HITLER'S LOST PLAN
John Q. Pridger
We're still trying to justify our role in the Second World War and congratulate ourselves on our victory over Nazi Germany.
With all the Holocaust based movies and books that continue to flood the literary and media markets, and all the continuing anti-Nazi and German propaganda with which we are favored, we'd thought we'd seen and heard it all.
Enter the miraculous discovery of Hitler's Lost Plan, the alleged squeal to MK, allegedly dictated in 1928, withheld from publication, and only recently discovered.
According to the text Hitler had his eyes on the conquest of the entire world — with a particular interest in the United States.
This is supposed to be news? Isn't that just about what we've been hearing since the big war? Hitler aimed to take over the world. We knew it because the government told us. They've been saying that since day one in order to justify America's involvement.
But, of course, there's a new twist. Though Hitler admired the United States, seeing it as a manifestation of Anglo-German racial superiority, he had come to see it as Jew dominated. So he had a dual reason for wishing to conquer America — to add America to the German heartland, and free Anglo-German Americans from the the yoke of Jewish domination.
And, of course, he was going to exterminate all the Jews in North America and around the world. If he didn't exactly say it, the inference is clear at least in retrospect with regard to what he did in Europe.
Additionally, he saw America as a threat to the fatherland because the heartiest Englishmen and Germans had immigrated to the American frontier where they had prospered and built a great nation, leaving a weakened gene pool in the old countries. Thus, unless Germany conquered America, Germany would never be safe. But for the influence of Jews, it would continue to dominate the world and eclipse German power and glory.
Pridger, having read Hitler's original work, admits that the book sounds perfectly Hitleresque, but the book's appearance at this late date nonetheless raises speculation that it might be a fraud. Pridger is eager to read the book and make his own judgements.
But there is nothing markedly new. Our own propaganda had long ago painted Hitler as a threat to the world, and our involvement in the war more or less a defensive action to prevent the conquest of Europe followed by the global conquest.
John Q. Pridger