Balder Ex-Libris - Feder GottfriedReview of books rare and missing2024-03-16T01:56:42+00:00urn:md5:aa728a70505b2fae05796923271581c2DotclearFeder Gottfried - The Manifesto for the abolition of enslavement to interest on moneyurn:md5:3693466a4185cfb0b07a67092e84b5d12015-05-10T14:22:00+01:002015-05-10T13:27:31+01:00balderFeder GottfriedBolchevikCommunismConspiracyEconomyFascismFirst World WarGermanyJewJewMarxNew YorkNorth AmericaRevolutionSatanismTalmudThird Reich <p><img src="https://balderexlibris.com/public/img3/Feder_Gottfried_-_The_Manifesto_for_the_abolition_of_enslavement_to_interest_on_money.jpg" alt="" /><br />
Author : <strong>Feder Gottfried</strong><br />
Title : <strong>The Manifesto for the abolition of enslavement to interest on money with explanations provided</strong><br />
Year : 1919<br />
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Link download : <a href="https://balderexlibris.com/public/ebook2/Feder_Gottfried_-_The_Manifesto_for_the_abolition_of_enslavement_to_interest_on_money.zip">Feder_Gottfried_-_The_Manifesto_for_the_abolition_of_enslavement_to_interest_on_money.zip</a><br />
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The Manifesto for the Abolition of Enslavement to Interest on Money. a. What is Mammonism? b. What is the cure for Mammonism? c. The nine points of the Manifesto. Implementation and Rationale 1. Because of failed promises of the German Revolution of 1918 the people are tending more and more toward Bolshevism. 2. The German folk are sick with Mammonism. 3. Mammonism derives its power from interest on loans. 4. The way to cure Mammonism is by abolishing interest on loans, especially war-bonds. 5. The vast majority of Germans holding war-bonds really lose money because of them, because they have to pay taxes to cover the interest payments; only the largest holders of war-bonds have a net profit from them. 6. Germany’s real wealth consists not in any material assets but in the productivity of the German people. 7. If the obligation to pay interest on public debt were ended, the Bavarian state could abolish all direct and indirect taxes and fund itself entirely on the revenues from state-owned industries. 8. Interest-payments are the reason why the state cannot do without taxes; those receiving the largest sums of interest pay relatively little in taxes. The Reich is financially in a much worse situation than the federal states. 9. Comparison of the affluent bondholder, the working-class bondholder, and the dependent bondholder. Expansion of social welfare for the dependent bondholder after cancellation of interest. 10. Instead of repaying the principal of war-bonds under cancellation of interest the state could simply declared the bonds to be currency. 11. For other fixed-interest assets, including mortgages, repayment under cancellation of interest is recommended. This should solve the housing problem. 12. A history of opposition to interest-slavery. a. Curtailment and prohibition of interest before the 19th century. b. Enshrinement of interest under the developing global order during the 19th century. c. Cancellation of interest will dissolve the interestcommunity within Germany and enables the German nation to unite against the Gold International. The Conversion of War-Bonds into Bank-Credit. Rather than simply declare war-bonds to be currency, a better idea is to require that they be surrendered for conversion into bank-credit. Special Comments on the Demand for Laws in the Manifesto. Elaboration of the nine points. The Objections and their Refutation Objections from various perspectives are addressed. a. Three objections based on a failure to comprehend how conditions would change under abolition of interest-slavery. b. A question from the perspective of a large bondholder. c. How is depriving investors of interest supposed to help the worker? d. What about the importance of inheritance in holding families together? e. Three objections from officials of the current system. f. The Communist complaint that abolition of interest will not abolish economic inequality. g. Social-Democracy is doomed because it is based on Marxist ideology, which does not recognize the radical difference between industrial capital and loan-capital. Social-Democratic government, as a moderate application of Marxism that fails, paves the way for Communism. h. The contemptible bourgeois and two objections from the bourgeois perspective. Won’t abolition of interest adversely affect savings? No. Is big loan-capital really not in some way productive? Only labor is productive. Further Program. a. Abolition of interest-slavery is the prerequisite for establishment of the social state. b. Reconstruction of the German state according to the true spirit of socialism. c. Liberation of the entire world from Jewish control. <strong>...</strong></p>Feder Gottfried - The programme of the NSDAPurn:md5:d3bfda6780653ed997b9d7676b4e90002011-12-07T23:34:00+00:002014-05-07T22:08:07+01:00balderFeder GottfriedGermanyN.S.D.A.P.Third Reich <p><img src="https://balderexlibris.com/public/img/.Feder_Gottfried_-_The_programme_of_the_NSDAP_s.jpg" alt="" /><br />
Author : <strong>Feder Gottfried</strong><br />
Title : <strong>The programme of the NSDAP and its General Conceptions</strong><br />
Year : 1932<br />
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Link download : <a href="https://balderexlibris.com/public/ebook/Feder_Gottfried_-_The_programme_of_the_NSDAP.zip">Feder_Gottfried_-_The_programme_of_the_NSDAP.zip</a><br />
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Historical Account of the Rise of the N.S.D.A.P. with a Biographical Survey of the Career of Adolf Hitler. Adolf Hitler was bom on April 20 th, 1889, at Braun au on the Inn, a village of the old Bavaria. His father was the orphaned child of a poor peasant and worked his way up to being a Customs Official. His mother came from a German peasant family. When he was 13 years old he !ost his father, and four years later his mother. Adolf Hitler was then a scholar at the Re a 1- schu1e at Linz on the Danube, after leaving the National School. It had been his father's wish that he should become an official, but his own desire was to be an artist. His mother's death obliged him without further delay to earn his own living. At 17 years old Hitler went to Vienna, where he aimed to become an architect. He earned a living by his own efforts, first as a builder's labourer, mixing the mortar, then as an architect's draughtsman. At 18 years old he was already ta king an interest in poli tics; he became anti-Marxist, but so far took no leading part. From his earliest youth Hitler had been passionately Nationalist, and his hope was to combine the social experiences of his worlüng period with his nationalist convictions. For severa! years he lived in Vienna in extreme poverty. In 1912 he migrated to Munich, where he was a student. He had never known youthful enjoyments, but ever since the day when he left home with 50 kronen in his pocket, labour and privation had been his lot. In February, 1911!, he succeeded in getting free from the obligation to serve in the Austrian 1\rmy. Six months later war broke out. He immediately volunteered for service in the German Army, and obtained, by a direct appeal to King Ludwig of Bavaria, permission to enter a Bavarian regiment as a volunteer for the war. On October 10 th, 1911!, the new regiment marched forth. On Deccmber 2nd, 1911!, the 25-years oid volunteer was awarded the Iron Cross, 2nd Class. In recognition of his bravery in the ataack on the 'Bayernwald' and in the other engagements near Wytschaete, he was ordered to take on duty as a despatch-carrier, which demanded especial courage and reliability, for reports had often to be carried across open ground under heavy fire. This quickly made his name known throughout the regiment beyond the narrow circle of his comrades. On October 7th, 1916, he was wounded by a shell splinter. In March, 1917, he returned to his regiment. He received severa! other distinctions, including a Reg i rn en t s <a></a>meeting of 1700. He now organised the propaganda of the young Party, which after a year's work numbered 61! members. A year later. 1920 - it bad already reached 3000. Hitler's propagandist activity in Mumch was such that be was finally addressing mass~meetings three times a week, and on Mondays he carried on a course of instruction. He attacked first and foremost the f o 11 y of V ers a i Il e s, and denied the assertions of the Marxists, the Centre Party, etc. that it was possible to fulfil that Treaty. He pilloried the slogan of these Parties - "Give up your arms, and the others will also disarm". He spoke on the assumption that after arms had been given up by us the rest would continue to arm, - if not with their own money, then with the millions wrung from the completely disarmed German nation. Whilst opposing the propaganda od the S.P.D. and Centre in favour of signing the Treaty, he prophecied that the Ruhr would be occupied, whatever we signed. 1921. This year was marked by the foundation of the first l0cal groups at Rosenheim and Landshut. Hitler organised the first body of men to protect the Party, and began his fight against the Separatist movement in Bavaria. Our leader also addressed a meeting of over 5000 in the Circus in Munich. <strong>...</strong></p>