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BIRTH
WALKER —At Kowloon Hospital, on Tuesday, March 21, 1939, to Margaret, wife of W. L. Walker --- dinughter.
The
"What is your opinion on your allies, the Japanese?" "The basis of actual life is no longer the special Japan- cao culture, although that settles A. "Italy's future will always the colour of its life, but the.
ba conditioned by a develop mighty scientific and technical ment which centres geographi- work of Europe and America, cally round the Mediterranean. Aryan peoples, (p. 318).'
"I ASKED HITLER
QUESTIONS"
Q
in which questions, asked by an interpreter, are answered from Ifiller's best soller-"MEIN KAMPF" ("My Struggle"). The answers, are taken from an unexpurgated copy of the book-an edition issued for Storm Troopers. Page references here at the end of paragrapha
refer in this edition,
*
than you turned A by confidence in his own
up.
Every further strengthen- "If all further Aryan influendo ing of France on the Continent on Japan were to cease from to- means an impediment for Italy day, the advance of Japan in Supposing a better Fuchrer "The child. ...fortified in the future.
knowledge and selence could con- "One should never make the tinue for a short time still. But Would you give him your job? strength, gripped by the power mistake of thinking that family in a few years the spring would
of commonly-felt team-spirit, ties between peoples can in any dry up, the Japanese character- way exclude rivalries." (p. 700.) istics win the upper hand, where A. "The Fuchrer of the whole must win the conviction of the
party is elected in a general invincibility of his people. the present culture would be meeting of members according The National State must conduct come rigid and sink again back to the rules of the party. He is boys' and girls' education from into the sleep from which it was the exclusive Fuchrer of the the same point of view. In the [Q. "There is much interest aroused seven generations ago
now in your drive in the by the wave of Aryan culture. movement....He carries all re- case of girls, also, chief im- sponsibility on his shoulders. portance must be given to physi- Balkans. Do you believe in . One can describe such a'
cal education, only Inter to the peaceful, economic penetration race as a culture-carrier but "The members of a movement improvement of their spiritual as a policy?"
never as a 'culture-creator.' "
are always free to call him to and intellectual values,” (p.460).- (p. 319.)
account before the forum of a "The National State must new election, and to deprive him start from the principle that in of his office in so far as he has the community it is more valu- extended the hand of conflicted with the principles of able to have a perhaps intel- friendship to Mr. Cham- the movement or served ita in- lectually less developed, but principle of a State's policy...berlain and M. Daladier at terests badly. In his place then physically sound creaturg' with "No people have better pre- Munich. What is your real steps the new man, the one who good, firm character, filled with do better, with equal decisiveness and w-power, pared its economic conquests opinion of democratic leaders? can with greater brutality by the
authority and equal responsibi- than a talented weakling. sword and later defended them A. gonality-and puts in its
"Democracy excludes per- luty." (p.379.)
place the majority of stupidity, incapability and cowardice. (p. 347.)
A. "The talk of 'peaceful eco-
' ‚„nomic' conquest of the world was probably the greatest non-
senge ever made the guiding
Thongkong Telegraph. without regard for any one, than
Wyndham St., Hongkong 'Phone 26615 March 21, 1939
England." (p. 158.)
Q. "Why did you choose Italy
as an ally?"
1
"A people of learned men, if these are physically degenerate, weak-willed and cowardly paci-
Q. Why did you seize Austria fists, will not conquer the skies, "Granting all the limitations and Czecho - Slovakia? and will not even be able to and spiritual inferiority of these In order to help the people or secure its existence on this
earth." (p. 452.) parliamentary medicine-men of posscas the territory?
"Education must be modelled the white race, they cannot Another Gateway?
themselves seriously imagine A. "German Austria must re- on such a plan that when a child A. "In Europe there exist only they can, following the path of a turn to the great German leaves school he is not a semi-
two possible allies for Ger- Western democracy, MEMEL is hardly another many: England and Italy." (p. against
Aght motherland, and not for any pacifist, democrat or something, a doctrine (Com- economic reasons. No, no. Even but a whole German." (p. 474.) Czecho-Slovakin. But de- 705.)
munism) for which democracy if this uniting were damaging velopments there are reminis-
from an enconomic point of view, "The destinies of peoples are is a means to an end." (p. 412.)
even so it would have to come cent of those which followed forged firmly together only by
about. the prospect of common success National - Socialist organisation in the sense of common acquisi- both in Austria and in Moraviations, conquests; in short, of an and Bohemia: increasing. Gor-extension of both parties' man pressure within, tacit sup-
power." (p. 697.)
port for that pressure from without, and increased difficulty for the governing State-in Q.
this case Lithuania-in main-
"But you have made non- aggression pacts with the two Western democracies, Bri- tain and France. What do you think of democracy, then?"
"What do you think of A. "The democracy of the pre-
your ally, Mussolini?”
sent-day Western world is
"Common blood belongs to a common Reich" (p.1.) .'
Do you mean all you wrote in "Mein Kampf"?
A "If a
doctrine is actually right in its general lines it
is less harmful to stick to one version of it, even if it should.
What is the basis of your no longer quite conform to the power?
reality, than by-improving it— to expose a principle (hitherto the forerunner of Marxism. A "The first foundation for taken as one of the granite bases building authority is always of the movement) to general dis- A The skill of a leading would hardly be thinkable.
which, without democracy, popularity. However, an autho
say you
you
taining law and order in the politically besieged territory.
statesman is shown in the
rity which is based on this foun- cussion with its most evil conse "Democracy first gives to this dation alone is still extremely expect to fill people with blind fact that for the achievement
quences....For how can Yet the position of Memel has of his own
world pest the ground for weak, unsure and variable...In faith in the rightness of a doc- needs at certain always been less settled than, it periods he always finds those nourishing itself on which then might, in force, we see the trine when by constantly alter- seemed, that of Czecho-Slovakia partners who must follow the this plague can extend itself." second foundation of every ing its external structure you
same path for the protection of
(p.-85.)
authority, ; ...If popularity and Memel's population is prepon-their own interests." (p. 698.)
force are combined and can last (p. 512.)
create uncertainty and doubt?" |derantly German, The territory
over a certain time, then an
"A movement....must not was separated from East Prussia
Q. As you
want authority based on still firmer venture to make concessions to peace, I should be interest- foundation can arise, the autho- whatever the spirit of the time after the Great War and placed
ed to know your definition of a rity of tradition. When, finally, is in formulating its programme, "What is the purpose of the Rome-Berlin axis?"
pacifist.
popularity, force and tradition but must for always keep to a A "The pacifist, by complote are combined, an authority can form it has found suitable in all alliance whose object his idea, subjectively, will al- (p. 379.)
ly surrendering himself to be regarded as unshakable." “An
events until victory has crown- does not include the purpose of making war is senseless and ways first seek the objective.
ed it." (p. 513.) worthless. One makes alliances severely his people is threaten- Q. You educate boys and viris right however unjustly and
under the Council of Allied Am-Q. bassadors, but was forcibly seized by the Lithuanians in A. 1923. In 1924 Memel was re- cognised by League of Nations members as part of Lithuania. only for conflict..
Indeed, a Polish seizure of
"The conflict may lie as far of his herd out of pure instinct tary machines. What good đo . Do you think you can Lithuanian territory had earlier ahead as you like at the time of self-preservation and fight you really think can come of this ty force? been accepted by the League.none the less the prospect of a
of concluding the alliance; but with them." (p. 122.)
for the world? Thus in this part of the Euro-warlike embroilment is the inner pean counterpane the patch-inducement to it." (p. 749.)
work has not been considered so firmly fixed as elsewhere. For IL has
some years, seemed to be only pasted down.
indeed,
Long after the Lithuanian seizure of Memel the inhabitants
☆
"What do you think of the Franco-British Entente?"
of that territory displayed un- A. "Germany's alliance would
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enable her to carry on un- disturbed with those prepara- The ascendancy of National tions which... must be made Socialism in Germany has in-
for setting accounts with France. tensified the sense of grievance such an alliance lies in the fact The most important thing about; among the German people under that the hostile alliance falls to Lithuanian rule, as it has among bits and the Entente, which we whatsoever German minorities have to thank for so much used a8 spearheads for calamity, is dissolved and thus Hitler's programme of terri-the deadly enemy of our people, torial expansion in Europe. The France, falla victim to isolation." increasing Nazification of Ger- (p. 755.)
man lenders in Memel, coupled with the declaration on Satur
day by Dr. Neumann, the local. Berlin-Rome axis into the "You have enlarged the "Fuehrer," that far-reaching
trianglo. changes were impending, point Lame - Berlin-Tokyo to developments which
What is your real opinion of parallel those that took place Orientals?"
alliances between Europeans and] earlier last week in Bohemia and Moravia.
may
A. "One greedily seizes the yellow hand and embraces
It is noteworthy, if this is the
an alliance which, from a racial case, that the German expan-point of view, is perhaps irres- sionista are looking northward possible." (p. 722.
Context: along the Baltic as well as east-Hitler I discussing the Anglo- ward towards the Ukraine. Japanese Alliance.)
ed, and will never join the ranks
GRIN AND BEAR IT
up to be nothing but mili-
govern Germany for ever,
A. "In the long run systems of government are not preser- By Lichty ved by the pressure of force, but by the belief in their good- ness and their honesty in re- presenting and furthering the interests of people." (p. 309.)
Tailed Factors Brožíkin, Int.
"Another feature you "might like is the paper-thin walls—end
the folks next, door argue all the time!";
If you are a dictator why do you bother to keep the
| Reichstag, semblance of parlia-
ment?
are
A "Parliaments in themselves necessary because in them a chance to rise slowly is given to men to whom later re- sponsible tasks can be entrust- ed." (p. 501.)
BUDDHA TO
GO BACK
YEARS ayo, a British tradesman wandering in a remote part of Bur- ma, tock from a temple, a statue of the Buddha,
He took it home' with him to Eng- land grd for long time it reposed on the manteláhelf" of his home in Lancashire.
Now the man has died and his re- |intiver· are ·ánxious that the image shall be restored to its rightful place f the temple.
The Burmese Government has been. Informed, and search is being made for the temple from which the image was taken.
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