Flink, Salomon, The German Reichsbank and Economic Germany, Harper, New York, 1930.Haflfner, Sebastian, Germany, Jekyll and Hyde, Dutton, New York, 1941.Harris, Forbes & Co., Economic Conditions in Germany at the End of 1926, New York,1927.Heiden, Konrad, A History of National Socialism, London, 1934.Hitchcock, Dal, "The German Financial Revolution," Harper*s Magazine, February 1941.Hitler, Adolf, Mein Kampf, edited by Dr. George N. Shuster and others, Reynal & Hitchcock,1940.Howard, E. D., "Condition of the German Workman," Journal of Political Economy, February1906.Kaufman, Theodore N., Germany Must Perish, Argyle Press, 1941.Kircher, R., "Chancellor Brüning," Living Age, September 1931.Klein, F., "Brüning of Germany," Current History, October 1931.Kuczynski, R. R., "German Railways and German Public Finance," Journal of PoliticalEconomy, April 1924.Le Figaro's Reports, "The Secret of Germany's Budget," Harper's Weekly, January 2, 1909.Liebknecht, Karl, Militarism, B. W. Huebsch, 1917., Speeches, International Publishers, 1927.Lochner, Louis P., What About Germany? Dodd, Mead, New York, 1942.Lotz, W., Present Economic State of Germany: Public Finance, International Conciliation,April 1932.Lowe, Charles, Prince Bismarck, New York, 1886.Lowenstein, Prince Hubertus, The Tragedy of a Nation, London, 1934.Lowenstein, Karl, Hitler's Germany, Macmillan, New York, 1940.Ludwig, Emil, Hindenburg, John C. Winston Co., New York, 1935.Mann, Erika and Klaus, The Other Germany, Modern Age Books, New York, 1940.Marcosson, Isaac, "New German Leadership," Saturday Evening Post, May 16, 1931.National Industrial Conference Board, The Situation in Germany at the Beginning of 1933,New York, 1933.Neumann, Sigmund, Permanent Revolution, Harper's, New York, 1942.Oechsner, Frederick, This Is the Enemy, Little, Brown, New York, 1942.Palzi, M., "Economic Foundations of the German Totalitarian State," American Journal ofSociology, January 1941.Pendle, G·, "Greece, a Mature Dictatorship," Fortnightly Review, December 1937.Perris, Herbert, Germany and the German Emperor, Henry Holt, New York, 1912.Plutynski, A., The German Paradox, London, 1933.Pope, Ernest R., Munich Playground, G. P. Putnam, New York, 1941.Preissig, Edward, Political Institutions of the Old World, Putnam, New York, 1906.Rauschning, Hermann, The Conservative Revolution, Putnam, New York, 1941.1, Men of Chaos, Putnam, New York, 1942., The Revolution of Nihilism, Alliance Book Corp., New York, 1939.Reimann, Guenter, The Vampire Economy, Vanguard Press, New York, 1939.Reinhold, Peter P., Economic, Financial and Political State of Germany Since the War, YaleUniversity Press, 1928.Renatus, Kuno, Twelfth Hour of Capitalism, Alfred A. Knopf, New York, 1932.Reynolds, Bernard F., Prelude to Hitler, London, 1933.Robertson, C. Grant, Bismarck, London, 1918.Rosenberg, Arthur, History of the German Republic, London, i9\6.Salazar, Antonio de Oliveira, Doctrine and Action, London, 1939.Schmidt, Carl T., German Business Cycles, 1924-}}, National Bureau Economic ResearchPubs. No. 25.Schuman, Frederick L., Germany Since 1918, Henry Holt, New York, 1937.Scott-James, R. A., "Greece Under the Dictatorship," Christian Science Monitor Monthly,October 6, 1937.26l
Shuster, George N., "Talk with Chancellor Brüning," Commonweal, April 15, 1931.Snyder, Louis L., From Bismarck to Hitler, Bayard Press, Williamsport, Pa., 1935.Sollohut, N·, "Forerunners of the Third Reich," Contemporary Review, July 1939.Stolper, Gustav, German Economy, Reynal & Hitchcock, New York, 1940.Sydow, Reinhold, "Germany's Serious Financial Dilemma," American Review of Reviews,December 1908.Thompson, Dorothy, "Will Gangs Rule the World?" (Interview with Chancellor Brüning)Saturday Evening Post, July 16, 1932.Thyssen, Fritz, 7 Paid Hitler, Farrar & Rinehart, New York, 1941.Tolischus, Otto D·, They Wanted War, Reynal & Hitchcock, New York, 1942.U.S. Bureau of Labor Bulletin—"Cost of Living of Working Classes in Principal IndustrialTowns of the German Empire," Washington, September 1908.Vagts, Alfred, The History of Militarism, W. W. Norton, New York, 1937.Valentin, V., "Leading Factors of Modern German History," Contemporary Review,January 1936.Veblen, Thorstein, Imperial Germany and the Industrial Revolution, Viking Press, NewYork, 1939.Wagner, Adolph, "National Debt of the German Empire," North American Review, June1902.Winkler, Paul, The Thousand Year Conspiracy, Chas. Scribner, New York, 1943.Woodside, Willson, "Germany's Hidden Crisis," Harper's Magazine, February 1937.Young Plan Advisory Committee, "Basle Report on German Finances," Current History,February 1932.UNITED STATESAngly, Edmund, Oh, Yeah! Viking Press, New York, 1931.Chase, Stuart, "Autarchy," Scribner's Magazine, September 1933.Coyle, David Cushman, Uncommon Sense, National Home Library, 1936.Ezekiel, Mordecai, Jobs for All, Alfred A. Knopf, New York, 1939.Hansen, Alvin H., Fiscal Policy and the Business Cycle, W. W. Norton, New York, 1941.James, William, The Moral Equivalent of War, Am. Association for International Conciliation,February, 1910, No. 27.Keynes, John Maynard, The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money, Harcourt,Brace, New York, 1936.Laski, Harold J., The American Presidency, Harper & Bros., New York, 1940.Luce, Henry R., The American Century, Farrar & Rinehart, New York, 1941.McClure, Wallace, International Executive Agreements, Columbia University Press, 1941.Meriam, Lewis, and Schmeckebier, Laurence F., Reorganization of the National Government,Brookings Institution, 1939.Myers, William S., and Newton, Walter H., The Hoover Administration, Chas. Scribner,New York, 1936.National Resources Planning Board—Pamphlets and Reports, U. S. Government PrintingOffice, 1942 and 1943.Roosevelt, Franklin D., Public Papers and Addresses, 1928-36, Random House, New York,1938.Seven Harvard and Tufts Economists, An Economic Program for American Democracy,Vanguard Press, New York, 1938.Soule, George, "The Basis of a Lasting Peace," New Republic, September 20, 1939.Tugwell, Rexford G·, speech before American Economic Assn., December 1931, reported inProceedings.U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Report of the Committee on Continuity of Business andEmployment, Washington, 1931.U.S. Dept. of Commerce, Statistical Abstract of the U.S., Washington, U.S. GovernmentPrinting Office (yearly).262
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AS WE GO MARCHINGBY JOHN T. FLYNNPr
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CONTENTSPreface by Ronald Radoshvii
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PREFACEby Ronald RadoshThe former P
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merits that preceded" Hitler, Flynn
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spending was most prolific for mili
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Flynn's prototype American fascist
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It was the expression of such views
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witnesses and I have sought to stud
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PART ONETHE SOIL OF FASCISM:ITALYI
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understand is that these fascist di
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during the next sixty-two years bec
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forming to the general pattern of W
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tion of economic laws and out of ce
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each reasonably within the mental g
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money was concerned. But he proved
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an invention of present-day reforme
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great remittances of cash from her
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directed almost wholly at the ambit
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a national economic necessity. Then
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for imperialism. For eighteen years
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more impressed by the disturbing fa
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internal troubles. He provided a pr
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themselves. The movement marked a t
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workers and all would be workers. T
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of Milanese syndicalism and the ric
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the corrupt politicians who ruled t
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must not enclose itself within the
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ous fruits for Italy now. Yet the e
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The soldiers streamed back to the c
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Over all this the great Russian bol
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He made it plain that he had no res
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Mussolini, whose chief aim was powe
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agreed among themselves on certain
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to pay contractors without increasi
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noticed into the thinking of all so
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trade and professional estates alon
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save that ancient one—more and mo
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summons by violent measures which c
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every section—rushed with their d
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countries a party calling for a rig
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commanding the love of the people.
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government is the opposite of this.
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the practical men and that the worl
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Vatican, said in 1936 that all the
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The great fascist evangelist did no
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of a handful of brutal and lawless
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movement. Had fascism entered Germa
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younger critics and victims of Hitl
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without success. Even after an atte
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grew in virulence as a social irrit
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evils. What, actually, had happened
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must make itself responsible for th
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came the paradise ot state-owned en
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Of this amount 96,929,000,000, or 6
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steel production was back to the pr
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agriculture, and great sums were sp
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foreigners. It was these foreign lo
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machine. By militarism I mean that
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and were called "democrats," they p
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was far more poignant and imperious
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in taxes were required in order to
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in extent, imposes a system, not me
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state. To cap it all he emphasized
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one of the most destructive intelle
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liferated, spread out until it occu
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with the community represented on t
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epublic became the great imposer an
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control better adapted to their app
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German romantic school of philosoph
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for poverty? To even debate whether
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evolutionary episodes, but in a spi
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welfare institutions, and to extend
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known later as Federgeld—feather
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State share in profits of all large
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Klaus Mann observe that "there was
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lend. But the mainstay of borrowing
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income rose from 45 billion in 1933
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However, it would not be true to sa
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to its interference and control and
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fully developed the two most import
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he lived with becoming modesty in a
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taking over all trusts by the state
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ence. Von Papen was toying with the
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£luence. The stronger leaders who
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indigent, the many former socialist
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when he toured this country was rec
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may have widely hostile opinions ab
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the people themselves do appear, in
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well to be clear upon the central p
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fascism may rise thus. We have but
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artisan" of Greece, went through al
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1937 we beheld the painful ascent u
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The sources of power and energy are
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i3· Justice to disabled war vetera
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utilities such as streets, water wo
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ureaus and eliminating extravagance
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President made it clear that he was
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When, therefore, these vast expendi
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great inventions as the railroads,
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to pay. The other is for the Govern
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such things. A democratic governmen
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try, organized into local groups un
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than facing all these angry forces
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sity of changes in our laws to enco
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the management of its multitudinous
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dark history of the Russian experim
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cult of planning offered to minds t
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We have left the period of extreme
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Since the war effort got under way
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pipe lines, electric power, water p
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for the peace. Mr. Arthur Sulzberge
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the federal system will be itself s
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effective than war as an antidote a
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- Page 240 and 241: And now, nearly forty years later,
- Page 242 and 243: In a period of depression—and we
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- Page 278 and 279: BibliographyITALYAmoruso, Vincenzo,
- Page 282 and 283: Veblcn, Thorstein, The Engineers an
- Page 284 and 285: Bonomi, Ivanoe, Italian Premier, 59
- Page 286 and 287: General Confederation of Labor, in
- Page 288 and 289: Merriam, Dr. Charles, on streamlini
- Page 290 and 291: Scott, Howard, and technocracy, 169
- Page 292: JOHN T. FLYNN was an author and jou