Rethinking Churchill

When, in a very few years, the pundits start to pontificate on the great question: “Who was the Man of the Century?” there is little doubt that they will reach virtually instant consensus. Inevitably, the answer will be: Winston Churchill. Indeed, Professor Harry Jaffa has already informed us that Churchill was not only the Man of the Twentieth Century, but the Man of Many Centuries.

8 Responses to “Rethinking Churchill”


  1. 1 Justin Huber

    This question is directed towards Mr. Braun as maybe he will be able to help answer it for me. Was Hitler’s Germany a true ‘welfare state’ in the way we would define it today? The fact that the Hitler regime established certain social programs is often used by “conservatives” and “libertarians” as a reason why National Socialism was evil or in no way different from Communism? What is your take on this.

    Justin Huber

  2. 2 Friedrich Braun

    Adolf Hitler proved that you could have a well-functioning free market coupled with a command economy. A National Socialist Volksgemeinschaft ensued. Of course, that sort of worldview only really works in a homogeneous society, where everyone is racially/ethnically related and forms, in point of fact, a community of common blood and interests. A family. It’s impossible to achieve this sense of community in an individualistic, capitalistic, and racially fragmented setting.

    The National Socialist government introduced various pieces of legislation that were incredibly progressive for its time and the envy of Europe and the rest of the world. The book on the manifold achievements of National Socialist Germany, in all facets of German life, has yet to be written, but who will write it in today’s climate?

    You can have a glimpse here:

    How Hitler Consolidated Power in Germany and Launched A Social Revolution.

    The First Years of the Third Reich.

    LEON DEGRELLE.

    http://vho.org/GB/Journals/JHR/12/3/Degrelle299-370.html

  3. 3 Justin Huber

    Thanks for they reply. I will check out the article. In my opinion, actions speak louder than words and Hitler was the only major leader of the 20th century to take on Stalin and the Communists.

  4. 4 Al Ross

    Churchill was ‘The Man of the Jewish Century’. Much of what we know about the bibulous old fraud comes from his (thoroughly toxic and congenitally alcoholic) son Randolph’s Jewish amanuensis, Martin Gilbert, who wrote Winston Churchill’s biography. A Jewish source is almost always a poisoned one and cannot to be trusted at any price.

  5. 5 Justin Huber

    My biggest problem with capitalism is that it seems to be marching arm and arm with the multicultural movement that is destroying the white race. It seems like every TV commercial from a major company pushes the diversity at all costs/globalist agenda. In my mind, this even more dangerous than the rampant materialism that these ads also promote. I used to be one of those so called “conservatives” who believed that free markets and capitalism was the answer to everything. Now, I now longer believe this is true. The foundation of a strong society/country lies in the preservation of its race. In our case, that is the white race. Without this we have nothing-economies, art, inventions-you name it.

  6. 6 Friedrich Braun

    Yes, only 8 years ago I was a libertarian reading Hayek and Rothbard. Thank God I grew out of it.

  7. 7 Justin Huber

    Amen to that. Have you ever read Hitler’s Table Talk? I’ve read it (along with all his other books) and am reading it again. Liking it more the second time around. Offers some insight into Hitler’s own libertarian streak as I like to call it. I e-mailed Irving (who said I should read the book) about it explaining some of my views, but he didn’t say too much. In the e-mail, I told him that Hitler reminded me of Thomas Jefferson in some respects. This is even more apparent in his unpublished Second Book where Hitler goes into more depth about his plans for expansion in the East. Essentially, Hitler believed that a more agrian society was preferrable to an urbanized one. Quite Jeffersonian in my opinion.

  8. 8 Friedrich Braun

    Yes, David Irving believes that Hitler’s Table Talk gives more insight into his thinking than Mein Kampf (that he says he hasn’t read).

Leave a Reply