Podobne
- Strona startowa
- Silva Daniel Ostatni szpieg Hitlera
- Daniel Silva Ostatni szpieg Hitlera
- dygasiński adolf as
- VB.NET Module 1 Overview of the Microsoft .NET Platform
- adobe.photoshop.7.pl.podrÄcznik.uzytkownika.[osloskop.net]
- Maja.Lidia.Kossakowska. .Siewca.Wiatru.(osloskop.net)
- Adobe.Photoshop.7.PL.podręcznik.uzytkownika.[osloskop.net]
- Alistair MacLean Przelecz zlamanego serca (2)
- Chmielewska Joanna Wszystko czerwone.WHITE
- Lackey Mercedes Obietnica Magii (2)
- zanotowane.pl
- doc.pisz.pl
- pdf.pisz.pl
- mrowkodzik.xlx.pl
Cytat
Do celu tam się wysiada. Lec Stanisław Jerzy (pierw. de Tusch-Letz, 1909-1966)
A bogowie grają w kości i nie pytają wcale czy chcesz przyłączyć się do gry (. . . ) Bogowie kpią sobie z twojego poukładanego życia (. . . ) nie przejmują się zbytnio ani naszymi planami na przyszłość ani oczekiwaniami. Gdzieś we wszechświecie rzucają kości i przypadkiem wypada twoja kolej. I odtąd zwyciężyć lub przegrać - to tylko kwestia szczęścia. Borys Pasternak
Idąc po kurzych jajach nie podskakuj. Przysłowie szkockie
I Herkules nie poradzi przeciwko wielu.
Dialog półinteligentów równa się monologowi ćwierćinteligenta. Stanisław Jerzy Lec (pierw. de Tusch - Letz, 1909-1966)
[ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
.As an underlying principle in the internal development of the Storm Detachment, we came to the decisionthat not only should it be perfectly trained in bodily efficiency but that the men should be so instructed as tomake them indomitably convinced champions of the National Socialist ideas and, finally, that they should beschooled to observe the strictest discipline.This body was to have nothing to do with the defenceorganizations of the bourgeois type and especially not with any secret organization.My reasons at that time for guarding strictly against letting the Storm Detachment of the German NationalSocialist Labour Party appear as a defence association were as follows:On purely practical grounds it is impossible to build up a national defence organization by means of privateassociations, unless the State makes an enormous contribution to it.Whoever thinks otherwise overestimateshis own powers.Now it is entirely out of the question to form organizations of any military value for adefinite purpose on the principle of so-called voluntary discipline.Here the chief support for enforcingorders, namely, the power of inflicting punishment, is lacking.In the autumn, or rather in the spring, of 1919it was still possible to raise volunteer corps , not only because most of the men who came forward at thattime had been through the school of the old Army, but also because the kind of duty imposed thereconstrained the individual to absolute obedience at least for a definite period of time.That spirit is entirely lacking in the volunteer defence organizations of to-day.The more the defenceassociation grows, the weaker its discipline becomes and so much the less can one demand from theindividual members.Thus the whole organization will more and more assume the character of the oldnon-political associations of war comrades and veterans.It is impossible to carry through a voluntary training in military service for larger masses unless one isassured absolute power of command.There will always be few men who will voluntarily and spontaneously285Mein Kampfsubmit to that kind of obedience which is considered natural and necessary in the Army.Moreover, a proper system of military training cannot be developed where there are such ridiculously scantymeans as those at the disposal of the defence associations.The principal task of such an institution must be toimpart the best and most reliable kind of instruction.Eight years have passed since the end of the War, andduring that time none of our German youth, at an age when formerly they would have had to do militaryservice, have received any systematic training at all.The aim of a defence association cannot be to enlist hereand now all those who have already received a military training; for in that case it could be reckoned withmathematical accuracy when the last member would leave the association.Even the younger soldier from1918 will no longer be fit for front-line service twenty years later, and we are approaching that state of thingswith a rapidity that gives cause for anxiety.Thus the defence associations must assume more and more theaspect of the old ex-service men s societies.But that cannot be the meaning and purpose of an institutionwhich calls itself, not an association of ex-service men but a defence association, indicating by this title thatit considers its task to be, not only to preserve the tradition of the old soldiers and hold them together but alsoto propagate the idea of national defence and be able to carry this idea into practical effect, which means thecreation of a body of men who are fit and trained for military defence.But this implies that those elements will receive a military training which up to now have received none.Thisis something that in practice is impossible for the defence associations.Real soldiers cannot be made by atraining of one or two hours per week.In view of the enormously increasing demands which modern warfareimposes on each individual soldier to-day, a military service of two years is barely sufficient to transform araw recruit into a trained soldier.At the Front during the War we all saw the fearful consequences which ouryoung recruits had to suffer from their lack of a thorough military training.Volunteer formations which hadbeen drilled for fifteen or twenty weeks under an iron discipline and shown unlimited self-denial provednevertheless to be no better than cannon fodder at the Front.Only when distributed among the ranks of theold and experienced soldiers could the young recruits, who had been trained for four or six months, becomeuseful members of a regiment.Guided by the old men , they adapted themselves gradually to their task.In the light of all this, how hopeless must the attempt be to create a body of fighting troops by a so-calledtraining of one or two hours in the week, without any definite power of command and without anyconsiderable means.In that way perhaps one could refresh military training in old soldiers, but raw recruitscannot thus be transformed into expert soldiers.How such a proceeding produces utterly worthless results may also be demonstrated by the fact that at thesame time as these so-called volunteer defence associations, with great effort and outcry and underdifficulties and lack of necessities, try to educate and train a few thousand men of goodwill (the others neednot be taken into account) for purposes of national defence, the State teaches our young men democratic andpacifist ideas and thus deprives millions and millions of their national instincts, poisons their logical sense ofpatriotism and gradually turns them into a herd of sheep who will patiently follow any arbitrary command.Thus they render ridiculous all those attempts made by the defence associations to inculcate their ideas in theminds of the German youth.Almost more important is the following consideration, which has always made me take up a stand against allattempts at a so-called military training on the basis of the volunteer associations.Assuming that, in spite of all the difficulties just mentioned, a defence association were successful in traininga certain number of Germans every year to be efficient soldiers, not only as regards their mental outlook butalso as regards bodily efficiency and the expert handling of arms, the result must necessarily be null and voidin a State whose whole tendency makes it not only look upon such a defensive formation as undesirable buteven positively hate it, because such an association would completely contradict the intimate aims of thepolitical leaders, who are the corrupters of this State.But anyhow, such a result would be worthless under governments which have demonstrated by their own actsthat they do not lay the slightest importance on the military power of the nation and are not disposed to286Mein Kampfpermit an appeal to that power only in case that it were necessary for the protection of their own malignantexistence.And that is the state of affairs to-day
[ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]