In 1922, just a few years after the war to end all wars, an obscure Austrian living in Bavaria drafted a pamphlet to be called Settling Accounts.
In it he intended to attack the ineffectiveness of the dominant political parties in Germany that were opposed to the new National Socialists (or Nazis).
With the help of these collaborators, chief among them Rudolf Hess, the pamphlet morphed into Adolf Hitler’s notorious autobiography, Mein Kampf.
It included Hitler's racist agenda and his glorification of the "Aryan" race.
It was Hitler's blueprint for what later became his quest for world domination and for the extermination of the Jews and others: in other words, his blueprint for holocaust.
Written eight years before he assumed power in Germany, the book lays it all out: his megalomania, his obsession with Jews and his lust for power.
ADOLPH HITLER (1889–1945) was the leader of the Nazi Party (Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei; NSDAP), Chancellor of Germany from 1933 to 1945, and Führer ("leader") of Nazi Germany from 1934 to 1945. As dictator of Nazi Germany, he initiated World War II in Europe with the invasion of Poland in September 1939, and was the chief architect of the Holocaust.
”What Hitler envisages a hundred years hence, is…a horrible brainless empire in which nothing ever happens except the training of young men for war and the endless breeding of fresh cannon-fodder…”
-George Orwell