Saturday, October 16, 2021

Saturday Snippet: Doing business under Nazism (or any other extremism)

 

Published in 1939, Gunter Reimann's book "The Vampire Economy: Doing Business Under Fascism" has stood the test of time as an amazingly frank, blunt, revealing look at what happens when an extremist ideology takes over a nation and its economy.



One is struck by how common the problems are under Nazism, or Communism, or even under our modern, allegedly capitalist economy when it's taken over by "woke" zealots.  Extremism, by any name at all, remains extremism, and won't tolerate any alternatives except those that are ideologically correct.  As the book's blurb points out:


Vampires are not just mythical creatures that come out and prowl for victims during a full moon. Today's vampires are the politicians and bureaucrats who drain the lifeblood out of businesses through taxation, regulation, inflation, price controls, trade interference, fiat money, and attacks on private property. The Vampire Economy provides a frightening look at the consequences of state economic management.


That's a very timely requirement of what we're seeing coming out of the Biden administration, Congress and the Senate right now.  (Why else, do you think, does the current $3.5 trillion stimulus bill contain authorization for no less than 87,000 additional IRS agents?  They aren't needed to pass around coffee and cookies during interviews, I assure you!  They're there to get the government's claws into every business in the country, and every individual's bank accounts - remember the other provision it contains, to force banks to report every single transaction over $600, or any account with a balance over $600?  That's extremism in action.  It "follows the money" as much as any other ideology - and it wants as much as possible of that money for itself.)

Here's the second chapter of "The Vampire Economy".  I hope you find it interesting enough to order the book (it's only $2.99 in e-book format) and read the whole thing, because the powers that currently be would like nothing more than the same level of control over our economy.


HERR V. is one of the largest landowners in Eastern Prussia. He is a conservative old landowner who was once proud of being the free and independent master of a huge domain and who boasted of his patriarchal relations with his employees. As an ardent German nationalist he felt certain, when Hitler came to power, that the country had been “saved from the Bolshevists and the Jews.” He never dreamed that the new regime would dare interfere with his God-given rights far more than had the Social-Democratic government he had hated. Unable to grasp quickly enough the changes that were occurring, he did not conform to the ever-mounting requirements of the ruling Party. Soon he was on bad terms with the provincial Party secretary, whom he despised as an upstart. The Party leader tried to break his stubborn spirit by all manner of petty decrees and regulations, as, for instance, by ordering him to give lodging to S.A. men (Brownshirts) and members of the Hitler Youth League, who annoyed him endlessly.

There was no longer a Hindenburg, who as President of the Reich and Supreme Commander of the Army, would listen to the complaints of his agrarian friends and intervene with the government on their behalf. Herr V. learned only through bitter experience that there was no longer any court or official to protect him, and he began to fear that his estates might be expropriated. He visited his former banker, Herr Z., to whom he confessed:

I want to invest my liquid funds in a way which is safe, where they can’t be touched by the State or the Party. In the old days I always refused to speculate, to buy stocks. Now I would not mind. However, I would like best to buy a farm in South-West Africa. Perhaps my next crop will be a failure and I will be blamed, accused of “sabotage,” and replaced in the management of my estates by a Party administrator. I want to be prepared for such a contingency and have a place to go should the Party decide to take away my property.

The banker was compelled to inform his landowner friend that there was no such way out. The State would not allow him to leave Germany with more than ten marks. South-West Africa was closed to him; he would have to stay where he was.

Formerly numbered among the most independent and largest landed proprietors in Germany, with estates that had been in his family for generations, Herr V. today shares the despair of numerous German capitalists, none of whom can be sure that their property rights will be regarded as sacred by the State.

Manufacturers in Germany were panic-stricken when they heard of the experiences of some industrialists who were more or less expropriated by the State. These industrialists were visited by State auditors who had strict orders to “examine” the balance sheets and all bookkeeping entries of the company (or individual businessman) for the preceding two, three, or more years until some error or false entry was found. The slightest formal mistake was punished with tremendous penalties. A fine of millions of marks was imposed for a single bookkeeping error. Obviously, the examination of the books was simply a pretext for partial expropriation of the private capitalist with a view to complete expropriation and seizure of the desired property later. The owner of the property was helpless, since under fascism there is no longer an independent judiciary that protects the property rights of private citizens against the State. The authoritarian State has made it a principle that private property is no longer sacred.

The decree of February 28, 1933, nullified article 153 of the Weimar Constitution which guaranteed private property and restricted interference with private property in accordance with certain legally defined conditions … The conception of property has experienced a fundamental change. The individualistic conception of the State—a result of the liberal spirit—must give way to the concept that communal welfare precedes individual welfare (Gemeinnutz geht vor Eigennutz).

The government of a totalitarian State would not be “authoritarian” if the courts still functioned independently, as they do under liberal capitalism.

The division of power between the executive or legislative branch on the one hand and the judicial branch on the other was formerly a guarantee to the owner of private property that his property rights would be protected even against his own government. The totalitarian State, in abolishing this separation of power, abolishes the sanctity of private property, which thereupon ceases to be a basic principle of society fundamental to State morality.

Constitutionally the businessman still enjoys guarantees of property rights. But what is the value of such constitutional guarantees without courts that dare to defy the omnipotent bureaucracy or to enforce laws that are “out of date"? The judge who had the temerity to attempt this would land not in a concentration camp but in a lunatic asylum. A totalitarian State does not tolerate any “second government,” any challenge to the power of the all-wise dictator.

“Within the constitution of the Third Reich any position independent of the will of the Fuehrer no longer exisits. The principle of separation of power is a thing of the past. Only the Party has a privileged position.”

Fritz Nonnenbruch, the financial editor of the Voelkischer Beobachter, states: “There exists no law which binds the State. The State can do what it regards as necessary, because it has the authority.”

“The next stage of National-Socialist economic policy consists of replacing capitalist laws by policy.”

This Nazi doctrine has nothing to do with Communism or Socialism. It is offered as a new justification for the State’s use of private capital and it is a means of placing drastic limitations upon private property rights in the “national interest.”

“National interests” are not determined by laws, courts, or any legislative body. The decision is made mainly by the Nazi party, or, rather, by its leaders, that is, by the State bureaucracy. It is a principle that only Party members shall occupy key positions in the government and in all organizations where the State influences the distribution of jobs. They must be engaged whenever there is a choice between a Party member and non-Party member. The carrying out of this essential part of the unwritten constitution is assured by the fact that Party members, devoted to the leader and to the maintenance of the Party’s authority, occupy all key positions and appoint all new officials.

In the early days of the Nazi regime, some of the conservatives holding economic key posts, such as Dr. Hjalmar Schacht, former president of the Reichsbank and former Minister of Economics, and Dr. Kurt Schmitt, director of the largest German insurance company and Dr. Schacht’s predecessor as Minister of Economics, sought to restrain the growth of bureaucracy. These men upheld the traditional position of conservative capitalists—economy in administration and efficiency in civil service—and they sought to win the leading Nazis to this point of view. In a speech to young bank clerks and students Schacht openly attacked Party careerists who sought a place in the new ruling caste and hoped to become a part of the privileged aristocracy, with nothing to recommend them except their record as loyal Party men. He declared:

The aim of National Socialism is an economic and social order where everybody, whoever he is and whatever he did before, can obtain the highest posts in the economy and in the State if he has the strength, the will and the ability to do his job. This principle has been fully applied by the Reichsbank. At the Reichsbank, in contrast to conditions in the State offices, any employee can rise from a low to a high position. He is not evaluated according to recommendations or good friends, nor according to other similar things which have nothing to do with his abilities, but he is judged merely by his fitness, his personal value, his knowledge and his performance.

At the same time, however, the Party leaders asserted their right to continue in control of patronage, of the distribution of State jobs and special privileges to trusted old Party members personally devoted to the Fuehrer. Ministerialdirektor Sommer, as spokesman for Rudolph Hess, Hitler’s official representative, wrote in the Deutsche Juristenzeitung of May 21, 1936:

The influence of the Party cannot be seen in laws, but in practice, and personalities are the important factor. A large number of the ministers [at present all ministers] are Party members. Some of them are also Reich leaders of the Party, all Reichstatthaelter are Party members, and most are also provincial leaders of the Party. All Prussian Oberpraesidenten are district leaders in their area. Other personal personal connections exist through the office of landrat [governmental chief of a district administrative office] and the corresponding Party leader of the district, and finally, in general all jobs of political importance are held by old reliable Party members.

This does not mean that there are only Party members in the government. Even important branches have many non-Party members. But they are technical experts without freedom of decision rather than independent administrators. They must be particularly careful not to hurt the prestige of the Fuehrer in the application of any law or instruction. Because they are not subject to the rigid discipline of the Party, they are always suspected of being “unreliable.” Consequently they are inclined to be stricter than Party members in adhering to the letter of the law or in refusing personal favors to a businessman. They have no “Party friends” in other key positions of the administration who can do anything for them or for their friends.

To a great extent a person’s status depends upon the personal opinions and impressions of the Party secretary. It is exceedingly difficult to appeal from his authority; he can oust any person from his job and deprive him of his rights by simply declaring him “unreliable.” Hence it is very important to remain on friendly terms with the Party secretary, for his one word “reliable” has greater value than the highest honors any king may bestow on his favorites.

In the administrative apparatus and the State police force all key positions are occupied occupied by individuals whose devotion has met the acid test.

The Party is the whip with which the leaders control the administration as well as the behavior of the citizen, be he the manager of the steel trust, a small shopkeeper or a worker. The Party has its own courts and judiciary because Party members are not bound by official laws in their activities; they are permitted and indeed required to violate the laws in order to defend the prestige and authority of the Party leaders.

The official Union of German Civil Servants has a membership of 1,200,000, of whom one-sixth—206,000—are Party members, but 81 per cent of the higher State officials in Prussia are members of the Nazi party—Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiter Partei, to give it its full name. In the national government, all leaders are in the Party and subject to its rigid discipline. Few exceptions are made to the rule that all important positions in the administrative apparatus must be held by Nazis. The majority of those holding State jobs are also leaders of the Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiter Partei (N.S.D.A.P.) in their districts or communities.

“No one is to be appointed unless in addition to the qualifications which fit him for his post he gives a guarantee that he will always defend the National Socialist State without reservation.” The equivalent of this German rule is common to all totalitarian countries.

In a totalitarian land where the “will of the Party” is in effect the unwritten constitution, the membership rolls are well guarded. Not everyone who declares himself a loyal supporter of Hitler can join. It is no ordinary party. Nor is it a party wherein members can help to formulate policy and criticize the leader, or choose the leader. The authoritarian Nazi party makes the will of the leader the supreme law.

“The Elite Guards [S.S. men] and the Brownshirts [S.A. men] do no productive work. They do not work for the State. They work solely and exclusively for the leader.”

The existence of the Party machine and its control of the government render hopeless any attempt of an industrialist or banker—though he may be the most important financial figure in the country—to get control of the executive power and to supersede the authority of the Party leaders.

The Party secretaries and those in leading positions jealously guard their authority, so that no businessman, large or small, can gain in influence at their expense. The Party machine, as the vehicle of absolute power, was and is too valuable an asset to let slip into other hands. At all costs, the vested power of the leadership must be preserved.

The existence of a state within the State—the Party and the bureaucracy—is a phenomenon of the post-[World War I] world.

The Party and the government bureaucracy are above the law, but it must be pointed out that this special status of being above the law is reserved chiefly for the leadership. To create stability on which the leadership relies, there are strict laws regulating relationships among private businessmen. It is even conceivable that a businessman or concern might be successful in an appeal to the courts against some regulation of an over-zealous Nazi official, provided such a regulation were a gratuitous interference with private property and had no bearing on the defense of the Nazi regime. However, court action has been very rare because most businessmen fear arousing the anger of Nazi officials who on some later occasion might have opportunity to take revenge.

As a rule, the relations between businessmen are still regulated by laws and customs. But customs have changed and modified law, and law has, in turn, been largely replaced by a vague conception of “honor.” It is easier for a businessman to win a case in the German courts by appealing to “National-Socialist honor” than by referring to the exact text of the law.

This would lead to complete anarchy in business affairs unless a businessman knew when the “honor” of a National Socialist required payment of a debt or the execution of a commercial transaction. Consequently chambers of commerce and group or ‘’estate” organizations in the various trades have instituted “Courts of Honor.” A businessman who objects to another firm’s conception of “honor” can apply to these “Courts” which settle commercial disputes. Officially they are only maintaining “national” or “group discipline.” In reality, however, “Courts of Honor” are a kind of self-help organization for businessmen. The Party-controlled official courts are replaced by courts made up of businessmen. No businessman is officially compelled to submit his case to the “Court of Honor” or to accept its judgment, but the official trade organization urges its members to stick to certain rules which the group organization has established, except in cases where members have close relations with influential Party functionaries who show little respect for the businessmen’s courts. On the whole, there is a definite trend toward substituting for the centralized State jurisdiction courts composed of businessmen representing different trades.

Businessmen feel the need of maintaining certain business rules and respect for property rights. Their self-help organizations are similar to the guild organizations of medieval times, which had their own courts for disciplining members. But at that time the State power was weak, while today the authoritarian State is strong in its maintenance of a gigantic bureaucratic and military machine. The “Courts of Honor,” therefore, will always have to consider Party interests so as not to arouse the anger of important figures in the Party.

Employers have been badly shocked by their new legal status, especially the “conservatives” who have held their property for generations and to whom the sanctity of private property has been a part of their religion. They might have excused previous violations of property rights as exceptional emergency measures, but they hoped that the buttressing of the State power through fascism would also bring about a strengthening of the sanctity of private property. They were independent and individualistic businessmen, not only economically, but politically and psychologically. For this very reason they are the most disappointed and unhappy over the new state of affairs and are likely to get into trouble with a Party secretary or the Gestapo (the Secret State Police) for having grumbled incautiously or for not having shown enough devotion to the Fuehrer.

The capitalist under fascism has to be not merely a law-abiding citizen, he must be servile to the representatives of the State. He must not insist on “rights” and must not behave as if his private property rights were still sacred. He should be grateful to the Fuehrer that he still has private property.

This state of affairs must lead to the final collapse of business morale, and sound the death knell of the self-respect and self-reliance which marked the independent businessman under liberal capitalism.


There you have it.  If that sounds reminiscent of Communism as well as Nazism or Fascism, it's because it is.  Political extremes of Left or Right are so close to each other in their authoritarian, anti-democratic, dogmatic extremism that there's often little to choose between them in their effect on society.

Note, too, that the influence of the "Party" over everyday life extends far beyond the business sphere.  We're seeing similar attempts to impose ideology over law, and political correctness over our constitution, in many walks of life.  (Consider the Loudon County, Virginia, and its school board, trampling roughshod over parental rights and the views of its citizens in an attempt to impose "woke" ideology in the schools it controls.  It's been taken over by extremists, who will brook no challenge to their authority, legal or otherwise.  It's going to take strong measures to get rid of them.  One can only hope the citizens of Loudon County have the guts and political will to do so, otherwise the jackboot will rest upon their necks forever.)

The Biden administration is merely the fig-leaf for an extremist movement that wants to seize and retain control over every aspect of our lives.  The current push to force COVID-19 vaccinations upon everybody, despite all the (very convincing) evidence that they're not effective (and may even be actively harmful to many), is merely a symptom of that.  If they can force obedience on that issue, they can use it as a lever to force obedience on others.  Get people accustomed to obeying without question, and they'll do it out of habit.  Get them used to the idea that one can't challenge "authority" without suffering the consequences, and they'll stop challenging it.  (You want proof of that?  Consider this administration's security priorities, and wonder no longer.)

May we learn from the many examples in our history, and stop the current extremists before they seize the power they seek - because if we don't, they'll never let go of it, and we'll be under their jackboot forever.

I, for one, have no intention of living that way.  I've had to take a stand once before that cost me my vocation, my career, my financial security and my pension.  If I have to, I can - and will - take such a stand again.

Peter


13 comments:

  1. Chilling, to say the least. At my age I won't be around to "enjoy" the fruits of wokeism but I fear for my grandkids.

    BTW, the " Consider this administration's security priorities, and wonder no longer." link does not work.

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  2. @Flugelman: Thanks for the heads-up. I fixed the link.

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  3. The ace up their sleeve is eliminating cash completely, going to some sort of Fed reserve digital currency. It can be changed at a moment's notice, but more to the point, every single transaction can be tracked forever.

    If you go to the ATM and make a withdrawal, that cash is untraceable. They may know about the withdrawal since the account will have over $600 in it, but once it's cash, they don't know. Likewise, if I sell some stuff at a garage sale for cash and deposit that.

    What if there's no cash?

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  4.         Your statement about getting people used to obedience reminds me of some of the stuff I've read about the CPUSA and its infiltration of Washington during the New Deal.

            Hope Hale Davis, in her book GREAT DAY COMING, tells how she was required to steal something from the govt.office she worked in.  What she stole was trivial, some information on nutrition that her department would have sent free to any citizen that requested it.  What was important was that she violated the rules to get it.  That bound her to the party.

            In the other direction, the espionage apparatus put great emphasis on getting their spies to accept gifts or cash, even the ones who were ideological Communists serving the Great Proletarian Cause.  It created a relationship of obligation in the recipient.

            In the end, power was the only aim of such movements.

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  5. Ya know, it's nice to have a sock-full of half-dollars near at hand. One never knows when you might need a handy cosh, so it might be wise to use two very sturdy socks...

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  6. I keep saying the same thing, agin n' agin:
    Gonna be a lot of blood 'fore this thing is settled.

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  7. Quite a remarkable excerpt that you've posted here, Peter. I was not aware of of that book before and thank you for letting us know about it. Another book I would highly recommend for insight into what life was like under Nazism is "Not I: Memoirs of a German Childhood" by Joachim Fest, translated into English in 2012. Mr. Fest's father was a school principal who lost his job because he would not join the Nazi Party or implement its policies and barely managed to eke out a precarious existence for himself and family during the so-called Third Reich. Fest pére showed that it was possible to retain your honor and not to go along … but the price was often steep, even if you did not actively engage in resistance.

    Nikolaus Fest, Joachim's son, followed in his father's footsteps as a journalist; he is now a member of the European Parliament for the Alternative für Deutschland party (conservative, patriotic constitutionalists that include a small far-right contingent that is being blown out of proportion by the mainstream media) and consequently has been blackballed from all his former journalism gigs.

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  8. What if there's no cash?

    --a whole bunch of those younger than most of us are already being conditioned to this. FB Marketplace and several of the neighborhood trading groups my wife follows do selling and buying with digital apps, mostly venmo. "Just venmo me the money" is becoming very common. I get my monthly rent payment as venmo payments from the late 20s couple that lives there.

    I took a paypal payment at my last hamfest (BCF- before china flu).

    A whole chunk of the world's population uses on phone apps, and may not even have a traditional bank account.

    That said, there is a whole secondary economy out there where I make my living and it is primarily cash based. Estate, yard, garage, and online sales, swap meets, even the guys selling on corners and in empty parking lots are all places where cash changes hands.

    I encourage all the future kulaks here to start seeking out and practicing life in that economy BEFORE you find it is your only option.

    n

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  9. SiG beat me to it. Cash economy 'may' be our saving grace, or a barter economy with no money changing hands...

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  10. The problem with an electronic money system was clearly exhibited to me not long ago. A guy was looking for a motorhome for him and his child to live in. He had an account from some .gov dept for unemployment or similar that he planned to use for the purchase. When he tried to withdraw funds, he discovered they had emptied the account. Their stated reason was since he hadn't used it, he didn't need it. They refused to give it back to him.

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  11. The Vampire Economy is also available as a PDF download on Mises.org, as are many other relevant books.
    John in Indy

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  12. I’m glad to see folks are beginning to see the democrats as they actually are: fascists. In fact, Nazi, short for National Socialist German Workers' Party (in German, Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterparte) needs only to have the “German” removed to have what the democrats have become. Pre-WWII, the Nazi’s were no more for the “workers” than the democrats are now. They used that verbiage as subterfuge to gain control, and once achieved, paid no more lip service to it. If you run through the various definitions of democracy, representative democracy, fascism, socialism, and communism, you will see that an authoritarian government which rules in conjunction with corporations and severe economic and social regimentation, as well as forcible suppression of opposition best describes our current situation and it’s future arc Beware the Wikipedia progressive definition of fascism; they’ve inserted “right wing” into the definition. As most know, demofascists usually accuse opponents of their own inclination. As an example, “antifa”.

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