Quotes From "Leftism Revisited: From De Sade And Marx To Hitler And Pol Pot" By Erik Von KuehneltLeddihn

Generals, on the average, are far less bellicose than journalists...
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Generals, on the average, are far less bellicose than journalists or patriotic housewives: They know the horrors of a war and they dislike any break in the routine Erik Von KuehneltLeddihn
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Imagine if one should drag an innocent passer-by from the street to the operating room of a nearby hospital and force him at gunpoint to perform a delicate operation. The man would burst into tears. However, if one were to ask him to sound off on problems such as nuclear experiments, Vietnam, the borders of Israel, support for Indonesia, aid to Latin America, or recognition of Red China, in most cases he would start spouting opinions. Erik Von KuehneltLeddihn
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The shock which the Nazi horrors produced was so great, because they came after two hundred years of Roussellian propaganda about the goodness of human nature and also because the Germans were literate, clean, technologically progressive, hard working, “modern, ” sober, “orderly, ” and so forth. Yet about human nature we get more concrete and more pertinent information from the Bible than from statistics dealing with secondary education, the frequency of bathtubs or the mileage of superhighways. Erik Von KuehneltLeddihn
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There was no more reasonable sequitur between “provocation” and “reaction” in the case of the French Revolution than in the case of the Jews and the Nazis, the Armenians and the young Turks, the old Russian regime, the Kerensky interlude and bolshevism, Portuguese colonial rule in Angola and the horrors perpetrated by savage monsters of Holden Roberto’s “Liberation Front, ” the Belgian administration in the Congo and the delirious atrocities of Gbenye and Mulele, British colonialism in Kenya and the Mau-Mau. We have to face the fact that man is not “good”–only the extraordinary man is, only the heroic saint or the saintly hero, while the noble savage belongs to the world of fairy tales. Erik Von KuehneltLeddihn
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Modifying Clausewitz’ aphorism–war is the continuation of diplomacy by other means–one could say that in ideologically divided countries civil war is but the continuation of parliamentarism with other means. Erik Von KuehneltLeddihn
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The true rightist is not a man who wants to go back to this or that institution for the sake of a return; he wants first to find out what is eternally true, eternally valid, and then either to restore or reinstall it, regardless of whether it seems obsolete, whether it is ancient, contemporary, or even without precedent, brand new, "ultramodern." Old truths can be rediscovered, entirely new ones found. The Man of the Right does not have a time-bound, but a sovereign mind. Erik Von KuehneltLeddihn
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For the genuine materialist there is no fundamental, but only a gradual, an “evolutionary” difference, between man and a pest, a noxious insect Erik Von KuehneltLeddihn