Hitler said, "Mass demonstrations must burn into the little man's soul
the conviction that, though a little worm, he is part of a great
dragon."
-copied from here.
In "Tiger By The Tail," some Scothans also feel:
"...that darker longing for submergence of self which humankind had also known, too often, too well." (p. 254)
Scothans have been forcibly unified and are denied self-advancement by "...the aristocratic, anti-commercial order at home..." (ibid.) One way to cope with this is to identify themselves with the outward aggressive urge of the Frithian kingdom. At University, a Fascist-influenced student told me that we need to recognize "the mystical." This interested me until I learned that, by "mystical," he meant not self-transcendence but "marching together..."
Nazis also scapegoated a racial minority and Dominic Flandry introduces this policy as part of his sabotage of Schotania. See Flandry On Scotha: Earl Morgaar.
1 comment:
Kaor, Paul!
Hitler, unfortunately, and like Lenin, was a man of real talents and abilities. Else he would never have risen to become master of Germany. It would have been so much better for the world if Adolf had focused on his artistic interests, architecture and painting. So, I'm not surprised that he was, alas, a shrewd and imaginative politician.
And we see Chunderban Desai saying very similar things abouut "that darker longing for submergence of the self" in Chapter 21 of THE DAY OF THEIR RETURN: "Man has never really wanted a comfortable God, a reasonable or kindly one; he has wanted a faith, a cause, which promises everything but mainly which requires everthing. Like moths to the candle flame." And Desai cited Islam as one example of that kind of "submergence."
Ad astra! Sean
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