A series of articles by philosopher Anthony M. Ludovici comparing the achievements of National Socialist Germany and Fascist Italy and those of the liberal democracies--and Britain in particular.
This collection starts with a 1936 eye-witness review of Germany, written after a personal visit to that country. Ludovici describes how the Hitler government set about solving the unemployment crisis, a declining population, and urbanisation.
It also includes fascinating statistics on how the crime rate had been reduced, how many home start-up loans had been granted to new couples (repayable by having children), and of the number of new farmers created over the previous three years. He also describes the workings of eugenics courts and other measures to improve the health and well-being of the population.
The second essay is a review of a 1921 book explaining the application of Fascism in Italy, in which Ludovici takes the opportunity to describe the origin and meaning of that ideology for Italy--and what it achieved in opposing Communism.
The rest of the book consists of a number of essays studying the practical application of liberal democracy in western nations, focusing on Britain, the author's native country. In these essays, Ludovici shows how the core of liberalism is in effect poorly-disguised Communism (in terms of its underlying principles of equality, regardless of biological reality) and also how its policies are guaranteed to lead to racial degeneracy, economic collapse and the destruction of Western civilization.
The first two essays were originally published in The English Review journal, and the rest were originally published in The South African Observer in the 1950s and 1960s.
Contents
Anthony M. Ludovici: A Brief Biography
Hitler and the Third Reich
Book Review: The Fascist Movement in Italian Life
In Defence of Conservatism
The Black Invasion of Britain
Britain's Conservative Statesmen
How the Blind Lead the Blind
Poetic Justice
Personality in statesmanship
Western Europe's Social History -- In One Word
Feelings Masquerading as Thoughts in the Modern World
Subsidized Sloth and Subnormality in the Socialist State.