Comments by "Nick Nolte" (@nicknolte8671) on "Why they don't tell you about Hitler's "Shrinking Markets" problem" video.

  1.  @TheImperatorKnight  Oswald Spengler, the intellectual which gave Nazis an air of respectability and greatly inspired them and who tried to reconcile socialist vocabulary with Manchester liberalism agrees with you and he goes one step further: not only is it theft, it's "Bolshevism". "In Spengler’s Prussian utopia, the workers can hence look forward to working even on Sunday. It need hardly be said that progressive taxation and political pressure to increase wages are detestable in Spengler’s eyes. He expends great energy in denouncing what he terms the current Lohndiktatur or Lohnbolschewismus (“wage-dictatorship” and “wage-bolshevism”) of the trade unions; similarly, in a 1924 lecture dedicated to the issue of taxation, he excoriates the imposition of taxes on the rich, which has become nothing short of a “question of life and death” (Spengler 1933c: 299). He there equates the “West-European taxation policies” with “dry Bolshevism, which threatens to level down everything which protrudes above the masses” (309). In terms difficult to tell apart from those of a stringent economic liberal, he concludes this address by pressing to eliminate the political-democratic administration of taxation and—looking ahead to such organizations as The World Trade Organization or The International Monetary Fund?—to entrust all decisions on such matters to economic experts, a “world conference of insiders to the economic life.” “The more ‘just’ a tax is,” he avows, “the more unjust it is today. In the evaluation of such things the economy has the first word, not the jurist, the professional politician or the fiscal civil servant” (310)." --Ishay Landa, "Apprentice's Sorcerer" Spengler is the guy whose views you wildly misrepresent by the way. Why? He shares your ideology.
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