Editorial 1930

For the first ten years, Erich Schairer wrote weekly editorials for his “Sonntags-Zeitung”, practically without gaps. Only in the years 1931 and 1932 did his colleague Hermann List temporarily become the leading article. >> read more

Editorial 1931

For the first ten years, Erich Schairer wrote weekly editorials for his “Sonntags-Zeitung”, practically without gaps. Only in the years 1931 and 1932 did his colleague Hermann List temporarily become the leading article. >> read more

Editorial 1932

For the first ten years, Erich Schairer wrote weekly editorials for his “Sonntags-Zeitung”, practically without gaps. Only in the years 1931 and 1932 did his colleague Hermann List temporarily become the leading article. >> read more

Editorial 1933

For the first ten years, Erich Schairer wrote weekly editorials for his “Sonntags-Zeitung”, practically without gaps. Only in the years 1931 and 1932 did his colleague Hermann List temporarily become the leading article. >> read more

The German Reichstag is on the 21. March had come together with an unfamiliar ceremony: to bury himself. The story is rich in irony. But a parliament that turns itself off in this way, a parliamentary sanctioned dictatorship as the current German: this is really not a commonplace event. >> read more

The victory of the swastika in Germany at the 5. March is the victory of an unprecedented skillful propaganda campaign. If now, as one hears, a special propaganda ministry should be created for one of the chief investigators of the National Socialist election campaign, Herr Goebbels, that would be a clear proof of the significance which the government itself attaches to a virtuoso instrument , >> read more

Does it only seem that way to me, or does the new German Chancellor really have this striking resemblance to Wilhelm II of Hohenzollern? ... Whoever opposed him, he wanted to crush him (eg the evil Social Democrats); he intended to lead his people to glorious times; he was the peace emperor and then slipped into a war. (And he lost the war.) >> read more

It is tragic that today one has to preach to the proletariat what a bourgeois politician said about 25 years ago, that is, at a time when there was no fascism, and under a system that compared to today is almost "parliamentary" “Could call. In a certain sense one can speak of a "dialectical" tragedy. Thesis: The entire situation imperatively requires proletarian unification. Antithesis: This agreement is impossible for the moment. >> read more

There is one good thing about the great economic crisis in which we find ourselves: it broadcasts visual instruction on the capitalist system, under whose rule people can starve to death in addition to full chafing. >> read more

The ID card came into the house. Number so and so. Polling station here and there. What do you do? Stay home? But they will come then in the afternoon, the tugs, and radiate mellow fury. Actually, really. After all, you're a citizen, are not you? >> read more