Post by account_disabled on Nov 30, 2023 17:42:14 GMT 12
In our century, the 21st, there are Phone Number Data still readings that create problems . Books which, if published, lead to complaints, discrimination, labels attached without escape. To me all this seems ridiculous - no, it is objectively ridiculous - we live in a country that is claimed to be democratic, free, in which an individual decides for himself which readings to do and which not. But this is not intended to be a polemical post, just an article in which to show five books that have given us a hard time. As if, by reading them, possessing them, the person was to be incriminated, avoided or worse. I remember a scene on the news from years ago, but not what crime it was referring to.
The authorities confiscated weapons of various types and placed them, as usual, on display on a table. Along with those weapons there also appeared a book - not one of the taboo ones I will talk about - an essay on the Years of Lead. I wondered what it had to do with guns. It was an essay, a book, it was literature, which has nothing to do with weapons and crimes. Mein Kampf by Adolf Hitler Mein KampfMy battle , written by the German dictator – when he was not yet such – during his imprisonment in the Landsberg am Lech prison after the attempted coup d'état ( putsch ) in Munich which took place between 8 and 9 November 1923. It is an autobiographical essay that shows Hitler's subsequent political line and for this reason, I believe, it is considered a book to be avoided.
But I am convinced that no book can change an individual's thoughts and it is not by reading Mein Kampf that a person can transform into a bloodthirsty dictator. Certain flaws are already present in DNA. The Historical Institute of Munich wants to reprint this work, which will also contain some critical notes, but there are already problems and controversies sparked by this initiative. The book was banned in 1945 – I always say that the Middle Ages are not over yet – and in Germany it is forbidden to promulgate Nazi ideas. But can publishing a book ever mean promulgating ideas of any kind? No, absolutely not, as far as I'm concerned. I bought Mein Kampf over 20 years ago at a stall near the university. It cost 5,000 lire and was a paperback.
The authorities confiscated weapons of various types and placed them, as usual, on display on a table. Along with those weapons there also appeared a book - not one of the taboo ones I will talk about - an essay on the Years of Lead. I wondered what it had to do with guns. It was an essay, a book, it was literature, which has nothing to do with weapons and crimes. Mein Kampf by Adolf Hitler Mein KampfMy battle , written by the German dictator – when he was not yet such – during his imprisonment in the Landsberg am Lech prison after the attempted coup d'état ( putsch ) in Munich which took place between 8 and 9 November 1923. It is an autobiographical essay that shows Hitler's subsequent political line and for this reason, I believe, it is considered a book to be avoided.
But I am convinced that no book can change an individual's thoughts and it is not by reading Mein Kampf that a person can transform into a bloodthirsty dictator. Certain flaws are already present in DNA. The Historical Institute of Munich wants to reprint this work, which will also contain some critical notes, but there are already problems and controversies sparked by this initiative. The book was banned in 1945 – I always say that the Middle Ages are not over yet – and in Germany it is forbidden to promulgate Nazi ideas. But can publishing a book ever mean promulgating ideas of any kind? No, absolutely not, as far as I'm concerned. I bought Mein Kampf over 20 years ago at a stall near the university. It cost 5,000 lire and was a paperback.