In his book Mein Kampf, Adolf Hitler described the Judaization of the German press as one of the greatest dangers for Germany. It states that "(((the Jew was far too clever to have the entire press attack [German folk culture] equally))) . No, one part of them was there to cover against the other.[controlled opposition]" This clearly characterizes the tactics that the Jew used when taking possession of the press: divide and rule! This was considered - as with the political parties and business associations - to be the guiding principle of Alljuda when, after the founding of Bismarck's empire under the banner of liberalism, it set the tone in the press and the "(((Frankfurter Zeitung))) " and "(((Berliner Tageblatt))) " rose to become so-called world papers. Initially, the path of financing newspaper companies was chosen in order to gain influence on the design of the paper. In addition, there was the mass appearance of Jewish and Jewish-related editors and employees. In newspapers financed by Jews or friends of Jews, nothing was ever allowed to be written about or against the Jews and their concerns. Thus, even before the World War and in the following period - according to the statement of the Catholic priest Wilhelm Senn in the "Schoner Zukunft" in 1928 - "a conspiracy of silence on the Jewish question" arose in most German newspapers.
The oldest and most significant Jewish newspaper in Germany was established in the stronghold of trade Jewry, in Frankfurt am Main. Since the disastrous years of 1848/49, out of this Jewish metropolis, under the guise of a 'factual' economic and stock market newspaper, emerged the 'Frankfurter Zeitung' of the banking Jew Lob Sonnemann. In 1856, he took over the paper with the slogan: 'From material progress to spiritual advancement!' He then fled in 1866 with it from the Prussians for some time to democratic Stuttgart, but soon returned to Frankfurt thanks to Bismarck's undeserved leniency, to wage an underground yet effective struggle against the German Empire in the columns of the 'F. Z.' The paper shamelessly represented the interests of the enemy state, to the point that its publisher was rightly called by Bismarck (according to C. H. Brockhaus, Stunden mit Bismarck 1871/1878, Leipzig 1929, p. 84) 'a paid French agent.' Jewish revenge celebrated the unfortunate dismissal of the old imperial chancellor in the 'Frankfurter Zeitung' of March 21, 1890 with the base words: 'May it also be said of him (the system that went with Bismarck) that what has gone does not return; the nation will soon count March 18, 1890 among the days that are remembered with joy.' Although primarily the Jewish nation was meant here and not the German one, such and similar outbursts of genuine Jewish hatred towards Germans led Bismarck to make the following remark in 1892 in Friedrichsruh to Hermann Hofmann:
>"Actually, I have reaped ingratitude from them (i.e., the Jews). No statesman has done more for their emancipation than I have. Nevertheless, the democratic and radical papers, which are mainly in Jewish hands, attacked me most violently."
The word "Too late!", which is so immensely tragic for the German past, stands above this insight of our former Reich Chancellor, who, by the way, had declared in 1878 with clear reference to the Jewish newspaper writers in the Reichstag:
>"Such people would suffocate everywhere there (in England and France) under the crushing contempt of their compatriots! This is not the case with us alone, with us they do not succumb to contempt, they hold their foreheads high, they find public defenders even in these rooms."
This mindset of his contemporaries, aptly described by Bismarck, who under the spell of liberalist-Marxist fraternal delusions did not know any Jewish question, was particularly exploited by the Jewish press to solidify their position and soon become dominant. Shortly after the Franco-German War of 1870/71, the Jew Rudolf Mosse began to establish a rapidly growing newspaper conglomerate with the "Berliner Tageblatt."
The ascent of this "prominent" figure was genuinely Jewish: this Eastern Jew Ruben Moses had immigrated from Graetz in Posen to Prussia and immediately Germanized his name to Rudolf Mosse.
In 1867, he set up a series of advertisement collection points and soon began publishing entire advertisement supplements for middle-class magazines such as "Kladderadatsch," "Gartenlaube," and "Fliegende Blatter." At the end of 1871, he founded the "Berliner Tageblatt," which, as stated in the deed of foundation and the promotional letters sent to Jews, was "for the promotion of the interests of Judaism."
Until 1933, the Lachmann-Mosse family remained the owners of the publishing house. The Mosse publishing house produced, until 1933 (data and names as of 1932!): The "Berliner Tageblatt," whose editorial board included the following Jews and half-Jews: (((Th. Wolff, E. Feder, G. Stein, F. Pinner, Priester, Goldstein, E. Hamburger, A. Kerr = Kempner, Einstein, Sinsheimer, Jonas, Mamlock))) . Foreign representatives included, among others, A. Singer in Budapest, J. Schmerz in Bucharest, P. Block in Paris, and Th. Sternberg in Tokyo. The circulation during its heyday was 310,000 or more.
The "Berliner Morgenzeitung", a genuine, cleverly disguised Jewish newspaper for the bourgeois masses, with a circulation of about 78,000.
The "Berliner Volkszeitung", which was more attuned to the instincts of the Marxist working masses and reached a record circulation of 420,000.
The "8-Uhr-Abendblatt", of which Victor Hahn was the publisher. Ironically, it bore the subtitle """National Newspaper""", which would only have been justified had the word "Jewish" been prefixed to it. The editorial staff included: H. Zucker, F. Hirsch, Dr. Frankfurter, E. Leimdorfer, F. Hollaender, P. Pinthus, and E. Neckarsuhmer. The circulation exceeded 170,000.
Additionally, the following magazines were published by Mosse: "Bader-Almanach", "Illustrated Family Newspaper", "Garden Flora", "Foundry Newspaper", "German Colonial Newspaper (!!), "Rudolf-Mosse-Almanach", "De Post van Holland", "German Empire Address Book", "Trade and Commerce", "Technical Review". Mosse also had exclusive distribution and exclusive advertising acceptance for 11 foreign address books.
The following should be noted about the treasonous activity of the "B.T." [Berliner Tageblatt (((newspaper))) ] during the World War: In 1915, the former Berlin representative of the "Daily Mail", F. W. Wile, published an anti-German hate book with the significant title "Who's Who in Hunland". In this pamphlet, the German-hater praises the "B.T." as follows: "Its tendency is directed against the government, against Prussianism, against the military, and is semi-socialist. Officially, it represents radical democracy. (((Since it belongs to Jews and is published by Jews, it is also authoritative for the opinions of influential Berlin Jewry))) . No other newspaper is so well known abroad, and his articles are often quoted by foreign newspapers, especially the English ones."
After decades of fighting, which were immensely damaging to German interests before the whole world, the German military idea, the German people and the Empire, the spirit of treason of the "B.T." revealed itself in the middle of the World War when, on December 13, 1916, it wrote full of derision - unpunished by the censorship - "This war will continue, this 'great time' will remain with us until somewhere some unexpected thing will appear between the fighting ranks." In this vile attitude, from the very beginning, even if occasionally disturbed by business envy, an ally of Jewish subversive work found himself in the diverse press products of the great Berlin publishing house Ullstein.
The Ullstein press, which reached the highest possible circulation and scope in Germany before 1933, was founded by the Jewish paper dealer Leopold Ullstein, who created the "Berliner Zeitung" in 1877. The paper continuously incited against Bismarck and rallied support for the emerging Social Democratic Party, particularly among the Jews, through Marx and Lassalle. With typical department store methods and ruthless, immoral sensational reporting, the newspapers of this publishing house soon reached an unprecedented height (numerically!). In 1887, Ullstein bought the esteemed "Vossische Zeitung," which had been in German family ownership since 1704 and had long been close to the Prussian state government, and transformed it into a voice for a distinctly anti-imperialist, pro-French policy, a role it maintained until its end in 1934.
The mammoth structure of the Ullstein publishing house still published the following newspapers and magazines in 1932 with accompanying circulation figures:
1. "Berliner Morgenpost" (called "Mottenpost" from the German folk joke). The editors were: Robolsky Bernstein, Breisacher, German, Falk, Gluck, Loeb, Mendel, Munzer, Strindberg, Weckwarth. The normal circulation was: 572,770, on Sundays 658,330, and was the highest circulation of all newspapers published in the Weimar Intermediate Empire!
2. "Vossische Zeitung", whose editors were "adorned" with the names: Elbau (from Mandelbaum!), Misch, Guttmann, Bernauer, Caspary, Goldstein, Salomon, Wallenberg, Dusterwald, Wiesenthal, Elsesser. Circulation: 73,970 on weekdays, 87,260 on Sundays.
3. "Berliner Allgemeine Zeitung" Circulation over 50,000.
4. "B. Z. am Mittag" In the editorship the Jews and half-Jews: Falk, Jacobsohn, Muhsam, Rehling Circulation: over 160,000.
5. "Tempo" Editors: Gutmann, Jacobi, Lachmann, Lustig, Zuckerkandl. Circulation: 125,000.
6. "Berliner Montagspost" Circulation: 171,380.
7. "Die Grune Post" Circulation: about 920,000.[Expand Post]
8. "Wohnungstauschanzeiger" Circulation: 7,240.
9. "Berliner Illustrierte Zeitung", once the largest picture newspaper with a monthly circulation of 1.75 million
10. "Die Dame" Circulation: 48,890.
11. "Das Blatt der Hausfrau" Circulation: 36,740.
12. "Zeitbilder" Circulation: over 80,000.
13. "Uhu" (magazine). Circulation: 145,000.
14. "Die Koralle" (magazine). Circulation: 37,800.
15. "Der Querschnitt" (magazine). Mintage: 13,250.
16. "Die Bauwelt". Circulation: 12,300.
17. "Deutsches Bauwesen". Circulation: 9,200.
18th "Bauwelt Catalogue". Circulation: 6,000.
19. "Traffic Engineering". Circulation: 3,000.
20. "Berliner Handels-Register".
21. "ABC timetable".
The public opinion "fabricated" in these numerous press products by Ullstein as well as by Hosse, Sonnemann and the Jew provincial papers arose according to the recipe that the Jew G. Bernhard revealed in a rare fit of truthfulness in the "Vossische Zeitung" No. 244 (1925):
"But who still asks whether (((public opinion))) is right or not? It is there, it is asserting itself, and the judgment of this (((public opinion))) is influenced by a few (((wire-pullers))) who, with a great deal of money, have procured for themselves an extensive press apparatus== in the various countries, through whose bells they can loudly proclaim whatever they want."