• PugJesus@piefed.socialOPM
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    3 days ago

    Explanation: Hitler’s famously unreadable screed, Mein Kampf, actually outlines his plans for Nazi Germany in broadly recognizable terms, even if the specifics like the death camps had yet to be worked out.

    It was published nearly a decade before his rise to power.

    Foreign leaders still treated him as though he had very limited goals instead of what he had actually stated as his plans, all the way up until the invasion of Poland which kicked off WW2.

    • First_Thunder@lemmy.zip
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      3 days ago

      I tried to read it, it is so badly written. Might be a bad translation, but there is so much rambling that I didn’t manage to reach much more than half of it

      • PugJesus@piefed.socialOPM
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        3 days ago

        I’ve heard from native German speakers that it is legitimately rambling and incoherent, and that translators often have difficulty presenting it because it’s easy to seem like you ‘messed up’ outputting gibberish, but a good translation has to be accurate to the source itself being gibberish.

        Famously, even fellow fascist Mussolini hated Mein Kampf and regarded it as unreadable, lmao.

      • leagman1@feddit.org
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        3 days ago

        If it’s loads of rambling, then it’s true to the German original. It’s a badly written book that has aged badly and has lots and lots of obscure rambling.