In the tumultuous years between the end of World War I and the rise of the Third Reich, Germany was plunged into a maelstrom of political instability, economic collapse, and social disintegration.
An excellent and well researched article, thank you.
“Even Otto Strasser, who broke with the NSDAP to pursue his own form of socialist nationalism, drew heavily from the broader Conservative Revolutionary movement, particularly its critiques of materialism and its calls for a spiritual and cultural revival.”
This is true. This same philosophical trajectory carried through into the post WW2 political activity of Otto Ernst Remer’s Socialist Reich Party; an ostensibly ‘far right’ party, which received funding from the Soviet Union.
There is really no logical contradiction between a volkish political impulse and communitarian economics. The artificial division of left and right has had its day in 2025.
To quote Alain de Benoist: Left? Right? That’s over.
An excellent and well researched article, thank you.
“Even Otto Strasser, who broke with the NSDAP to pursue his own form of socialist nationalism, drew heavily from the broader Conservative Revolutionary movement, particularly its critiques of materialism and its calls for a spiritual and cultural revival.”
This is true. This same philosophical trajectory carried through into the post WW2 political activity of Otto Ernst Remer’s Socialist Reich Party; an ostensibly ‘far right’ party, which received funding from the Soviet Union.
There is really no logical contradiction between a volkish political impulse and communitarian economics. The artificial division of left and right has had its day in 2025.
To quote Alain de Benoist: Left? Right? That’s over.