Mein Kampf to be Published in Germany – With 3,700 Jewish Comments

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
October 18, 2015

mein-kampf

Germany is going to print Mein Kampf again, but they are only doing so with massive annotations written by Jews. This is being dictated by the government, meaning that no, you won’t be able to purchase a thinner version without the commentary.

Because even if you think you are an adult capable of making your own decisions about what books you read, Mama Merkel still wants to look out for you.

Daily Express:

Copyright on the infamous book – whose title means “My Struggle” – is due to expire next year and German and French editions are already being planned.

Publishers will have free reign to print the far-right diatribe as the seven-decade anniversary of its author’s death has now passed, meaning the Bavarian State, which owned the copyright, can no longer control where it is disseminated.

Hitler dictated the lengthy tome during his time in prison in 1923 while leader of the Nazi party.

The government-funded Institute of Contemporary History in Munich will oversee the publication of a highly-controversial German language version.

Fayard, a French publishing company, also plans to print an annotated version of the manuscript.

It said in a statement: “The publication of this book central to the history of the 20th century will be accompanied by a critical analysis established by a scientific committee of French and foreign historians.”

Fears have been raised that Mein Kampf could enter the bestseller charts.

Germans are permitted to own the book, which originally came out in two volumes in 1925 and 1926 and was printed 12million times, but reprinting after 1945 was banned.

The full number of comments that Merkel wants you to read to remind you Hitler is evil is 3,700. It literally doubles the page count. For every word Hitler wrote, Jews need a word to explain it away.