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opposing this development effectively on a small scale, just as it is incapable of doing so today
on a large scale. Even after the collapse of 1918 this bourgeois world had failed to realize that an
old world was vanishing and a new one being born and that there is no use in supporting and thus
artificially maintaining what has been found to be decayed and rotten, but that something healthy
must be substituted for it. A social structure that had become obsolete had cracked and every
attempt to maintain it was bound to fail.
threatened at any moment to lead to a collapse not only of the state but also of the provinces and
of the communities. The decisive thing, however, was this: Behind this methodical destruction of
Germany's economy, there stood the specter of Asiatic bolshevism. It was there then, just as
much as it is there today.