Camp Gagnon - Demonic Hitler : The Esoteric History of Nazi Germany
Episode Date: February 17, 2025🚨Remember to Rate This Show 🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟Control Body Odor ANYWHERE with @shop.mando and get $5 off your Starter Pack (that’s over 40% off) with promo code CAMP at shopmando.com! #mandopo...d #sponsored #ad Shoutout to our sponsors: Mando, MagicSpoon, Huel, Morgan & Morgan and Bluechew MagicSpoon: https://magicspoon.com/campHuel: https://huel.com/camp FREE NEWSLETTER HERE: https://camp.beehiiv.com/We're about to take a wild ride into the twisted world of Nazi occultism. From the origins of occultism in Germany to the mind-bending rituals performed in concentration camps, we'll explore how the Nazis hijacked ancient beliefs and practices to push their own sick agenda. We'll also delve into the influence of theosophy and anthroposophy on Nazi ideology, the search for Thor's hammer and other mythical artifacts, and even the Nazis' belief in vampires and werewolves. Join me as we shine a light on one of the most unsettling and little-known aspects of Nazi history. WELCOME TO CAMP! TIMESTAMP: 0:00 Summary of Nazi Occultism2:23 Origins of Occultism In Germany8:52 Pushing Agenda To Make History19:28 Theosophy + Anthroposophy25:13 Theosophy’s Idea of Race30:45 Early Influence on Ariosophy32:38 Origins of Arianism + German Connection38:35 Why Nordic People Were Chosen41:22 The History of The Swastika 46:06 Formation of Thule Society + Hitler Takes Over German Worker Party54:49 Rosenberg and Occultism58:04 Hitler Owned The Book “Magic”1:00:20 Gnosticism 1:07:34 What Was Hitlers Religion?1:15:00 Why Were Occultist High Ranking Nazis?1:19:06 Search For Thor's Hammer + Ancient Technology1:24:35 Hitler Capturing The Holy Lance + The Wild Hunt1:29:26 Banning of Occultism + Magician 1:39:48 Concentration Camp Prisoners Used For Occult Magic1:44:49 Remote Viewing To Capture Mussolini 1:47:02 Author Hired To Write Propaganda1:50:48 Parapsychologist Magician Writes Horoscopes1:55:33 Vampires and Werewolves2:10:19 Nazi’s Trust Interest In Miracle Weapons2:14:46 Check Out Dr. Kerlander’s Books
Transcript
Discussion (0)
We're going to discuss one of the most interesting topics in history to me.
It's a combination of history and occultism, but they had this weird fascination with the supernatural.
The supernatural imaginary, this collection of beliefs.
Himmler might be the only leading Nazi who believed in almost every doctrine we've talked about.
Wagner and Gutter Damarung and Werewolves and Vampires.
So the Tool Society, and named after this place.
Atlantis.
Hyperborea, these are all effectively the same place of some type of lost civilization.
In the North Atlantic, there might have been.
been frost giants or they might have had a third eye, they might have mated with aliens.
So it's more like a fun project.
They don't know that they're going to lose.
Then they lose.
Why does he put Himmler?
Basically is his number two in Hess, who's also very interested in occultism, is so close
in the high brass of the Nazi party.
Even Gerbils and Hitler believe in some of this stuff.
Himmler and Hess were so into what they got made fun of.
Hitler himself recognizes that we need to move away from that if we're going to become a mass
movement.
He had sent his men to go find Thor's Hammer.
Did they uncover anything?
Did they find any artifacts?
So this is an interesting thing.
It's a question I often get.
Hitler is now going to start an Eastern Front War with Russia.
And Hess is concerned about this.
So he consults with his astrologer, flies to basically broker a deal, gets captured.
And Hitler is livid about this.
And basically they pin it on the astrologer.
And he bans all this mysticism in Nazi German.
That's the narrative that Bormon and Hydric and Goebbels give Hitler.
It's not completely accurate.
Eric Curlander.
How are you, sir?
Excellent.
How are you?
I'm doing excellent.
Thank you so much for being here.
I'm really, really excited to talk because today we're going to discuss one of the most
interesting topics in history to me.
This is a combination of some of the most sort of morbid and interesting things.
It's a combination of history and occultism.
You wrote an excellent book, Hitler's Monsters, sort of an exploration of occultism in the Third Reich.
And to me, it is the only thing that put the context of the Nazi atrocities into perspective.
It made me understand the fundamental, I guess, idea that went behind sort of the war and then the ethnic cleansing that followed therefore.
This idea, like, you know, when we talk about Arianism, and it's, you know, I think in school people are taught,
okay, there's this bad guy Hitler
and he wanted to make the master race
where people have blonde hair and blue eyes.
And I was like, okay, all right, that makes sense.
And that's why they wanted to kill
the undesirables, quote, unquote.
And I go, okay, that makes sense.
But then they say the Russians, they're not Aryan.
I was like, they're blonde hair, blue eyes.
And they go, okay, but the Italians, they are.
And I was like, well, not many Italians have blonde hair.
And they go, and the Japanese, they're Aryan.
I was like, well, what is...
Partial.
But I'm like, how does any of this make sense?
And then they're like, oh, but we need to preserve the Nordic and Scandinavian traditions.
I was like, they're not even, what is, it, all of, all of it kind of falls apart from that
fundamental principle of, you know, what Aryanism that I think is commonly thought to be.
So I guess as a starting point, I guess I would love to sort of unpack that idea, unpack,
you know, Hitler's religion.
What was the religion of the Nazis?
What did that look like?
Some people claim he was Catholic.
And the thought leadership in sort of the National Socialist Party and what many of the high-ranking executives, what they believed.
And there's all this interesting mysticism around like objects that they were attempting to find.
There's a lot of like lore kind of Indiana Jones style, you know, trying to uncover cauldrons and holy lances and Thor's Hammer and all these really, really interesting things looking at this sort of, you know, terrible regime.
but they had this weird fascination with the supernatural.
So I guess to unpack it, could we start around the turn of the century, around the 1900s,
what was happening culturally and spiritually in Western Europe that sort of paved the way
for this philosophy to take hold in Germany?
Great.
Well, thank you, Mark.
And again, it's great to be on the show.
And I'm glad you want to start in the 19th century because this is important.
It's important to kind of mention three things in response to your kind of
excellent summary. The first is that the subtitle is a supernatural history of the Third Reich,
precisely to get away from this idea that the occult per se is the fuel to Nazi ideology.
The argument I make is a bigger one, that there are multiple elements of ideas in the 19th century,
which include folklore and mythology. That's not technically occultism or esotericism.
What we call border science, Grenzvesenchaft, what we might call pseudoscience now,
which is we would say now, it might be adjacent to occultism or conspiracism, but it's not the same thing, right?
And then you have religion, right?
You have paganism.
You have German Christianity.
Again, does it fit the same kind of mental universe, certainly, but not the occult, not witchcraft, not werewolves.
So when you bring this all together, I would say there's something developing, which I call the supernatural imaginary and has all these elements in it.
And we'll impact that a little more in a second.
The second thing from your introduction that I want to make sure everyone's aware of is that
there's this tension between science and religion and science and faith-based views of the world,
which percolate the supernatural imaginary.
And one way of squaring the circle throughout our conversations is to remember that
when fascists and far-right thinkers, much like,
many occultists, esotericists, and people who are invested in particular evangelical or fundamentalist
belief operate, they will quickly abandon materialist science when it doesn't fit their view.
So they'll invoke science to get legitimacy, but when pushed, they will then abandon it.
So the way that all these things worked is they would often invoke some scientific theory,
sometimes a legitimate one, sometimes less legitimate.
And if someone then pushed them and said, well, that doesn't make sense.
How can they would just try to exclude that person from the conversation.
So that's just a rhetorical and kind of psychological approach that you see on the far right then and now.
So that's not unique to the Nazis.
That's just what people who often have these faith-based ideas they want to be seen as legitimate do when people who don't accept them engage with them.
Interesting.
So utilizing scientific data, but not scientific methods.
Or even scientific forms.
So they talk about experiments and they talk about theories and hypotheses, but they're still based in what we would call faith.
And when actual scientists, who will themselves often say, we aren't sure about this or that, say, well, let's conduct an experiment.
And it doesn't prove their theory true.
They want to abandon those individuals or freeze them out.
We can talk about that.
We talk about world ice theory is a great example of this.
Right.
And then the third thing, and we'll get to it later on.
which really isn't going on in the late 19th century,
but you mentioned ethnic cleansing and racism and Aryanism.
The important thing to point out is, for me,
the supernatural thinking is kind of the special sauce, so to speak.
It's the catalyst for a lot of the worst human experiments
and kind of genocidal plans, but it's not the foundation.
The foundation is much broader,
and that is in eugenics and Western science
and imperialism and theories of race
that many Western countries accepted.
That's how you get to the Holocaust
or the precipice of it.
But that's also going to be where the Nazis
and other kind of far-right thinkers break off
because what happened in the 30s and 40s
is a lot of these experiments like the Tuskegee experiments
in the United States, right,
giving syphilist to African-Americans,
claims that different racial groups had lower IQs.
There were enough mainstream scientists
testing those things and saying,
actually, that's not true. There's much more diversity within populations than between them,
whether it's IQ, strength, anything. And so what was happening is a lot of scientists,
even if they were ideologically driven to be racist or sexist, when the science kept coming
back saying this can't be proven, they'd pull back from it. If you're a far right thinker
immersed in esotericism, when the science doesn't back you up and you still want to commit
something like the Holocaust, you just invoke the fact that the Jews, they aren't just biologically
inferior. They're also vampires and parasites and innately communistic. So I want to just get those
three things out at the beginning. We're talking about a larger framework, the supernatural imaginary.
I call it, we could call it romantic thinking. It's not just esotericism or cultism.
The fact that there is this tension between invoking science, everyone from the late 19th century on,
every party in the West, and later on, all industrialized societies, Japan, will invoke science
and need to use science and technology to win war. So no one's completely rejecting science.
This isn't the 12th century. But what you see that's very interesting in liberal societies,
while there's a lot of tension around scientific truth, very often you will see a sort of consensus
build after lots of experiments and theories get proven time and again. In fascist society,
as you can see a great selectivity about it,
because they'll invoke faith as often as they invoke science.
And ideology.
And that's how you get, what I would argue,
the radical nature of Nazi racial policies.
They weren't any different.
I mean, if you look what the Belgians did in the Congo,
what United States did with Native Americans,
in the long run, they also killed millions of people
of a different race.
But the systematic nature of it and the justifications
were more, I think, radicalized by this faith-based ideology.
science alone wouldn't have allowed the Nazis to get away with what they did. They needed ideology. They needed some of these esoteric and mythological, almost religious beliefs. Interesting. And I guess even the pursuit of trying to create a history, which is very interesting.
Excellent. Like what I forget the term in German. It was Himmler's Idrabak.
On an Arabah.
On an Arabah. Institute for ancestral research is what is how we translated.
It's conceptually fascinating. I think it has sort of almost modern parallels in certain ways where, you know, there's an attempt to make history to sort of go out and find what we need, having an agenda and then proving it to be true.
Yeah, let's unpack that for a second.
So first of all, many historian, sociologists, political scientists have talked about the way that it was really first liberals, it wasn't fascist, invented traditions to create a modern nation state, right?
Because for 5,000 years of history, people identified based on where they grew up, their kin network, their family, their culture, their language, or religion, right?
in the Islamic world or Christian world,
you can have very different ethnicities
and kind of pre-Christian or pre-Islamic traditions
and still feel like you're part of this universal network
well into the Middle Ages.
And so a bunch of historian, social scientists
have been trying to figure out, well, why does that change?
And their argument, I'm not saying this is the only argument out there,
but one argument is that a bunch of middle-class liberals
who wanted to create a nation state, right,
in the late 18th, early 19th, early 19th century,
invented traditions. They took selectively things from the history of wherever they were. They
codified the language and said, this is the only way to speak and write the language. And they
created nations or invented traditions. There's a famous article by Terence Ranger on this,
that the Scots actually didn't wear kilts really that often. If you look at the data,
and then the minute they were forced to be part of the British Empire of 70-07, all of a sudden,
you start to have these new cultural traditions,
including wearing kilts as a way to differentiate yourself
from the English.
Interesting.
And are you suggesting that that's a top-down change?
Exactly.
So these historians would say that it's the middle class.
It's not the aristocracy, because the aristocracy in this bizarre way
are universalist, right?
They can be racist, but the race can transcend nation, right?
So you have all these different Germanic, Italian and Spanish,
nobles and are marrying and they don't mind having multi-ethnic nations, multi-ethnic empires.
In fact, nationalism, liberal nationalism is dangerous for their empires.
Because liberalism is about freeing the individual and giving you self-government.
Nationalism is about creating your own state around your ethnicity, not your class or your
birth.
So liberal nationalism was a threat to the aristocracy.
So I don't want to say it's elites in the sense of like aristocrats, but a rising middle
class that was literate, that saw the benefits of a strong nation state that was both free
and capitalist, had a constitution, had an army. How do you create that when you have all these
peasants who don't read very well? You've got workers over here are frustrated at their lives.
You've got a bunch of elites in different parts of the country. You see themselves as
southern, northern, Sicilian, you know, Piedmontese. You invent these traditions. You spread it
through what Benedict Anderson calls print capitalism.
Everyone reads the newspaper.
They start to feel like they're part of the same culture, country.
They have the same interests.
Interesting to see what Benedict Anderson would say now with the Internet,
because you don't have those common things anymore.
And that creates nation.
So what I would argue the fascists are doing is they're simply taking slightly different
traditions, also looking at mythology, history, culture, right, ideology, religion,
and figuring out what is best at promoting their particular view of nation and empire, right?
They're not the first to do that.
It's a liberal nationalist, the 19th century, do it first.
That's interesting.
But the alternative explanation is that it's ground up, that people actually have affinities,
anthropologists, study this, historians, with people who are like them, psychologists,
whether it's appearance, culture, language.
So that's always there.
it's called the primordialist argument.
And then all that leaders have to do is invoke it.
So in this theory, right, and this is how Italian fascists viewed the world, the first fascists,
all the stuff that made you Italian was already there.
It preceded the liberal nation state.
You beloved your language.
You had vestigial memories of the Roman Empire and, you know, you were into Apollo or, you know, the Roman versions of all of
of all the same gods, the Greek gods, and the Greeks were part of your kind of national tradition, right, Greek culture.
It feels very blood and soil.
And all you had to do was kind of operationalize it.
So one view, which you could say is more liberal or Marxist, is that you create the, it's constructivist, right?
You construct the nation and identity in a very conscious way.
and the more, I don't want to say just right wing,
they're obviously liberal and left wing sociologists
and theorists who look at it, say,
actually it's already there,
so you just have to operationalize it.
You don't have to create it.
Right, if this ambient, as you said,
primordial feeling is existing,
you can just sort of catalyze it and then it'll persist.
And furthermore, I guess,
if people are looking for a countercultural attitude,
if they already are feeling this counterculturalism,
you just kind of need to give them,
them the token to say, hey, wearing these tartans is, you know, our counterculturalist ideal.
And then they can jump onto it. And it raises a really interesting moral question as far as
like nation building goes, which is a, you know, is a difficult task, the idea of nation building.
I mean, it's a fascinating thing that any nation can even get created specifically, not on,
you know, geographical or like ethnic lines, but just as an idea is crazy. But it raises the
question, is it okay to lie to your populace in order to form.
the nation. I don't know if I'm qualified to answer it, but it is an interesting question.
Any kind of affinity group, though, is going to have to at some point smooth out certain
individual differences, right? Whether it's a church or a religion or even a large family or a
kinship group. So the question is not so much about lying or not lying. It's what do you
sees on that feels authentic or has a real history, if you take the primordialist, that can get
these people to work together, right?
So not to get too much off topic, but one way that I've tried to test the theories in my own book,
because again, I do believe in social science and historians should test their theories.
If they can't reproduce the experiment in the past by going back to the archives, then try to do it in the present,
is we looked at what it is, this kind of supernatural romantic mindset, what it means psychologically, right?
using a historian named Lovejoy, intellectual historian philosopher.
And he had noted that romantics tend to think in certain core ways.
Like we called it diversitarianism, organicism, meaning they're always looking for a way to create
an in-group and an out-group.
It's not always racial.
Like the early romantics weren't, you know, even heritor, the founder of, in some ways
of German nationalism, thought everyone should have their own nation-state and ethnic group
that fits their culture and ethnicity and blood and soil.
But the idea that that's how you have to organize the world,
diversitarian in diversitarian ways,
meaning there are certain ways where everyone can't just get along
because they're always going to be different.
Right.
There's an intrinsic segregation.
And the same thing with the Descanza,
the holistic view that we're all part of,
societies are best when you're part of the same organism,
even if it's hierarchical
and you can't have elements that don't belong to your organism.
These things weren't biologized.
in the late 18th, early 19th century,
but you could see how they were susceptible to that.
So his argument, and we're riffing off of this,
is that this romantic way of viewing the world,
it's a reaction to the Enlightenment and liberalism, right?
That's where the romantic era comes from,
can be weaponized by the far right,
the us versus them, Carl Schmidt.
And the best way to do it is drawn this supernatural imaginary,
theories that can't be tested.
You're different, you're better,
you're being oppressed in some way,
these other groups think that everyone could get along and there are universal laws and everyone should tolerate each other and there should be international institutions.
That's the core belief of liberalism. Liberals and socialists don't like each other in a lot of ways, but the two basic principles behind liberalism and socialism is that you can have universal liberation, whether it's around capitalism and the individual or about the socialist community, right, as a group, they both say everyone,
can share in this ideology and these outcomes.
The far right does not believe that, right?
It's your own blood and soil, your own traditions that need to be preserved.
But I can see that that can be manipulated.
And that's why we're using this term romantic, because there's a tradition within romanticism
is saying, why are we trying to get everyone to live together like these liberals and socialists?
It doesn't make sense.
Let's just be who we are, what we've always been, the primordialist.
And if you don't know what those elements are, we'll give them to you. Here they are. It's this form of ethnicity and this kind of dress and this parade and this view of race and here's where our borders end and here's where they or here's where they should end. Right. And these people can belong and these people can't. And that's the diversitarianism and the organicism. And he also uses the term strzrebin, striving or competition. Romantics even before Darwold,
didn't see it as possible for a nation or a people to survive if they weren't working to do it,
fighting against something.
So when you get the second half of the 19th century and you get Darwin and then you get Carl Schmidt in the 20th century, us versus them,
you always have to fight against an internal external enemy.
This is inherent to the romantic framework as well.
And what do you draw on the things I talk about in the book, supernatural imaginary.
Oh, that's interesting.
And so what role does theosophy play in the early part?
of the 1900s. Great way to kind of illustrate this, right? So, Theosophy is definitely an occult
doctrine. It's a combination, like all of these new ideas, right, of science and religion,
faith and material explanations of the world, because in the late 19th century, and this is where
we started, traditional religion isn't working for people anymore. They're bored going to church,
especially men. It was declining everywhere, but women were still more likely.
statistically than men to attend church.
They were looking for new forms of spirituality,
and science, which did have a lot of answers,
was too complicated and too materialistic and technology.
A lot of people felt overwhelmed by it.
They couldn't understand an article on relativity,
so it must not be true.
They understood rocket ships as big,
big phallic things that go up in the sky.
So they believed in rockets and things that exploded and guns,
but things that are very small like quantum mechanics,
are very large, like planets and dark matter.
I don't get it.
It must be a weird Jewish conspiracy.
I wonder if it lacked a sort of emotional
or like a sort of an emotive explanation
where like, you know, there's a hyper rationalization
specifically in this time.
People have used the term like scientism.
Exactly.
To say like, oh, that feeling you have when you pray
or when you meditate, that's nothing.
And that's, you know, there is no God.
But then I wonder if there's people that say,
I feel something.
Yeah, absolutely.
So this science thing is not exactly satisfying that.
Yes.
What invented the universe, what created us?
There's obviously some type of-
Prime mover, the first cause.
I mean, that's all of kind of Western philosophy, but in the late 19th century, it's getting
scary because the more you can uncover material explanations and the more that traditional
religion isn't working to counter them, you get these things like esotericism, right, border
science, all these new ideas to fill the gap.
not just in Germany and Austria.
And this is why Theosophy is such a great example,
because that started with a Russian emigre
who spent time in Britain and America.
It has nothing to do with Germany and Austria.
And it was just basically taking kind of Hindu and Tibetan
and Buddhist ideas and mixing them with Darwinism,
vulgar Darwinism.
So root races, seven root races that evolved over time,
the most superior of them probably maybe,
made it with some kind of extraterrestrial
race or had some kind of
cosmological
sperm come to Earth.
Unfortunately, whether it's through race mixing
or some other thing that society,
which we now call Atlantis collapses, right?
And we could get back to that.
If you really study hard and are really good spiritually
and physically, you might be able to get back
as a European to that, to the talents, the divine wisdom, the spiritual kind of balance,
the physical balance of this original root race. I'm not an expert on theosophy. That's kind of
the core. That was still universalist. Anyone could do it. It wasn't just Europeans. And Blavoski
was very interested in India and Tibet and all these things. What's interesting then is to see how
this, because I just tell you, universalism is more intrinsic to socialism.
socialism and liberalism than it is to right-wing thinking.
So what then happens in Austria, where people are struggling, remember, they don't have a nation state.
And in fact, after 1866, when Austria loses, the Austrian Empire loses to Prussia, they get frozen out of the whole German experiment.
So if you're a German nationalist, or if you were used to having this mega empire and running the whole German empire since Charlemagne, right, the Holy Roman Empire, you're now on this tiny,
Rump Empire that's just basically hanging on with Hungary trying to prevent it from falling apart
completely. You want to join, a lot of these Germans want to join with the other Germanic and
Aryan peoples. And in that environment, a guy named Rudolf Steiner, who's a theosophist,
says, you know, this is all a little too esoteric and religious and Eastern. I'm going to create my own
version. I like the idea. I like uniting, you know, spiritual and organesis.
stuff with, you know, good sound science, but there's not enough of the science. It's not quite
Eurocentric enough. I'm going to create something called anthroposophy, which is instead of
it being about Theo, God, it's about anthro-man. Now, was it actually more methodologically rigorous
than theosophy? We're talking about occultism here. Not really. He conducted experiments to supposedly
show like you could see your estrall cell for all this and actual scientists have come and said
that we don't i mean he's just like got photos and they're not showing anything but he created a
whole cult around him it's still around waldorf schools you ever heard there's one in new york
there are these progressive schools where you like do a cult dancing and it's very pro
environmentalist um i haven't heard this yeah steiner has a tradition throughout europe and other parts of the
world people. I mean, he did some interesting things, but it was a new form of occultism. And if you
read him, he's much more concerned with race and Jews than Blavatsky was.
Interesting. Go figure. Operating in Austria. Would you say Blavatsky's ideas around
theosophy were through our modern lens, racist? I understand there's this idea of root races.
Excellent question. And it's like, okay, saying that we got inseminated by, you know, aliens on its
Fetian. Potentially. I forget. It's hard for me. I didn't come at this as someone who's interested in the occult.
Came at this as someone studying German history. I just written a book on why do liberals sell out to fascism, you know, in the wake of the Iraq resolution and Patriot Act, living with Hitler, right? And I'm looking, this is 2008-9, and I'm seeing the rise of the Tea Party and Sarah Palin, who's not a traditional conservative. She's not a classical liberal libertarian. There's this populist right-wing element.
I'm like, is this stuff, and I'm looking at Europe, Marine Le Pen, and York Hader in Austria,
and I'm saying, is there a resurgence of this?
They have these conspiracy theories.
So I wanted to go back to my laboratory, Germany, and say, what's going on before 1933?
Can you predict when a society will become more susceptible to this, right?
So I didn't come at it.
Why am I saying that I'm not an expert.
The journal of Western esoterrorism does not like my book.
Sure.
Because, you know, I don't get into the details of how complicated theosophy was.
I accept that.
I'm seeing that as one of many elements in the supernatural imaginary.
So I don't want to go on, I want this in the podcast.
I'm not an expert on it.
I'm not saying everyone who was into theosophy is going to become a fascist.
Quite the opposite.
Many of them were just hippies or they still go around and they're reading the Bhagavad Gita.
Just because Himmler also read the Bhagavad Gita does not make you.
That being said, I want to be clear.
that these these preoccupations with race, even if they were common to the 19th century,
get exacerbated in the next two iterations, right?
Anthroposophy and then Aerosophy.
So, yeah, in the late 19th century, every white Western intellectuals talking about the rise
and fall of Western civilization in racial terms.
They've all read Darwin.
Again, this comes from Britain and France, right?
It's Darwin. It's Alfred North Whitehead, right? It's Herbert Spencer. It's Gobineau in France. It's not a German. The Germans aren't the ones to invent this modern science of race and racial decline and fall. But that, not coincidentally, infuses all the major theories of the late 19th century. Even sometimes socialists talk about race problematically, right? So we shouldn't be surprised. And that is racist.
Right? The idea that you have these distinct races, the one thing I'll say in the defense of
Montem Blavatsky is it's before evolutionary biologists, as I just mentioned by the 30s and 40s,
has started to show that these theories don't hold. There aren't pure races that have distinct
characteristics. It's not like looking at animal species. Of course, the Nazis don't care about
that science. Right. Or the Ku Klux Klan, or even some people today, but the actual science shows
it's way too complicated because all the, first of all, race is just a kind of construction, as we
talked about already, based on putative skin color or the shape of people's heads, which
turns out to not be, it's not a real thing.
And then whatever it does reflect that is real biological difference doesn't map on to any
one-to-one distinctions.
Right.
So scientists are already starting to realize that in the 30s and 40s, but not in the 1870s and 80s.
So I don't want to be anachronistic and dismiss all these people as inherently racist by the standards of 1870s.
80s. If you're still pushing this in the 1930s, however, might be a problem.
The ideology is now very strong.
But phrenology at one point was all the rage.
Exactly. That's another great example of chronology.
You could feel the lumps on someone's head and be like, oh, you're smart.
And William James, brilliant psychologist at Harvard, is open to testing spiritualist claims in the late 19th century.
By the 1930s and 40s, there are many psychologists, including Freud, saying, come on, what are we doing here?
And don't you see even, I have this in my book, I found Freud basically criticizing Jung, his student, said, why are you still so into this wacky stuff?
Don't you see this is what the far right loves doing, talking about monsters and demons and astral planes?
Like, you realize this is dangerous because the same kind of thinking that leads the anti-Semitism.
him. Jung's like, no, no, it's cool and it might be true. We should pursue it. And sure enough, look what happens. Freud, who's more materialist, is like, I'm done with that kind of thing. There's no proof for it. And it's abetting race theories that are dangerous that are not grounded in science. And Jung, who's not Jewish, like Freud, right, didn't feel as threatened by it. He's younger. He grew up with more of these esoteric ideas, is okay with it until after the war. I have it in the collusion of the book.
He's like, maybe that wasn't such a good idea.
Maybe we should be more careful about these supernatural claims
and conspiracy theories and astral planes, right?
He says that in the 40s.
Oh, wow.
But he wasn't saying that in the 20s and 30s.
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So how does Ariosophy then get introduced
from these other ideologies and how does Hitler get exposed to it?
Right. So Ariosophy is the third iteration.
of these three major occult doctrines of the late 19th century,
the one that's most clearly a precursor to Nazism.
And that's because it takes what Theosophy has,
this idea that combines science and religion,
kind of Eastern spirituality and Darwinism.
It adds to it the already racial, kind of more human element
that Anthroposophy under Steiner had brought in,
that we should really be talking about what this means in the world
as well as spirituality and talking.
talking a little bit more about race and space,
and he even has some opinions on the Jews
and whether they can be liberated.
And it adds a more, a kind of purest sense
of Aryan history,
Aryan prehistory, Aryan mythology,
saying that, you know, it's all well and good
to believe in root races, Atlantis,
the way that race and spirituality combine.
But if we don't make this about restoring
the primacy of the Aryan,
then it's not a helpful doctrine.
So under Guido von List and Lest,
and Lanz, Jorg, Lanz von Liebenfelds,
they take the tradition of theosophy,
which had been relatively universalist,
very popular in Britain and America,
as well as Germany and Austria,
and they take the version
that had already become a little more Germanized
under Steiner, also in Austrian, right,
and make it very racialized
and very Germanic or aerocentric.
It still has mystical elements,
is still as Masonic doctrines.
It still believes in root races,
but it's now clearly differentiated from theosophy
in the way that it's become so racialized
and so obsessed with Germanic race and space.
Now, before we go on to how Ariosophy goes through Europe,
can you explain Aryanism as an idea?
Because, again, I know that it comes from Sanskrit.
It's almost like an Indo-Persian ethnic subset,
but then somehow it gets attributed to the Nordics.
Where does that disconnect come from?
Right. So the modern word for Persia, Iran, and Aryan have the same route, right? It's the peoples who lived in that kind of northwest Indian slash central Asian area supposedly thousands of years ago. What happens is the kind of scholars who are interested for the first time in a post-Christian history of language.
know, kind of linguistics, anthropology, endology, the studies of India and the roots of all kind of
modern civilization, the fertile crescent. In the early 19th century, some of them German, right,
even the Grim brothers, became fascinated with the idea that the root of all Indo-European
language and culture was this Aryan civilization, right, that spread out from northwest India
through Persia, possibly East as well.
That's all well and good, and there are some elements of truth to that linguistically, right,
Indo-European languages.
But what they started to do already in the first half of the 19th century is project onto that
the idea that what is pure and authentic and great about Germanic civilization in Europe
is its Indo-Aryan roots, not its Judeo-Christian roots, not its liberal materialist
and French Cartesian rationalist roots.
That is, those are foreign elements imposed on Germany from outside,
and that what's truly German or Aryan about German civilization goes back to the Aryans of prehistory.
Now, a competing ideology emerges in the second half of the 19th century.
So you have this Indo-Aryan ideology, and obviously it spreads across Europe.
You have Houston Stewart Chamberlain talking similarly about the great Indo-Aryan races and how different civilizations, depending on how much Aryan blood they have, are going to be better or worse and more sustainable or less.
Gobineau alludes to Aryan.
So it's not just a German thing.
But what happens in the late 19th century is a alternative view develops among people.
one historian calls it them
Germanists
or Germanocentric
theorists, a Germanentum
instead of Arir tomb. So
Aryer tomb is Aryanism. Germanentum is
kind of Germanism. Who say
yeah, maybe there are some
connections to these races, but what's
really important are the Nordic peoples
who are blonde and blue-eyed and were
actually in Atlantis or
Tula, the Thule
hyperborean civilization. And
to what extent they ended up
creating other Aryan civilizations or their blood help the Persians, we don't know.
But let's focus on reconstituting this North European race and not worrying so much about these
Indo-Aryan elements and connections.
And so what I talk about in Hitler's monsters is a way that these tensions persist without
getting resolved within the Nazi party.
And you can even see it in Himmler's Annen-Arabah.
So this Institute for Incessual Research that he found, in some ways, the office preceded
the Third Reich, but it's definitely there by 1935 as a large institute. Its first director,
Hermann Wirt, is a German, Dutch scholar of Nordic and German tradition. And he's fascinated
by the North Germanic roots of what he sees as kind of Nordic civilization in Germany
and elsewhere. He does talk at times about Aryanism and Indo-Aranism, but he's really
focused on having the SS research, you know, the lost civilization of Atlantis and going to
Scandinavia and looking at witchcraft and natural healing and all this stuff.
Interestingly, he's very much a border scientist. He actually studies something called the
Urrilla Linda Chronicle, which almost everyone by 1935 or 36 says is a forgery. It was probably
written in the 19th century,
supposed to be this like,
we're pre-Christian,
I think Dutch,
early Dutch texts
that talks about
Germanic traditions
and Thor and Odin,
and he just sticks to it.
He's like,
this is great.
It's like the book of Mormon
or something for him.
He is so embarrassing
that Himmler eventually
gets rid of him in 1938.
Oh, wow.
replaces him with a guy named
Wust.
It gets a
Walter Wust
or Wilhelm Wust, who is an indologist,
meaning he actually reads Sanskrit,
studies Hinduism, Buddhism,
and is an accepted scholar, I think,
at the University of Munich,
and he becomes the director of the Anan Arab.
And remember, in both cases,
these are humanists who are directing now
an institute that's going to end up covering the rocket program
and energy research.
It just shows you how little they care
about actual science or materialism, you know,
explanations of the world. But as an endologist, he pushes more of this Indo-Aryan framework,
that there are connections to these other great civilizations. So ariosophy, I would argue,
in some ways wins out the elements of ariosophy that we can see in Nazism over the more
Germanic-centric, Nordic tradition, but really both traditions survive and kind of there's a
healthy tension between them. I see. And I don't know if I missed it, but why Nordic? Why couldn't
the thought leaders of the time say,
the Germans are the end all be all true Aryans.
Because whether you're an Indo-Aryan
or a kind of Nordic, Germanic scholar,
you recognize that central Europe
has been a space of colonization.
Germanic peoples came down from the north,
much like Great Britain.
I see.
And as fast and loose as they play with science,
they recognize that everyone isn't as pure,
purely Nordic as the actual Nordic people and the Vikings were before they came down.
I see.
So if you're going to restore, if you're going to emulate any civilization, it should be the Nordic ones and whatever races were in the Thule, this North Atlantic civilization or civilization, not the admixtures of whatever.
They have these terms like dinarite and alpine and Slavic.
and they do accept that most Germans are mixed.
And so part of what Himmler wants to do
in a lot of these racers is selective breeding.
So breed out the foreign elements
and breed in more of the Nordic ones.
I see. Right.
So, yeah, Germany, because it's been, you know,
colonized, it cannot be the breadbasket
of, you know, human civilization.
It had to come from someone else.
It's still the biggest and most powerful area nation.
It's not like they aren't proud of it,
but they recognize there are pure elements
of Nordic civilization.
That had to come from somewhere else.
Yes.
And everyone else at the time
accepted that it was sort of
Indo-Persian
and they said,
no, no, no, it's actually
from the north.
Completely unfound.
The only variation
between this Nordic version
and the Indo-Aryan one,
as I understand it,
is the Indo-Aryan one
says that
the UR civilization
actually came from
the Fertile Crescent
in northern India
and went everywhere
in prehistory
and then was part of
what founded Atlantis or Thule.
I see.
And then when that collapsed, those people who were left went back to Tibet to kind of preserve
the, or religion and what have you.
While the Nordic, I think the Nordic version, again, this is neither of what I'm saying
is scientific.
I'm trying to recall their different arguments said that the Atlantis collapses and
then they colonize outwards.
Obviously, the purest Nordic people were still in the area they had originally been in.
and whatever made it to India or Japan wasn't that worthwhile.
So instead of that being an area where all Aryans came from,
it's just an area where some Nordic people went to,
which is why there's still connections.
They're still willing to entertain the connections,
but the transfer is reversed.
I see.
And that ostensibly influences a lot of the art of the Third Reich, right?
Well, the reason they embrace the swastika, regardless,
is they see that as an Ure kind of Indo-Aryan symbol
of fertility in the sun,
which precedes a kind of purely Germanic or Nordic Europe.
And the Nordicists just try to find examples of a swastika
in northern Europe to prove that it started there.
Right.
The Indo-Arians don't care.
It's just it's a root of all.
It's in Persia.
It's an India.
So for them, that's the sign of Aryan culture.
And at the time, wasn't it like a talisman almost of the time?
Like many people wore the swastika, I guess, at the turn of the century, and it was kind of a symbol of good luck.
Is that fair to say?
So we talked about the origins of classical modernity in late 19th century, all these people in the West who have become so kind of anured to modernity and technology, and they aren't really getting the spiritual sustenance they need from traditional Christianity are looking elsewhere.
So just like the 60s, this is just a cycle from the 1890s on.
There are all sorts of people in urban areas studying yoga and Hinduism and Buddhism and the Kabbalah and trying to find Eastern or alternative ways to get in touch with their spirituality or alternative narratives of how the great civilizations came about.
The core of a lot of those imports, if you're talking about India, are things related to the swastika?
It pops up, right, in one form or another.
What's interesting is that people obsessed with the Indo-Aryan roots of European civilization,
starting the 19th century, start to put swastikas on their books to connote these connections.
So when the focus movements form in Germany and Austria in the 1890s and later,
they often use the swastika, which is already an accepted emblem connecting Indo-Aryan civilization
in Germanic or European Nordic civilization.
It's not the Nazis.
The Nazis just appropriate it.
It's already around.
Right.
And these focus groups, these kind of groups that are quasi biologistic, biopolitical,
they kind of believe in eugenics and race science, kind of religious and mythological.
They're obsessed with Thor and Odin and Ariasophy.
They like to use the swastika as this unifying symbol for those two different strains of belief.
Interesting.
So it's not surprising that the Nazis who come out of that milieu would also appropriate it.
So it seems like the stage has been set, right?
Like ariosophy is around.
It's being distributed in pamphlets.
There was one magazine that was very popular.
Osterra.
Osterra.
Lans von Liemelfelds, which he claims he remembers Hitler, after Hitler became famous, I think, in the 20s,
Lans von Lemmstel says, I remember when he showed up 10 years ago to get some back issues,
like he was collecting comic books or something.
Hitler didn't never affirm that.
I see.
But it's probable he saw it.
We need to be very careful, though.
Ariosophy is the purest expression of this combination of focus ideology, which is widespread, the idea that Germanic and Indo-Aryan races are superior, and millions of people are interested in that.
And the occult, where I would say it's more like tens of thousands before the war.
It's still fringe.
The reason we're so interested in Ariasophy is the, the, the, the,
group that eventually forms the Nazi party came out of an ariosophic Masonic group.
So it's not that everyone who was into Aryanism or focus philosophy was an ariosophist.
It's just that ariosophy was one expression, which was clearly tied to the occult of that
movement, a pretty popular one, some famous people were members.
So that one of Hitler's, a couple of Hitler's most influential kind of
theorists,
Carlo Ager,
who is the mayor of Vienna
and kind of operationalized
anti-Semitism.
So it's not that fringe,
but it's not like it's the core
of all these focus movements,
right?
It just happens that the Nazi party
comes out of one of these
area of sophic groups.
Interesting.
Now, the tool...
It would be like if Churchill came out
of Alistair Crowley's orders
of the new Templar.
Like, if that had happened,
we'd be spending a lot more time
talking about it than we do now
as a fringe
movement. And it just so happens that the German
Workers Party comes out of
an Ariasothic group called the Thule Society.
If a famous person comes out of a cult,
that cult all of a sudden gets a lot more attention.
Even if the tensions, even if the connections
are somewhat tenuous. Right. That makes
sense. So the Tool Society,
again, named after this place.
Atlantis, yeah.
Hyperborea. These are all effectively the same place of some
type of lost civilization that existed
of once a great people. In the North Atlantic,
there might have been frosty.
giants, they might have been taller, they might have had a third eye, they might have mated with
aliens, ancient aliens, and then people, other great civilizations and built temples,
whether Incan temples or the pyramids of Egypt, right? We're all familiar. The irony of this is
given how popular these kinds of mythologies are on National Geographic, the History Channel now,
I don't have to work as hard to give you a sense of what they were talking about or believed.
Right.
Could it be that aliens came down and created.
Well, now a bunch of people think it could be.
Back then, this is the first time we started hearing about all of this.
And this is originally penned by the Ariosophists.
This is...
I would argue that the theosophists were the first to kind of create a coherent doctrine that alluded to this lost civilization.
To this lost civilization.
I mean, Atlantis had been around since the Greeks, but that that was actually where the
the superior root race was of the seven root races that then declined. That's where that trope
comes from. I see. There were other people, I think this guy, Hans Schindler, Bellamy, and others who
wrote literature that kind of riffed off of this in the British, the English speaking world. But
that's kind of where it comes from. The area of sophists, people just make it even more racial.
I see. And more existential. And so now this tool society exists in Germany around, I guess,
the early 1900s mid-teens of the 19thos?
Actually, so what happens, and this does show you the valence of
Aerosophyx of one member of the Ariosophic society in Germany,
I think in Dresden, a guy named Tador Fritch,
right before World War I, he's the most famous anti-Semite in Germany.
He writes something called the anti-Semitic catechism,
going back to the 1880s,
about how the Jews are the root of all evil.
And he's so frustrated by 1912
that even the German conservatives just seemed kind of lukewarm towards anti-Semitism
and this idea that Jews are behind socialism and liberalism and feminism and all these evil things
he he adds to his um german german order which is this thule masonic group uh not thule
ariothic masonic group in 1912 something called the hammer hamer boom or the hammer association
I'll explain why this is important, which is supposed to be a political affiliate.
Because he recognizes that for political purposes, having everyone get together and talk about
dowsing and astrology and going through weird Masonic rituals, vaguely linked to Aryan civilization is not terribly productive.
So he creates another group and many people in his German order also belong to the Hammer Association to try to get votes and try and get right-wing people to vote for them and not for normal.
conservatives. Why is this important? During the war, neither group does well. No one wants to pay-dus or
discuss astrology during an existential war. So by 1916 or so, the German order is struggling.
I think the Hammer Association's already dissolved. And a guy named Hermann Pohl, who's hanging
out in Munich, meets a guy named Sabotendorf, Rudolf von Sabatendorf, who is the editor of the leading
astrology journal in Germany.
And basically he's given the task of resuscitating the German order, this areosophic group that was also anti-Semitic and had these political ambitions.
And he's not very successful at it until he meets another occultist born the same year as Hitler, a guy named Walter Nauhaus, who has this kind of discussion circle.
He's an artist called the Thule Society because he's interested in Thuil.
So Bannor says, look, I can't get the German order going again.
why don't we combine forces, and we'll still talk about art and astrology and all that stuff,
but we'll also talk about how the Jews are trying to destroy Western civilization and how much
we hate communism and feminism.
And because it'll be under the cover of the Thule Society, no one will associate us with far-right
groups or whatever.
This is all still during the war.
It's like summer, fall, 1918.
So it's more like a fun project.
They don't know that they're going to lose.
then they lose.
And Nowhaus and Sabatendorf start recruiting people saying, look, the Jews won, the Socialists won,
they destroyed our society, they stabbed us in the back, join our Thule Society.
And we will first get rid of the Socialists who are running Bavaria, and then we'll take over Germany.
And they even have a plot to kill the Socialist Prime Minister Bavaria, which gets uncovered.
And seven people get arrested for treason and get executed in their society.
Yeah.
So he's incompetent as a political leader, but he's merged this eriosophic tradition of Teodor Fritz
with a political movement in immediate post-war Bavaria about destroying the left and the liberals and
taking Germany back and rebuilding.
He doesn't use the word Third Reich, but recreating the German empire.
And in early 1990, some of the members, actually late 1918, of the Thule,
society or friends with Sabot or think. He doesn't really get it. So they form their own corollary. Remember
the Hammer Association that Fritz created called the German Workers Circle? Sounds familiar.
Because they're like, we got to do something practical. People don't want to come to the Four Seasons Hotel and talk about pendulum dowsing. And then we tack on at the end, oh, by the way, the Jews are evil and taking over the world. Let's overthrow the government. We need an actual political vehicle. So this guy, Carl Harr and Anton Drexler, form something.
call the German Workers Circle to try to recruit normal workers at the railroad yards.
They realize it's still kind of associated with the Thule, though, which isn't really great.
So in January, they rename it the German Workers Party and explicitly meet separately from
Sabatendorf.
Sabatnors are still around and still doing the Thule stuff.
They're still members of the Thule, and famous Nazis are coming to Thule meetings.
Dietrich Schectert, Alfred Rosenberg, pardon me, are all.
all part of that milieu. But there's now this separation developing as Fritz tried to do before the
war between the actual kind of occult stuff, which a lot of these people like but recognize isn't
that politically accessible and it's kind of bourgeois and elitist and the political activism.
And it's that German Workers Party that Hitler visits in September. He's supposed to be surveilling
fringe, right and left wing groups for the army. And he kind of likes what they're talking about,
but he doesn't think they are really good rhetorically.
So he starts speaking himself.
He wasn't supposed to.
And they're like, this guy's great.
Why don't you join us?
So you can see this link between the pre-war
Ariasophic movement and the leading anti-Semitic
in Germany who wants to become more politically
activist and pragmatic.
Doesn't work.
This Sabatendorf guy tries to pick up the reins during the war,
joins another occult group,
and that group produces the early Nazi party.
Wow.
And Hitler takes over that workers' party, and then that ultimately becomes the National Socialists.
A year later. And when he writes Mankhamph, five years later, he's still complaining, as we talked about before, wandering scholars clothed in bearskins.
He's still obsessed with the fact that the roots of his party are in this folkish occult movement with, you know, people like the QAnon shaman running off into the woods and doing homeopathic medicine and arguing over which mythological.
tradition, how strong was Thor, how strong was Odin? And he doesn't think that's going to be
terribly useful in expanding the party. So that's tension has been there for now 15 or 20 years
between these right-wing occult groups that are obsessed with Aryan civilization and eliminating
Jews and socialists and feminists. And at the same time, recognize that that might not be a
mass political, politically accessible way in a modern society. So they're trying to resolve that
and Hitler himself recognizes that we need to move away from that if we're going to become a mass
movement. Now, at one point, I believe Rosenberg has a quote where he says,
occultism in Europe paved the way for... Yes, I found that in the archives. I think that's the
first time anyone's published anything else. Oh, really? So let's first take a step back and
acknowledge that Rosenberg, despite hanging out with these people, always claim that traditional
occultism or esotericism was not Aryan. For him, Aryans practiced a kind of oer religion or
wicanism, we would call witchcraft and other esoteric traditions, which, while to a layperson
don't look a lot different than cultism, for him mattered, because magic in the Aryan tradition
and esotericism or Christian witchcraft were two different things.
So the fact that he acknowledges in 1941 how important occultism per se, popular occultism was,
that's the movement was really important for me in my book because showed that even Rosenberg,
who draws these very nuanced distinctions between a kind of primitive Christian or even Jewish,
exploitative occultism and true Aryan magic practiced by earth mothers based on their embrace of
Aryan traditions and not Judeo-Christiani, which he thought was Jewish, right, shows that he's
being pragmatic and acknowledging that for normal people, they don't see the difference.
Being into the occult is why they thought Hitler was so interesting and charismatic and could
wield magic himself.
So that's why that quote was important for me, because I acknowledge that Rosenberg was officially
critical of occultism.
The reason I don't use occultism but supernatural in my book is to acknowledge
that among all these different people and all these different doctrines, much like Christianity or religion in general, everyone had their pet supernatural doctrine, which for them was true scientifically and religiously and everything else was just fantasy and made up by unscientific people.
When you put it all together, you see that's just the way that faith-based people dismiss those people they see as rivals.
They're scientific, they have authentic knowledge.
The other astrology group doesn't.
Once you realize that, you see why some Nazis seemed hostile to the occult.
It wasn't that they rejected these supernatural ways of viewing the world,
certainly not in the way of exploiting people's superstition.
It's that they didn't want rival groups claiming authority
based on their connections to the spiritual world or magical forces.
Interesting.
And that's really what I talk about in chapter four of the book,
is what seems like a war on the occult
is actually an attempt,
which is what every fascist government does,
to control and discipline everything.
So it fits their ideology.
And they still wait four years to really do anything
because they're so sensitive of the fact
as Hitler was already in 1924
that a lot of people like us like this
and it doesn't do us any good
to attack it too openly.
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Now, there's another thing that I had found in researching that Hitler apparently had,
I guess, a copy of a Bible, I believe, or maybe it was a tome called, like, magic, I think.
So, so, again, showing you, I mean, it's not fair to call Hitler a cultist because of this.
But a famous occultist named Aaron Chertoe, who had written and a parapsychologist, he considered himself a scientific occultist.
I also think he was a practicing anthroposophist and did kind of magical dances, which he thought helped with spirituality and all this.
He, he, like, taught it in a school.
He wrote a book called magic, which is about how magic could be wielded to not only have a better life, but also manipulate people.
and kind of become a perfect kind of human being
and live a truly full life
where you get what you want.
And Hitler, for whatever reason,
he saw Hitler as someone who would appreciate this book
and after Hitler became famous at some point in 24, 25,
we don't know when, but it looks like it was before 33,
he sent a copy to Hitler and signed it,
like to Adolf Hitler, Aaron Schertl,
and it had the stamp that a lot of Hitler's books had.
Hitler had stamps put in his own books to show they were part of his library.
And unlike many of those books, it had annotations in it.
I think 66 different annotations.
So a story named Tim Rybach, who read the book, the original version, I have only seen
reproduced versions, thinks it looks like Hitler's handwriting and it has not been dismissed.
So Hitler clearly was reading it closely, according to him.
I say in my book, it's likely that Hitler read it.
It looks like he read it.
And if he read it, here's the passages that he annotated.
And a lot of it shows that he, because he did study modern psychology,
mass crowd psychology and how to manipulate people.
It looks like he was reading it not because he necessarily believed in supernatural forces,
but he thought that people were susceptible to the techniques that parapsychologists used to manipulate them.
I see. And so some of his annotations, I'm only vaguely familiar with a couple of them that, you know, I guess allude to like Satanism or things like that. Are there any specific annotations that you find compelling?
Well, so we have to remember, despite Rosenberg's claims trying to differentiate Aryan wicanism from Christian witchcraft, in heretical Christianity, like the Cathar heresy, the Albigenzians, Middle Ages.
who were in southern France, ironically, or maybe not, near Montsegur, where the Holy Grail was supposedly hidden.
They were maybe the protectors of the Holy Grail in this mythology.
They were nominally Christian, but they were Manichaean Christians, meaning you couldn't have light without darkness.
And that's why they called the devil Lucifer.
The light bearer.
Because he was actually the one who was more pro-human and wanted you to live and
experience and have sex and get in touch with blood and soil. And it was, you know, God who was
trying to restrain you. And you needed both. Almost narcissism in a way. Nasty. Yeah,
Manekeye. And you have this light bear, almost a Prometheus serpent that comes in.
So a lot of a cultists, which now I suppose some devout Christians would just call Satanus,
saw this cult of Lucifer as a positive aspect of pagan or proto-Christian.
or Germanic Christian tradition
for people who are into the Holy Grail
in Indo-Aryanism like Othoran,
we could talk about him later,
who Hitler hired,
this was the connection to Indo-Aryan religion,
the Gnosticism, right?
If you look at Persia and places like that
where a lot of these Gnostic ideas were,
it probably come in through the areas
that was pre-Christian,
and the fact that it was being practiced
in France and ostensibly other parts of Europe and Germany,
meant that somehow this Indo-Aryan tradition had survived Christianity and conversion.
And the reason for Himmler and D'R.A. and a lot of these Nazis that the Catholic Church created the Inquisition was to wipe out this Germanic Indo-Aerian religion and the women who bore it as witches so they could kill two birds with one stone.
They could further Christianize German people, which meant Jewifying them, because they thought that.
Catholic Church was run by the Jews. And they could also murder a bunch of them because if they
killed the women who were child-bearing age, they couldn't have children. Right. So there's a long
tradition, I'm not saying this isn't any way accurate, anthropologically, or religiously,
among right-wing thinkers, Indo-Aryan-obsessed ideologues, that this Luciferianism and the book
that Otto Ron writes for Himmler is called Lucifer's Court is actually an expression of this
Indo-Aryan or religion that may have been practiced in Atlantis and was brought to Tibet.
And the Judeo-Christian conspirators who wanted to destroy Germanic and Indo-Aryan tradition,
call it witchcraft.
So Shertoll, by being into demonology and wanting to get to these pagan forces, was basically
tapping into a popular belief that there's something pre-Christian linked to nature, blood,
soil, Indo-Aryanism.
That subverts Christianity.
that if we could get rid of this veneer of Christianity, we could get in touch with it again.
Which in a way parallels Aerosophy, Anthroposophy, right?
If we could get back to the Indo-Aryan spirituality combined with an awareness of race science and biology that we now have, we could transcend the kind of constraints that Judeo-Christian and Franco-British material liberalism have put on us as Germanic peoples.
Interesting. Like the guy that wrote the Austeria. What was his name? Yeah. Lans for Lebenfels. Osterra.
Osterra. So Lebenfelds, originally he was a Catholic priest, right? But then leaves the church because he can't worship a Jew. Is that? I don't know if that was the only reason. I think he was also kind of disillusioned. There may have been some corruption involved. I don't remember. I will say it's not a coincidence in my mind.
that so many of the Nazi leaders were from Catholic parts of Germany,
because the thing about Catholicism versus Protestantism is it's a universalist religion,
which means it's very hard to be a fascist and be a devout Catholic.
In a country divided by religion, it's very hard to be a Catholic.
In Italy or Spain, where everyone's Catholic, you can have fascism that is actually buttressed by the church.
But in Germany or America, it's much easier to be a fascist and a racist if you're Protestant.
Because Protestants can construe anything they want out of the Bible.
They pick their own pastor.
They pick their own variation in Christianity.
The further they get from Lutheranism and Episcopalianism, the more malleable it is.
Think about the clan.
They were devout Protestants and had these weird racial theories.
Catholics, they're barriers, right?
Because Catholic is a universal religion.
ecumenical. So what I think happens in those places, especially in Austria, where the far right had a movement literally called Los Phon Rome. Let's be free of Rome. Is in order to be German, you had to get away from Catholicism and replace it with something else. In northern parts of Germany where people were Protestant, they already kind of combined their Protestantism with a belief in blood in soil and being German. Luther was German.
So they didn't have that same kind of binary tension.
So what you're seeing, I think, in Austria, especially, it's not a coincidence, a lot of these race theories supernatural and otherwise come out of Austria and Bavaria are people who are lapsed Catholics who are immersed in this very totalizing ideology instead of liturgies and rituals and think, I mean, even masonry comes from copying the Jesuits.
Let's remember that.
And Himmler would refer to the Jesuits as a model for the SS.
And then they want to create their own traditions around like pagan Grail.
You know, if you look at Vablesburg, what Himmler did, right?
These are, it's a version of Masonic, secret, occult societies that's no longer linked to Catholicism.
I see.
But with still some of the roots of the Catholic ritualism.
Right.
Or the need to replace it at least, whether they were consciously, doing it consciously or subconsciously.
Again, in Protestant areas, I would argue that Christianity was much more malleable and personalized.
I mean, Jesus is your friend.
If you want Jesus to be a blonde, blue-eyed scion of Balder the Brave, Nordica, you can just make that up, and it's fine.
Right.
Catholics have to have the authority of the Pope, which is a universal religion.
It's harder to play fast and loose with the rules.
Right.
Interesting.
So now, could you make some type of conjecture as to what Hitler's religion was?
I know many people have debated this.
I'm curious if you have any thoughts.
So my observation, not just from the research for this book, but, you know, generally
researching the Third Reich is that none of the main Nazi leaders were devout Christians.
Many of their constituents were and lower level party level.
And that's why this debate has been unnecessarily polarized.
Number one, it was very hard to be a devout Catholic and a devout Nazi.
Some were, but none of the leadership who were born Catholic were still,
In my experience, devout Catholics by the time they became Nazi leader.
So Hess was born Catholic, Gerbils, Hitler, Himmler, none of them were doing traditional Catholic stuff by middle age.
They had pagan rituals that they were doing or quasi-Christian solstice stuff.
So let's just start with that.
Among Protestant Germans, there was more of a symbiosis.
They even created a Protestant church.
called the German church, which had its own Nazi bishop, this guy named Mueller, which just threw
out the whole test because it was Jewish and said, now, you know, Jesus was a lost Aryan, part of a
lost Aryan tribe, you can be a Nazi and a Protestant or a Christian. So in that sense, Christianity
was directly allied with Nazism. But it was a version of Christianity, which we see in contemporary
America as well, which was so local and specific to your pastor, your church, wherever you live and your
ideology, it's hard to say it fit a traditional Christian idiom, right? Because if you see the,
what's happening in the United States in the last 40 or 50 years, there's a bunch of people who will call
themselves Christian. But if you ask them, so what version, are you Episcopalian? Are you Missouri
Synod Lutheran? Like, I don't know. I just have a pastor down the street and I love the Bible and I
love Jesus. Well, if that's true, then Jesus can be an Aryan. So that kind of Christianity was very
compatible with Nazism, but the leaders, including Hitler, did not seem very interested in it.
What Hitler and Drexler, I mentioned, put in the Nazi program, which they never changed,
they never followed it, but they never changed it either, 1920 program was, we support positive
Christianity. And then later on, they say, we don't care what religion you are as long as you're not Jewish.
So you can see, again, typical fascism kind of split the difference.
We're in a country that fought the Reformation and murdered each other over which
specific version of Christianity people were going to be, right?
I mean, literally, millions of Germans died.
So they're not going to dismiss Christianity openly,
whatever their private beliefs.
And their private beliefs were nasty.
The stuff Hitler and Himmler say about Christians sometimes is pretty impressive
and how anti-Christian they are.
So they say they're positive Christians,
meaning if you're not causing problems,
you're anomaly credit, we don't care.
Later on, they say we don't care what religion you are
as long as you're not a Jew because that's not a religion.
It's a race.
In that sense, they're very, I mean, that sounds like the traditional liberal thing.
Church and state, as long as you don't get in our way, you can practice what you want.
So again, they're kind of triangulating.
They don't want to alienate people who aren't motivated by religion anymore, but they also don't want to alienate Christians.
Interesting.
What they don't do, which some historians claim they tried to do, but I would argue they don't.
They never try to replace Christianity in the 12 years they're in power, at least.
It's too strong.
They talk about it.
I mean, Hitler has, you know, throwaway statements.
What will I do with the church is once we consolidate the Third Reich and win the war?
But because that never happens, we don't know if that's just speculation.
Now, at one point, and correctly if I'm wrong, I believe Hitler wrote in a letter that effectively his final solution is doing the work of the Lord.
I believe this is something that I read.
I don't know that I might be extrapolated.
I don't know that he uses the work of the Lord.
What he often uses as a stand, and I think this is very intentional.
He again recognizes he's operating in a Judeo-Christian context, which he's not thrilled as Judeo-Christian.
And this goes beyond their belief that Jews are using Christianity to enslave Arians and keep them from being muscular and blonde and Thorlike.
They also believe that Judeo-Christian ethos, because it's focused on the afterlife, and maybe this is connected to what I just said,
weakens people's desire to self-determine and be aggressive and live life to the fullest and
worship their ancestors and fight wars in the here and now. Because you're just living for going
to heaven later on. You just follow the rules like sheep. That's one reason they like Shinto and Hinduism,
the Shatria warrior cast and all these Eastern, because in their mind, they really worship their
ancestors and want to fight to maintain their race and have a Bushito.
code. Christians and Jews are always talking about going to heaven and forgiveness. Forgiveness. This is
not helpful in building an Aryan empire. Interesting. Right. So, yeah, so that's intrinsic in a lot of their
frustration with Christianity as an ideology. I see. An institution. I see. Even if they try to
meld it with Nazism through the German church, which doesn't work. It ultimately causes a bunch of
of conservative Protestants who are happy to take Jewish rights away at a limited way,
still allow them to go to church if they were converted, but not have them dominating society,
to get so frustrated at the fact that they can't take confession and they can't read the Old Testament
anymore, that they actually become opposed to the Third Reich, even though as conservative
Protestants are then and now usually okay with fascism, as long as no one's screwing with their
religion. They took it away and it backfired.
By contesting it and creating an official church that rejected
the Old Testament said, Jews who converted still can't go to heaven and can't go to church,
they pissed off enough conservative Protestants.
There's a movie coming out about one of them, Dietrich Bonhoeffer.
Martin Neumler is also famous.
He's a guy that said first they came for the trade unionists, then they came for the communists.
So both of them initially were, I mean, Bonhofer was more principled than Neumler.
Neither of them were on the barricades saying, why are you taking away rights from Jews?
Why are you putting communists in jail, right?
They're conservative Protestants.
I think they voted for Hitler.
think Neumler voted for Hitler. I don't know if Bonhoeffer did. But by 34, they're getting frustrated
with these attempts in their minds to paganize or Germanize Christianity, and they create an alternative
church called the Confessing Church, which Hitler again, we talked about how fascism, unlike
communism needs to accommodate liberal and conservative capitalist, military, industrial complex, the churches.
They don't initially move against the confessing church. They don't throw them in camps. It's only much
later when they get really frustrated and some of the leaders like Niemuller start criticizing things
outside theology like their policies, you know, on, you know, their legal policies and anti-Semitism
that they go after some of these people. I think Bonhoeffer only gets thrown in a camp during the
war despite all of his criticism. So they don't want to go after these confessing Protestants,
but they do alienate them by their attempts to Germanize the church, showing you they're not
traditional Christians. I see. So now if Hitler is not Christian and is I guess maybe in his early
teen years has like some maybe loose interest in this sort of ariosophy and kind of reading about
these sort of Aryan mystical occult ideas, why does he put Himmler basically is his number two
and Hess who's also very interested in occultism so close in the high brass of the Nazi party?
The way to look at it is to reverse the question and say, as long as Himmler and Hess were doing the stuff they needed to do, there was nothing in being an occultist. That's my argument in the book or supernatural in thinking that disqualified you, disqualified you for being a Nazi, as long as you were a loyal Nazi first. If anything, it helped you. So did Hitler and Gerbil sometimes make fun of Himmler and Hess and some of their beliefs? Yes. Did Hitler consciously and subconsciously appropriate some of these ideas?
from allegories to the solstice festival,
the swastika and the sun,
to having a dowser go through the Rite Cancelary
to believe in a world ice theory
and that German soldiers might be more resilient
to the ice.
He definitely did, right?
Gerbils, at first, when I was reading
through his diaries and his recordings
of his meetings in the propaganda ministry,
I was like, it looks he's very instrumentalist
in the way he treats astrology.
Like, I'm going to use it for,
propaganda because Germans believe in it and some Europeans believe in it. And I'll try to convince
them by quoting Nostradamus that, you know, the Belgians are going to lose and the Germans are
going to win. But then he starts getting really excited about it. Like this is a, Nostradamus actually
predicted this. And he gets, he wants to hire scientific astrologers who are famous. So there's this guy
Carl Kroft who claimed to have predicted the assassination on the attempt on Hitler in 1938. And once they
kind of surveilled him and made sure he didn't actually know about it. Like, hey, maybe he did
know it. And they hire him to do propaganda. And a parapsychologist who's friends with him, a famous
parapsychologist who after the war will go on TV and like he becomes like a partner with Erie Geller
and, you know, who tries to dispute his own magic, like they have debates about whether magic is real
and all this stuff. During the 30s, he was getting money from the Nazis.
to do parapsychology experiments.
And his buddy Kroft was working for Gerbels
in the propaganda ministry.
So this isn't purely instrumental.
Even Gerbils and Hitler believe in some of this stuff.
I see.
Himmler and Hess were so into it they got made fun of.
I mean, Hess had magnetopathic things on his bed
and started a homeopathic institute,
natural healing institute named after him.
Himmler, I mean, we could get into it so much stuff.
Himmler might be the only, like, leading Nazi who believed in almost every doctrine we've talked about, whether it's the occult doctrines to some degree, whether it's border science, parapsychology, astrology, biodynamic agriculture.
He at some point seems to have been willing to entertain almost all of these different ideas that I say are part of the supernatural imaginary.
There are other Nazis who were into a lot of them, Hess, Dare, Olandorf, but Himmler's really into it.
But he was so efficient and it was so mainstream at the time, Hitler wasn't going to dismiss him because he was making Death's Head rings and had a guy who thought he was the descendant of Thor as his right-hand man.
Hmm.
A guy named Carl Maria Villagut, an SS leader, who would develop aesthetically all the kind of items that the SS used in rituals.
And he changed his last name.
His ritualistic name was Vizthor, Wise Thor, because he thought he was related.
Of course, Himmler thought he was related to witches who were murdered by the Jewish Vatican as well.
What?
Yes.
So why did Himmler have such a fascination with objects and expeditions?
Like we talked about Veeblesburg Castle
That he this is the I guess the head of the SS
Or it was like a training facility for the SS
Like they were gonna send their
It's kind of like a training facility
And I guess some people speculate
That that was going to be almost like a grail room
For all of the things that he collects
All of these famous artifacts
That he believed have some type of mystical power
So there was a quote that we had talked about before we recorded
That he had sent his men to go find Thor's hammer
and that he believes that it is some type of,
possesses some type of power.
It wasn't so much, and this goes for the Grail as well.
We need to be careful.
Even Himmler recognized some of this stuff
could have been allegorical.
So whether it's Thor's Hammer,
he recognized that like pagan people 3,000 years ago
might have called something a hammer
as a physical manifestation of some force
in the universe, that hidden force.
Holy Grail for Ron and Himmler
was a symbol of,
a kind of religious tradition that Christians appropriated but was Indo-Aryan.
It might not have been a physical thing.
It might have.
They weren't sure.
What they didn't care about was whether or not it was a cup of Christ per se.
It was simply an object or an allegorical tradition that represented Indo-Aryan religion and magic.
And so when Himmler talks about Thoris Hammer, he's saying, whatever the ancient Nordic people were calling
the electricity that came out of Thor's hammer
might have been a real
ore electricity that we could harness
for scientific purposes
and I want you to go research it
and see if the stuff that we see
in like mythology and ancient text
is actually some lost
this is where we get into home apathy, alopathy
naturally, some lost tradition or energy
that modern mainstream science
doesn't know how to get in touch with.
It wasn't that he thought there was actual, you know, Mnolnir, the hammer that gave off those forces.
At least I haven't seen that.
But he does think there might be magical or hidden forces linked to what we see as Thor's hammer that had been lost to history because all these materialist and Christian Westerners rejected Nordic and Indo-Aryan mythology, religion, and science.
Did they uncover anything?
No.
find any artifacts? They literally found, so this is an interesting thing. It's a question I often get.
Literally nothing was ever discovered linking or justifying any belief they had in anything.
They didn't come up with anti-gravity. They didn't create a flying saucer. They didn't find Thor's energies.
They didn't create lasers out of natural. It's truly remarkable the degree to which
some of these leading Nazis
kept experimenting
or kind of trying to justify
these research expeditions
when they weren't really uncovering anything
I mean in some cases
so for example a Tibet exhibition
expedition did have some
benefits in terms of botany
like Ernst Schaefer who was a botanist
the guy who went along with it
some of the anthropologists found some interesting stuff
it's not that every expedition they did
was completely useless then or now
It's just that it didn't prove any of the things they wanted to prove by any scientific measure.
Certainly, yeah, I don't think they found any supernatural artifact.
But did they find, I guess, like a grail that they had heard about and went to a different place and found a piece of gold or something?
No, they went to Montsegur.
I mean, remember, lots of people, I mean, the Freemasons, the Knights Templar, there are all sorts of groups interested in this stuff before the Nazis.
The really important thing to remember her is the Nazis are merely reconfiguring.
or reinventing existing traditions,
they didn't come up with any new stuff.
Whether it's focus groups or broader, British, French,
and German kind of esoteric beliefs or doctrines,
they're simply recombinating or directly appropriating ideas
that were already popular by the 1920s and 30s
and still are in the British and American History Channel,
whether it's ancient aliens, hidden forces,
the third eye.
Interesting.
Atlantis.
So when does all this stuff start to pop up?
Second half of the 19th century in the wake of Romanticism
with the kind of decline of traditional Christianity and rise of modern science,
which is alienating to these people.
And then it just gets recondin.
I mean, dionetics, Scientology, Eric von Donakin.
We have those traditions in the British and American context as well,
ancient aliens, temples in South America and Egypt that were,
could only be built by a superior race.
The Nazis lapped that stuff up.
That justified their idea of ancient Aryan civilization that had spread out and then declined,
and now it was their job to reconstruct that.
And the access by getting in touch with the Tibetan civilization, the northern Indians
fighting for British independent against for independence from Britain, the Japanese,
they could use these partner Aryan civilizations or partially Aryan civilizations to
help them their quest to resuscitate Aryan civilization.
Interesting.
Now, speaking of objects with mystical powers,
there is a story that I think is probably apocryphal,
but I'm curious to your opinion,
that when Hitler invaded Vienna and got control of Vienna,
that spear of destiny.
Exactly, that the spear of D'Anseney,
the Holy Lance, that he went into the House of Treasures in Vienna
and seized the Holy Lance,
that was once carried by Charlemagne through Baxter,
Is there any credence to this?
What Hitler did do, which I think any German statesman would have done, is having annexed Austria, being an Austrian and wanting to make it clear that the capital of the Germanic Reich was no longer.
I mean, Austria wasn't the Holy Roman Empire, which he hated because Vienna was associated with all these lesser races and the Germans were only minority.
he transferred, I forget to where.
I don't remember if it was Regensburg,
which had been the other seat
of the Holy Run Empire at some point.
But he just transferred
all the imperial treasures
further north into what had traditionally been
Germany, which would now be kind of the center of the Reich.
There's no evidence that I've seen in the archives
that he did so because he had any mystical investment
in any of the holy treasures.
Other than they were valuable,
Christians like them,
A lot of German people thought they were important part of German identity and tradition,
and he wanted them more centrally located.
I see.
The only Spear or Holy Lance that I found in looking at thousands and thousands of pages over 10 years of Nazi archival documents is an episode,
which I found in the archives in Berlin, where Rosenberg, Himmler, and one of the SS archaeologists,
I mean, Rosenberg and Himmler had their own archaeologists, so the Rosenberg's office,
and the SS on an era were rivals
and kind of collecting treasure
and things from all over Europe
and proving that they're Aryan
and see who could come up with cooler stuff.
Rosenberg and Himmler didn't really like each other
because they overlapped in so many of these theories, right?
But in this case, what was interesting
in this letter I found,
they're enthusiastically, or letters,
writing each other because they had found something,
you can look it up, I mean, I hadn't heard of it before,
the Spear of Kovil,
which is an area of what would now be,
Western Ukraine, I believe, that was supposedly representative of a superior Germanic civilization,
you know, a thousand years earlier, which they wanted to find because they wanted to annex as
much of Eastern Europe as they could that fit their idea of the furthest expanse as the Aryan or
Germanic race. And finding this spear and studying it showed that the Germans had gotten
further than or as far as they thought they had gotten, right? I see. So it wasn't so much about
its mystical value as this other border scientific, somewhat supernatural belief in folklore
and mythology that by studying ghost stories and vampire and werewolf stories and looking
at old artifacts, you could reconstruct the limits of the Germanic races by differentiating
what people said, even if they sometimes used a Slavic language from Slavic traditions.
So they had these archaeologists going out there and studying the artifacts and the museums,
collections, of course,
or, you know, raiding it and taking it back to Germany
in many cases, say, oh, this is an area that can be Germanized,
this is an area that can't.
Because they're finding artifacts,
there's archaeological evidence that they had gone this far.
And that can extend the story.
So they, I have an episode in the book where in chapter seven,
there's this tradition, which is where we get the headless
horseman from.
Oh, what's that?
The wild hunt.
So in Germanic or German-speaking countries,
remember, he was a Hessian.
And this is an area where a bunch of German immigrants
were that there are and I think this is also in um if not in Faust in one kind of famous work of
literature at night coming out of the mountain these it's in a Tolkien dead soldiers come out some of them
headless or missing arms and they ride the night kind of screaming and they i think they can punish
sinners and they can you know you're supposed to be wary of them it's called the wild hunt again
an expert on this. It is part of the core root of the headless horsemen who would come out at night,
I think out of a tree and it was Germanic, right? So they would look for people who had folklore that
talked about the wild hunt. And if they did, regardless of ethnicity, I mean, regardless of language,
said, oh, these must be were Germanic people. And if they didn't, they weren't. I'm just giving
you one example of the arbitrary way. I see. They used ghost stories in the supernatural to differentiate.
Oh, wow. Yeah. Fascinating. So,
Now, there's an interesting moment that you discuss, I believe in the book.
You also did it in a talk that I'd watched, that there's this little saga that happens
where Hitler is now going to start an Eastern Front War with Russia.
And Hess is concerned about this.
So he consults with his astrologer, flies to Britain to basically broker a deal, gets captured,
and Hitler is livid about this.
And basically, they pin it on the astrologer who gave him the idea to fly.
either in the first place, and he
bans all this mysticism
of, you know, in Nazi Germany.
That's the narrative that Bormann
and Hydrick and Goebbels give Hitler.
It's not completely accurate.
But let's take a step back to 37.
Remember I said they didn't really do anything to the occult
until 37. What happens by 37 is
there are so many members of the police,
not necessarily Gestapo and certainly
not members of the SS, but kind of normal
criminal police are supposed to
kind of investigate public decency and stuff, there are members of police, some of whom are directly
linked to debunkers who want to push, you know, for science and enlightenment and against occult ideas,
writing the police and the Gestapo saying, look, we've got all these occultists around.
They're still making money.
They're meeting.
When are you going to do something about it?
And so the head of the criminal police, this guy named Arturnava, who I think also becomes a
ends up in a group and leader later on. He's one of the high-ranking SS men. He's like,
we need to do something about this. Hyderick really wants to go after all occultists. He's the head
of the intelligence service and later on the Gestapo, the architect of the Holocaust. He's a very
high-ranking SS guy. Himmler is really into all these ideas and only wants to go against
after popular occultists who are exploiting like grandmothers and Jewish occultists. We calls
Boulevard occultus. So Neba comes up with a compromise and says, why don't
don't we make a move and ban some of these organizations, arrest a few astrologers and stuff?
And meanwhile, the really good ones, the scientific ones, will get the sponsorship of the SS,
and they can do their research under your protection. Hydrus, like, fine, whatever. That's better
than what we have now. Himmler's like, that's cool. So they've already made a move against
the cultists and decide to compromise because too many Nazi leaders, including Himmler,
are interested in it. They're not just going to throw everyone in jail, but they're all
also not going to let them run rampant anymore.
And that lasts for about four years.
And what happens in 41, which is really interesting,
it's two years into the war.
During the war, fascists always get more repressive.
I mean, even liberal states get more repressive.
So they've moved against jazz clubs and gay and lesbian people,
and they've started arresting Jews and all this other stuff.
They haven't done anything with the cultists yet until Hess flies to Scotland.
Now, did he consult with his Australia?
He did have an astrologer.
So did Himmler, by the way.
So did Nancy Reagan.
I mean, this is not that unusual.
He probably did.
But the real issue is how embarrassing it was that Hess, the deputy furor,
had without prior approval or any diplomatic community case,
commandeered a plane flown there.
Instead of being treated like a representative gets captured and is made to look stupid,
it makes Hitler look stupid.
and makes the Third Reich look divided.
So Hitler was already livid about this and was talking about he hopes Hess gets executed,
can't believe he betrayed him.
The irony is Hess for all his supernatural thinking was a smart guy.
He went to University of Munich and recognized that Hitler was about to cause a two front war.
The same two front war, he had constantly said because of World War I, he wasn't going to do.
So he was hoping he could get Britain to make a deal and say, look, fascism, you may not love it,
but aren't we better than the communists?
Why don't you stay out of this? Let us defeat communism. Then we'll be friends.
Fortunately with Churchill in charge, that wasn't going to happen. If Chamberlain or Lord Halifax had been in charge, who knows.
But either way, they just capture him and interrogate him. So Bormon, who has been gradually displacing Hess, getting more and more power and trust from Hitler and becoming the guy in charge of who gets to see Hitler and he's helping with policy, he's happy that Hess has gone and did this.
And he and Hydrick and Gerbils, who all didn't like Hess and don't like occultism,
he uses as an excuse and say, by the way, the reason we think he did this is he was an occultist
and asked his astrologer, which isn't why he did it.
He was going to do it anyway.
He just asked the astrologer if he did it all about weather and timing.
The reason he did it what he did it in May is the original invasion of the Soviet Union was going to be like May 15th, I think, and he flew on May 10th.
I mean, come on.
that being said, Hitler was like, oh, that's why, go after all the occultists.
I'm done with them.
He called it the Hess action.
Right.
But what's funny about this to show you, again, their ambivalent attitude is the Gestapo,
Rosenberg, Gerbels, they all start attacking occultists in the press, blah, blah, blah, blah,
lasts for like six weeks.
By which point, the forces of going after the occult have kind of dissipated,
partly because Himmler wants to keep their libraries,
and keep the good ones for himself.
There are a bunch that go into concentration camps,
but many of them are released in 42 and 43
for the Navy Pendulum Institute
and Himmler's own
pendulum
operation to try to find Operation Mars
to try to find Mussolini.
Meanwhile, Hitler is getting frustrated
because the debunkers who take advantage of this
to try to make fun of magicians
and occultists publicly
and show that nothing they do is real,
Hitler's friends with the head of the Reich Magicians Association.
He thinks it's cool that people like magic.
And he doesn't differentiate between magic and occultism.
He doesn't really understand the difference.
So he says, stop debunking these things.
Oh, wow.
People like it.
The army likes it.
I'm friends with the guy.
So right after this movement, you're getting all these debunkers saying,
hey, I thought we were going to move against the occult.
And they're being told, yeah, well, the Fuhr doesn't want this.
Himmler doesn't want that.
So it kind of fizzles out.
So now when you say the Magicians Association, do you mean people that are doing slight of hand and tricks?
Right.
But remember, a lot of these people are also saying that they can call on their clairvoyant.
They're talking to dead people.
They're doing spiritualism.
They're doing parapsychology, which is all bread and butter occultism and border science.
So debunkers are saying the two are linked.
You can't differentiate magic from other claims to having esoteric powers.
And Hitler only defended.
them because he was close with the head of the organization. It's not clear that Hitler believed it was all
real. He was just like, why are we going after them? Which again, if they really believed in
public enlightenment, you know, which already, again, we had kind of these debunkers writing,
one of them was a police officer, commissar named Carl Peltz, who's writing his superiors in the
Gestapo and criminal police, why aren't we doing something already in 37? So my point in chapter's
four and five to say rather than go after them, like they go after Jews and communists and
socialists and Joe's witnesses, they try to discipline them and control them. Another famous
example, we talked about Rudolf Steiner and Anthroposophy, very, very popular. It's popular in
America and Britain, really popular in German and Austria. There's Waldorf schools. There's just
a astrologically based form of agriculture called biodynamic agriculture, which is based on the stars and the
moon. It's still around today, by the way. You plan at certain times and you read the stars.
A bunch of Nazis, some of whom had been in anthroposophic movement, some of them just read
Steiner like all this stuff. What they don't like or recognize is going to be problematic
with Hitler and Himmler around and Hydrick is claiming Steiner as a guru who's a charismatic
leader and what he says is law because he died in 1924. But a lot of his father's like, oh,
he's like Jesus, right?
Everything he wrote is awesome, because, again, this isn't really science.
It's religion.
And obviously, for Hitler and Himmler, who want everyone to be loyal to them, the SS, the party, that's not going to fly.
So you have a bunch of SS Lee.
I have letters from SS leaders talking to leaders of the anthroposophic movement saying, look, we like what you're doing.
The biodynamic agriculture.
You can have your Waldorf school.
Just stop saying that Steiner is the most important figure in history.
You're in the Third Reich.
it's going to, we can't defend you if Hitler and Himmler keep hearing about this.
So you see how it's not the doc to supernatural doctrines.
It's the hierarchy.
It's the ideology.
It's the party.
And this guy Earhard Barch, one of the figures, is so into anthroposophy.
He's like, no, no, let me talk to Hitler.
I'll convince him.
I don't remember how far he got, but he pissed off so many Nazis.
They eventually demote him.
Oh, wow.
But they still use biodynamic agriculture.
Himmler has people in Docow prisoners using the methods.
and when he wants to colonize the east, he wants warrior peasants to go east and farm with biodynamic
agriculture because it's not using materialist, environmentally poisonous, artificial fertilizer.
And when you say biodynamic agriculture still used, what do you mean by that?
I don't know how it's called, but that technique, if you look at all, really?
There are people who still use a version of that or they follow Steiner's rules.
Again, I'm not a scientist.
Sure, sure.
There are elements to obviously organic farming.
Let's say it's akin to organic farming, which are good, right?
Right.
But I don't know why you need to talk about the stars in the moon to do that properly.
So I'm not saying that everyone who does biodynamic agriculture,
I think it was called the biodynamic vetschaft or agravirtchevartzsche or whatever it was called in German,
is inherently an authoritarian.
I'm simply point out that this tradition was embraced by the Third Reich as an
alternative to industrial agriculture, artificial fertilizer.
Fascinating.
Yeah.
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Check it out. Blue-chew. Let's get back to the show. You had just mentioned the Pendulum
Institute that during this Hess action, all these occultists are then thrown in concentration camps
and that some of these occultists are removed from the concentration camps and said,
if you're able to help us with the war effort, you'll be given freedom.
Yeah.
And they put them in this thing known as the pendulum institute.
What is that and what were these eclos?
So let's talk about three different examples of this.
First of all, Gerbils manages to protect or take out of the camps.
I forget which, depends on who.
They had multiple astrologers working for him, which he continues through 1943.
So despite the 1941 Hess action,
Gerbils has occultists doing
astrological
horoscopes and tables for him
that he can use his propaganda.
In 1942,
the German Navy
is kind of nonplussed at why
for the first time in the Battle of the Atlantic,
the British seemed to be able to
predict where the U-boats are coming from.
Now, you would think
the foremost country of science
until a few years earlier in world history,
Germany per capita, I mean, physics, chemistry, engineering.
They were pretty impressive, right?
Might have thought that the British had developed some kind of technology that helped them
pinpoint where the U-boats were.
They had used radar, which they now knew about, in 1940, to win the Battle of Britain,
by whether clouds or whatever, they could see where the German planes are coming in.
Instead of assuming they had developed an equivalent, sonar, they thought they had figured out
some occult way through pendulum dowsing, not all of them.
some members of the Navy, but not Nazi leaders.
This is really important to show a widespread this is.
There's a guy in the Navy officer named Hans Ruder who theorized, and this would be bad enough,
right, that they had come up with some kind of occult way through dowsing radius.
It's called radiosdisia, the scientific term, to locate large, heavy metal objects under the water,
and therefore pinpoint and bomb them right before they could torpedo British countries.
convoys.
Rotor actually gets the support of other officers to create his own pendulum institute
within the Navy.
Again, this isn't officially a party or SS operation.
This is now the Navy, and they give them money.
And he's allowed to take a bunch of pendulum dowsers out of the camps.
Not all of them were in the camps, but many were.
Give them food, whatever, pay them.
Of course, it didn't work.
They didn't, they didn't find any British ships.
that way, they decided that British probably weren't using that, or they were better at it,
who knows. The fact that the Navy invested in this at all, though, says something about how
widespread the supernatural imaginary was, and romantic thinking was it, the higher echelons,
even in the military. Is there an element of this that it's just sort of a low-cost, high-impact
behavior that could help maybe. They're desperate. So we know the CIA did similar stuff, right?
M.K. Ultra, things like this. They think the Russians.
using mind control. So they say, yeah, let's throw a couple hundred thousand dollars at mind
controls. Exactly. The difference is, I would argue, you cannot find at the upper echelons of the
actual government or people running the economy or industry, people with this kind of romantic or
supernatural mindset in Churchill's government, Roosevelt's government, right? It's the fact that the CIA,
that a massive bureaucracy occasionally tried some fringe stuff is a lot different than the leaders
of the Navy, of the SS, of the party saying, let's open whole homeopathic and natural healing
hospitals. Let's not only have concentration camps based on border or pseudoscientific race
theories about Jews being vampires and parasites, let's have them farming with biodynamic
agriculture. It's the scale, the depth and breadth of it. It's not whether it happens at all.
We know the British actually had their own people working on horoscopes eventually more as a counter espionage operation, right?
But it was way bigger in the Third Reich.
So all that to say, sure, you could say this particular episode didn't cost a lot, but the agglomeration of all these different things is why I do think there is a story to be told.
And again, I'm not saying you can only understand the Third Reich from a supernatural point of view.
there's lots of concrete material and geopolitical reasons they did what they did or they wouldn't have been successful.
I'm really saying that by leaving this element out, because it was relegated to the fringes of historical inquiry, we lose a lot of nuance and a lot of color to help understand why they did what they did, how they thought about things, and why they made decisions in certain ways that can't be explained purely through a materialist or eugenical.
or biopolitical or capitalist lens, right?
Right.
Now, perhaps most interestingly,
when it comes to the remote viewing stuff,
there, Himmler claims that they used remote viewing
and maybe this pendulum-dousing type ritual
to liberate Mussolini after he's captured by the allies.
Himmler thinks, I don't know that he claimed,
because we don't have him claiming this.
What we have are the memoirs of Schellenberg,
who replaces Hydric after Hyderick gets assassinated
his head of the intelligence service,
saying that Himmler believed in it.
We have other SS guy, what's his name?
The name escapes me kind of mid-level SS guy
who's also important trying to understand
the Holocaust and the kind of hierarchy there
and decision-making who changes his mind.
I think his name is Wilhelm Huttel.
At one point, he claims the intelligence came from elsewhere.
There's no way it worked,
and Himmler was just into that stuff.
And some other memoir, I forget which was first, says actually it might have been that because I don't know what the alternative intelligence would.
All that matters is there were SS leaders, including Himmler, seemed to think they might be able to find Mussolini by having people concentrate over a map with pendulum.
Pendulums, right?
Sidereal pendulum swinging back and forth.
And they let out some astrologers too and parapsychologists just in case.
There's like 30 or 40 of these people in a village.
and Vanzai or near Vanzai, I don't remember if it was in Vanzai or right next door,
the same place near the same suburb where they had planned the Holocaust a year earlier,
being given cigars and alcohol and nice food as long as they would pour over these maps.
And however it was found, one theory is that conventional intelligence found out one of the islands
he was likely in, and they fed it to the astrologers so they could make Himmler happy.
So Wilhelm Volf, his favorite astrologer, could say,
oh, I think we found him.
And then him was like, oh, it worked.
Interesting.
Then there's other accounts that, no, they don't know how they got the information.
Maybe it did work.
What matters here is that they've spent so much money and time on this.
What other examples are there?
Those are all the ones that really stand out to me.
What other examples are there within the Third Reich of using or utilizing supernatural rituals or behavior to gain power?
Well, to gain power, I don't want to, well, the whole first three chapters are the way that they, they exploit these beliefs to get voters to support them, right?
So we talked about Sheritol and how Hitler read his magic book, possibly to manipulate people.
They would hold solstice festivals and invite people to them and talk about, you know, the or Germanic religion and race.
in the early to mid-20s.
In the late 20s, early 30s, they hire one of the most famous horror writers in Europe,
probably the most famous horror writer in Germany,
who had been a kind of liberal or libertine writer before the war.
I think he'd been to America a few times.
He wrote, he had all these exotic locations,
stories about witches and vampires and weird, sexual, demonic.
orgies. And he was considered kind of, you know, a little bit out there, like almost R-rated
stuff. And he was so annoyed that Germany lost its colonies because he loved traveling all these
places and competing with the British Empire. And then, you know, the left wing taking over and
the loss of land that he started to hang out with Nazis and far right people and wrote a book
about how awesome the Frye Corps and the far right was and how it was cool that they were killing
left-wing people called Ryder in the German night, basically knights in the German night,
like people who come up, these are all people who are on trial for murder and all this stuff.
Ernst Rome, the head of the stormtroopers, somehow knows him.
Gerbil thinks he's really interesting.
And then I think Putsi Homstengel, was Hitler's chauffeur, actually brings him for his birthday to meet Hitler.
And through all of this, he manages to be hired by Gerbils to write propaganda for the Third Reich.
It's like hiring Stephen King to come up with propaganda because you're good at coming up with fanciful horror stories.
Wow.
He gives a speech in a graveyard there he is as part of a propaganda in 1932 shortly before they take power.
I think right before Hitler or right before Rome gives a speech.
So he's not that marginal figure.
And clearly, this is a Nazi saying, despite him, I don't remember if I think it was Rosenberg, who was kind of moralistic, who's like, how can you have this guy who's talking about like witch semen and whatever he's doing hanging out with us and writing for the party?
Isn't that kind of problematic and gerbils is like, no, it's fine.
You know, Hitler likes him and it's fine.
and we're going to do it anyway.
I think it was Rosenberg who complained
that this is kind of embarrassing.
And then what's so funny is Bertolt Brack,
the famous playwright, you know, the Three Penny Opera.
When he hears about this, he writes this scathing article.
Like, we knew they were weird and into supernatural stuff,
but there's nothing better in showing how absurd and stupid
and supernatural the Nazi movement is that imagining Gerbils
hiring this embarrassing horror writer who screws around with women
and has all these horrible pornographic vampire stories as their propaganda.
It's like there's no way these guys could get elected now.
And then, of course, they do.
Wow.
But even then, that's not it.
In 1932, a the most famous parapsychologist, magician, whatever you want to call him, in Germany,
a guy named Eric Hanneson, who gave himself a Danish name.
He's actually an Austrian Jew born the same year as Hitler, but named Steinschneiter,
he kind of made his way through the ranks doing like magic shows and kind of writing comic books and stuff in the 20s and becomes so well known that he has thousands of people reading his magazine, multiple magazines.
He just puts out all these different magazines.
And when he sees that the Nazis are starting to do well, he starts to write horoscopes saying how awesome Hitler is
and the Nazis are probably going to come to power.
Meanwhile, a bunch of stormtroopers in Berlin,
where he has his house of occultism,
his palace of occultism,
start to hang out with him
because they like what he's writing.
They could party on his yacht.
He loans some of them money.
We're talking about leading stormtroopers.
So there's this direct connection between this most famous
parapsychologist magician who has tens,
maybe hundreds of thousands of Germans who know who he is
and think he can predict the future.
and manipulate people's minds and these stormtroopers.
And then this is what's really interesting.
Shortly before he's murdered by the Nazi party,
a few weeks after Hitler comes to power,
he announces at a seance
that he has seen, I think on February 26th,
the Reichstag fire, I think is February 27th or 28th,
that he's seen a giant building on fire.
And then a day or two later, the Reichstag's put on fire.
Now, one explanation,
is he actually predicted it or got lucky. Another is he's hanging out with the stormtroopers
who are going to set it on fire. And that it was a false flag that he knew about. Either way,
between the rumors that he's Jewish, which are now pretty obvious, that the left has been promoting
because they hate him for supporting Nazism. Like this guy, Bruno Frye lefters, right, like,
why are you hanging out with this guy? He's Jewish. The fact that he's been hanging out with Nazi stormtroopers
and they owe him money, which they don't want to pay him. And now he's claiming.
to have predicted the Reichstag fire publicly, for all sorts of those reasons, they kill him a few weeks later.
His body shows up.
It's pretty clear some stormtroopers who were friends with him, probably invited him out and killed him.
Now, some people say, oh, that proves they don't like the occult.
No, it's the opposite.
They were so embarrassed by their close ties to this guy, the fact that he just couldn't keep things quiet, plus he's Jewish, that they take him out.
But that, for me, shows, again how both directly and indirectly in terms of these effects,
infinities between supernatural thinking and fascism, right, conspiracism, pseudoscience,
whatever you want to call it, that that is one reason they appealed, as Rosenberg said later
on, right, to a certain subsection of the German population that after so much war and
depression and crisis, having all these supernatural things around them, what I call the supernatural
imaginary, the Nazis were really good at wielding those ideas, operating.
rationalizing them, torchlight processions, talking about, you know, the, the spirituality and racial purity and
ancient history, prehistory, Aryan history of the German people. They appeal to people seeking
some kind of sustenance. Wow. And still only got a third of the vote. Let's remember that.
Yeah. A lot of rural white men and small town white men disillusioned with capitalism who hated communism,
who saw this as a solution.
Let's give it a try.
And it seems like they gave it a try for a long time in the sense that many of these high-ranking Nazis, they believe this for until the end.
You asked about how they got power.
Once they're in power, we already talked about that.
They're kind of ambivalent at times about what to do with it.
Again, I wouldn't explain their economic or tax policies or social policies through recourse to supernatural.
I do, though, talk about in Chapter 8 and 9 how the Holocaust and human experiments and also some of the partisan warfare and miracle weapon development was linked to the supernatural thinking.
There are aspects of the war, again, Chapter 7, like how did they justify their empire in the East, folklore and mythology, biodynamic agriculture?
So they weaponize this stuff during the Third Reich, but it's a whole different story about how they come to power in kind of appealing to these ideas.
that are already there.
I see.
Okay.
And so just, I guess, to wrap up, the, uh, the actual weaponizing.
Mm-hmm.
Uh, I mean, you had just mentioned that, you know, the Holocaust and things like that.
They were weaponizing the supernatural.
Yeah.
So I can't say, obviously, there's no Holocaust without race science, which goes back to Darwin
and Herbert Spencer and is a, and Gobineau and Chamberlain.
It's not even a German tradition, which is widespread in Europe and America, between
the 1890s and 1940s, right? The idea that there are different races with different
qualities, let's say, better or worse, and that you can breed better races through eugenics,
the Nazis are immersed in that. That's part of it. And the Jews are clearly a race they don't
want to be dominant. And capitalism and economic imperatives are important. If these are
lesser races, life unworthy of life, as eugenics is say, how much energy.
year we're going to take treating them like
false citizens. If we can't get them out,
maybe we'll enslave them, slave labor.
So there are a lot of imperatives that are
also true of other European colonial powers,
the United States, in why people of a different race,
in this case, Jews and Slavs, get the short end of the stick.
But the reason it gets so radical
and so totalizing, I argue, in Chapter 8,
is this is all leavened
or catalyzed by
occult, esoteric, and mythological beliefs about Jews and Slavs being almost mythological monsters,
right?
There's constant comparisons, not only from Hitler, but in propaganda pamphlets, Jews being
this kind of eastern vampiric presence that comes in the Osteudan to the pure Aryan, Germanic,
and it's the women and exploits their economy and sucks them dry.
Hitler has a phrase in Mind Kampf where he says,
you know, the vampire comes in and like all vampires and parasites,
it sucks the blood out of its victim.
And then when the victim dies, it dies too because there's no more blood to suck.
I mean, this is literally a few years after Dosferatu comes out,
which is this eastern European-looking,
almost anti-Semitic caricaturedish vampire that comes into this pure little
German town and sucks the blood,
literally and figuratively out of the town.
He brings disease, pestilence, he attacks a blonde woman.
Was Nesferatu intentionally made to represent these things?
There's a whole debate on whether it was intentional or not.
Mernow was not known for being a fascist.
Whether it was subconscious or accidental, my point is simply the Nazis were appropriating
and operationalizing tropes that invoke the idea of Jews being monsters who have an
international network where they can carry out their monstrous,
Judeo-Bolshevik plot to destroy Aryan civilization, which goes back to them accusing
Aryan women being witches, right, to exterminate them. Well, why not return the favor? So once
things get brutal and they're already killing millions of people and getting killed themselves,
this in my mind helps justify, doesn't explain completely, their attempt to eliminate the
Jews. It's not a purely technical or biological exercise. It's not a purely materialist one. We just don't
We have too many miles to feed.
And then they use the same tropes with Slavs.
Most famously, in early 1945,
you have a bunch of ethnic Germans fleeing from what's now basically Yugoslavia,
where there had always been ethnic Germans,
but during the Third Reich, they were treated very well
because they were part of the greater Germanic kind of Reich,
claiming that, and this is very interesting,
the gender dynamic,
that partisans of Tito, the communist leader,
who was helping the Soviets,
fight the fascists,
disproportionately women were transforming into vampires,
blood drinkers, they called them,
and saying, we need Schwabin Lutsch.
Schfabin means Germans from Swabian and Southwest Germany.
A lot of the Germans who had moved,
whether it's Catherine of Great's Russia or Serbia,
were from Southwest Germany
because during the economic crises,
of the early modern period, a lot of them left were invited because they were hardworking
and good with, you know, finances and stuff, good farmers. So they call them all Schwabin,
and they claim that they're getting overtaken with a kind of psychosis and foaming at the
mouth and they want to drink Schwabin Blut, and they're attacking and sometimes killing Germans.
And there's an SS folklore as Kurosik, one of these guys who had been justifying German
expansion to the east, who's collecting these stories in D.P. Camp.
You can find it's they're all collected in a German archive for East European anthropology.
I saw them.
I have a colleague who saw them.
Just report after report of being attacked by these partisans.
Now, these are, they don't always say it, but these are communist Slavs who are supposedly turning into vampires to attack Germans.
At the very same time, what were Goebbels, Hitler, and Himmler doing with one of the special forces leaders who had rescued Mussolini, creating their own partisan for it?
And guess what they called them?
Werewolves?
Werewolves.
And what's so interesting as I talk about throughout the book
is there's a whole tradition
going back to the 19th century.
Now remember, the 19th century,
even the late 18th century,
the romantic era is when the British and the French
take the East European vampire,
which in Serbian or Polish tradition
is this like zombie-like thing
that comes out of the grave and disgusting
and feeds on its, you know,
its own relatives, and they romanticize it into a kind of noble East European figure
who represents the pre-industrial world who's coming, kind of a fish out of water and doesn't
want to kill people, but has to. This isn't start with Bram Stoker. This is already with Lord Byron.
This is with Coleridge's Cristobal about this beautiful lesbian vampire that seduces a woman in the
woods. So while the French and British and Americans are romanticizing,
the East European vampire, not exoticizing it or creating a racial monster out of it.
The Germans are arguing that vampires are these diseased eastern interlopers, whether they represent Slavs or Jews, that are coming to destroy the pure Aryan race.
Wow.
Conversely, the werewolf in West European tradition, especially the French tradition, Leichanthropy, right?
that's where it comes from, are tied to the devil and witchcraft.
So people who become werewolves have done something evil or had a horse jump over there.
I mean, the traditions are all, it's all linked to Christian cosmology and witchcraft.
But, you know, we'rewolf isn't a good thing.
It's a curse.
We know that also from the, you know, novels and movies in British and American tradition.
The Germanic tradition in the 19th century, the Romantic era, the werewolf is resuscitated as a noble, if troubled figure in Nordic.
mythology who's there tied to nature, blood and soil to kind of defend Germanic pagan civilization
against Christian interlopers and protect wayfarers.
Complete inversion.
I found one of Rosenberg's acolytes who did a dissertation on this, showing how the
werewolf is a positive figure in Germanic tradition.
The berserkers of Odin put on wolf skins and turned into wolves, all this stuff.
And so there's a, there's this tradition there that then gets invoked right before World War I, a kind of right-wing nationalist writer writes a book called Werewolf about the Germans in the, I think, kind of the Westphalian area fighting against the Catholic Church and the Inquisition who are murdering their family and their wives as were werewolves like partisans in the woods.
then the 20s, there's something called the Vervolf,
though interestingly, it's still using playing on the W-E-H-R of the Vermacht,
like to defend yourself in terms of national defense,
not the WER-E-R, which means man-wolf,
and German and English.
So the Vervolf, so they're playing on the Vermacht and Wolf
as a paramilitary group that's going to fight against
the French and Belgian occupation,
and then you see in the Third Reich,
I think Himmler names an SS division,
Weirwolf.
Hitler names one of his headquarters in the east, the werewolf.
And then in 1944-45, we shouldn't be, I'm trying to show you the tradition there.
When they need to come up with a name for their paramilitary,
they do Weirwolf and they take out the H to invoke the truly supernatural version.
Of the Man Wolf.
Wow. And this werewolf is trying to exterminate the vampire.
It's trying to, right. Well, so the, what's happening are two parallel narratives that are only connected by what I call the supernatural imaginary.
Right.
Germans in the East claiming they're being attacked by Slavic vampires, which they've learned somehow through folklore mythology to view Slavs as vampiric and evil and degenerate, but still superpower, just like the Jews as vampiric parasil.
that can control everything.
At the same time, though, independently,
the Nazi leadership is saying,
we need our own partisan movement
to defend against the communists that are coming in,
and we're going to call them werewolves.
Bizarre.
Coincidental in the literal sense,
but still there's an ambient feeling of supernaturalism
that comes through.
The supernatural imaginary,
this collection of beliefs that may go back
100 years, whatever it is,
that people use to make
sense of difficult reality. Rather than taxes and terrorists and military strategy and democracy
and science, it's easier to invoke Wagner and Gutterdomirong and werewolves and vampires.
Not every German did this. My argument is simply that this helps us understand the attractiveness
of fascism and the persistence of fascism after the Third Reich, because if there is a party willing
to exploit these ideas, which are always there in every society, every industrialized capitalist society
where science and liberal institutions that are so clinical and impersonal are in charge,
you'll always have people feel alienated who want to fall back on their own romantic beliefs.
And this gives them a vehicle to do that.
And if a party can appeal to that, they can get a pretty large percentage of the electorate.
Do you need a supernatural component to create a fascist government?
It seems to be there.
It seemed to be there in the Italian fascist.
movement. I mean, Franco drew more on a supernatural imagery linked to the Catholic Church.
Right.
But I would say that liberalism and socialism are very much secular. It's always about
institution, science, historical stages, right, processes. And even traditional conservatism,
and the Anglo-Saxon tradition, it's usually classical liberalism or libertarianism, which is secular.
even if you throw in a William F. Buckley kind of Christian conservatism, it's still very much more than traditional Christian institutions that are, if you believe, Weber, already compatible with liberal individualism, capitalism, right, the Protestant work ethic. And so what fascists do is they have to compete with that. So they create an alternative way of viewing the world, which is illiberal, does not believe in.
neutral processes, institutions, the deep state to resolve problems objectively. It wants it to all be
under someone who is directly tied through blood, soil, ideology, myth, mythology, to the people,
bypass this clinical state, certainly legislative processes, right? Science gets in the way,
materialist, methodical science. You just have to come up with alternatives. Science is wrong. Why do we
trust them. They're part of a liberal conspiracy to hold us down, right? And so by doing that,
you have to invoke some alternative, and that alternative has to be supernatural or romantic.
You could never share the view that these things need to be worked out scientifically,
transparently through negotiated rules, right?
They would fall apart. Interesting. So it's inevitable. They're going to have to resort to that
somehow, what some political scientists call political religion. I would say it's more
morphous in that. It's a, because it can vary in content and, but it gets operationalized when
there are politicians on the right who no longer care about liberal with a small all proceduralism,
science, material reality, or recognize what it is, but think they can't get elected anymore
with their particular interests, right? Maybe they're very wealthy. Maybe they're, you know,
very powerful and recognize that the only way to get normal people to vote for them is exploit their
frustration, superstitions, desire for a world based on intuition and their own beliefs, right?
We talked about this earlier, but a lot of people who support fascist parties want their beliefs
validated. They're not interested in objective scientific inquiry or compromising with people
who have different ideas or interests. They want someone to say, you're right. This is
really happening. You're on the right side of history. You're not, your conspiratorial view of the
world is correct. And I agree with you. And I'm going to make you powerful. I'm going to validate
your personal view of the world. Your skepticism is real. They don't want someone to say,
actually, let's take a step back and look at what's really going on. Recognize this. And let's,
let's talk to scientists and experts. Why don't we just have the people you elect work this out in a very,
transparent, compromise, data-driven way.
They don't like that.
They want someone who has totalizing solutions, right?
Is there anything regarding the supernatural
in the third rake that we have not discussed?
We'd be remiss not to tell the good people?
No, I think we've gotten to...
I mean, the one thing I would say,
as a kind of final episode, we talk about vampires
versus werewolves.
I think it's very interesting that the armaments minister,
Spier, despite being an architect and not trained technically in armaments, took over and did a
really good job using modern management techniques, capitalism, bureaucracy, hiring experts,
regardless of whether they were Nazis. And at the end of the war, having built the V1 and V2
rocket or helped build it, and keeping the Nazis afloat for a year maybe more than they should
have been, given their resources, is constantly getting bombarded by Nazi leaders.
Hitler, Himmler, Gerbils,
Bormon, when are you going to come up with the miracle weapons?
That'll help us take out New York and London.
Where's the V3?
Where is, you know, all this stuff?
And he keeps saying, what are you talking about?
I've never promised you miracle weapons.
What we need are more flak,
more guns to shoot down allied bombers.
And we need more fighters to shoot down allied bombers.
And we don't need big,
tanks with huge fallic guns on them because we're not going to be fighting offensive war
anymore. And we don't need weird rockets. They haven't done any good. And it's too late for
them now. I mean, we can bomb. All we're going to do is piss people off more. And he keeps
being asked about these miracle weapons. And my conclusion in a way, Spears, is that the Nazis have
started to get high on their own supplies, so to speak. They really are starting to believe that you
can through will and magic, I don't mean like literally that they believe in all in magic,
that somehow Schpier and the German ingenuity will come up with some weapons that are going to
be decisive. And the irony is because of this thinking, I say this in the book, they don't
invest in atomic weapons. Because for people like Himmler and Bormon and Rosenberg and Hitler,
who are still stuck at like teenage boys in a phase where they're fascinating.
by rockets and bombs and tanks, the things that in our society, the people who are otherwise
anti-science, I'll go out to watch rocket launches, right? Because you can see it and you see
the fire coming out and it's cool and it's going somewhere and you've got heroic astronauts.
You know what they're not interested in? Quantum mechanics. Biochemistry, uh, relativity,
nuclear, too complicated, right? Same thing back then. Hitler basically said, I don't even know what
you're talking about, seems like a long shot. Let's focus on more rockets. Meanwhile, the socialists
and the liberals who believed in science were making much more progress by using, in many cases,
German scientists, Jewish and liberal, who had fled this Third Reich that was far too
invested in supernatural thinking. So that's a lesson, I think, as well. So their interest in
this supernatural Hail Mary to get this V3 rocket, slowly.
them down from Cradian nuke.
Not just a V3.
Himmler puts an SS guy
who built concentration camps.
That was his main claim to fame
charge of the rocket program
because he and Hitler don't trust
the generals and the rocket engineers
anymore because some of them
had tried to kill Hitler.
Again, because they were rational
and we're like, we're going to lose,
let's get rid of this guy.
So what I'm saying is this
miraculous thinking
that was in tension with
Nazi rationality
and German rationality for much of the war
is starting to displace more rational thinking.
And if not for people like Speer,
if you just took the Nazi leaders
who don't have PhDs in physics,
but think as amateurs,
they can figure things out.
Boy, they would have been an even worse shape.
You imagine if you actually put Himmler directly
in charge of the emmermans industry instead of Schpere?
Yeah, I mean, the war...
Who's writing nasty letters, leave me alone?
War would have ended two years earlier, probably.
Well, maybe six months.
Like, I'm not arguing that Nazis would have won.
Right.
They lasted longer than they should have, and part of it is because the more rational thinkers in the party were able to hold out.
But, you know, you see what Himmler and Hitler believed.
Right.
Dr. Curlander, this has been excellent.
Truly, I mean, just between us, I mean, your recall and, I mean, ability to go.
I mean, we've been recording for a long time now.
It's remarkable.
Truly, like, I'm blown away.
This has been excellent and really, really engaging.
If anyone's interested in obviously check out.
the book.
Hitler's monsters.
Hitler's monsters.
That is the third book that you've written.
You have two others if you would like to tell the people where they can find those.
My first book, though, I think it's out of print, price of exclusion about the decline of
German liberalism.
The second one, which I think is about to be reprinted, called Living with Hitler,
liberal Democrats in the Third Reich, about how liberal Democrats made compromises with the Nazis
and fascism to kind of survive, but also sometimes because they agreed with certain things.
Hitler's Monsters, it's what we were just talking about, my third book from 2018.
And then I have a new book called Modern Germany, a Global History with a couple co-authors with Oxford University Press.
And it's a attempt to look at German history from a global perspective.
So not just from what's going on in Germany or Central Europe, but really, how is Germany a laboratory for modernity in a global context from 1,500 to the present?
Yeah, and my next project is called
Before the Final Solution,
a Global History of the Nazi Jewish Question.
So we'll see where that takes us.
Thank you.
I would love to have you back
and we can discuss that one when it comes out.
Thank you.
Thank you again.
All right, Mark.
Appreciate it.
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