A MERICANS in general are perhaps no more reluctant to face unpleasant truths than are other peoples, but American liberals of the Wilsonian tradition most certainly are. True, their opponents in the period immediately after World War I were even more unwilling or unable to face the facts, but that is no reason why the liberals of the middle 'twenties and thereafter should have glossed over the obvious difficulties which were leading to the collapse of the Weimar and eventually to World War II. During the frenzied inflation summer of 1923, the writer roamed hither and yon across Germany, learning at first hand what the impoverishment of a middle class brings about. Some three years later, in I926-27, I returned to Germany, and was struck by the evident weaknesses which the political structure had developed in even this short period. At the request of the editors of the Survey Graphic, who were then planning a special issue to be entitled Ten Years of the German Republic, the following thumbnail characterizations, based on many first-hand relations with all the types presented, were prepared and submitted. In spite of the fact that these sketches were done on the spot, so to speak, the editors of the Survey apparently felt that it would be best to retain their well-known we-know-the-worst-butwe're-optimistic line. Indeed, they expressed themselves to the effect that Americans should learn to look at the bright side of the German Republic. After the manuscript had been returned by the Survey editors, the best that could be done, writing from abroad, was to get fragments into the now defunct monthly, The World Tomorrow. The bits chosen by the editors were only those which could be construed as in some sense supporting The World Tomorrows' ultra-pacifist position, so that the net results were highly unsatisfactory. The article as it stands here is in all essential respects identical with the complete version written in 1927. It is now published with the intention of showing: (i) that at times the American public is not permitted so much as to taste bitter medicine-taffy is handed out even by liberal journals; and (2) that the aftermath of World War II may find us blissfully oblivious of the gathering storm of World War III.
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