Indeed; right in the opening pages of Parenti's Blackshirts and Reds:
In Germany, a similar pattern of complicity between fascists and
capitalists emerged. German workers and farm laborers had won the
right to unionize, the eight-hour day, and unemployment insurance.
But to revive profit levels, heavy industry and big finance wanted
wage cuts for their workers and massive state subsidies and tax cuts
for themselves.
During the 1920s, the Nazi Sturmabteilung or SA, the brownshirted
storm troopers, subsidized by business, were used mostly as
an antilabor paramilitary force whose function was to terrorize
workers and farm laborers. By 1 930, most of the tycoons had concluded
that the Weimar Republic no longer served their needs and
was too accommodating to the working class. They greatly
increased their subsidies to Hitler, propelling the Nazi party onto
the national stage. Business tycoons supplied the Nazis with generous
funds for fleets of motor cars and loudspeakers to saturate the
cities and villages of Germany, along with funds for Nazi party
organizations, youth groups, and paramilitary forces. In the July
1932 campaign, Hitler had sufficient funds to fly to fifty cities in the
last two weeks alone.
...
Along with serving the capitalists, fascist leaders served themselves,
getting in on the money at every opportunity. Their personal
greed and their class loyalties were two sides of the same coin.
Mussolini and his cohorts lived lavishly, cavorting within the higher
circles of wealth and aristocracy. Nazi officials and SS commanders
amassed personal fortunes by plundering conquered territories and
stealing from concentration camp inmates and other political victims.
Huge amounts were made from secretly owned, well-connected
businesses, and from contracting out camp slave labor to
industrial firms like LG. Farben and Krupp.
Hitler is usually portrayed as an ideological fanatic, uninterested
in crass material things. In fact, he accumulated an immense fortune,
much of it in questionable ways. He expropriated art works from the
public domain. He stole enormous sums from Nazi party coffers. He
invented a new concept, the "personality right;' that enabled him to
charge a small fee for every postage stamp with his picture on it, a
venture that made him hundreds of millions of marks.
Edit: ...
Far from being the ascetic, Hitler lived self-indulgently. During
his entire tenure in office he got special rulings from the German tax
office that allowed him to avoid paying income or property taxes. He
had a motor pool of limousines, private apartments, country homes,
a vast staff of servants, and a majestic estate in the Alps. His happiest
times were spent entertaining European royalty, including the Duke
and Duchess of Windsor, who numbered among his enthusiastic
admirers.
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Indeed; right in the opening pages of Parenti's Blackshirts and Reds:
...
Edit: ...
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