I do expect one thing—that the nation give me the right to intervene immediately and to take action myself wherever a person has failed to render qualified obedience and service in the performance of the greater task, a matter of to be or not to be. The front and the homeland, the transport system, administration and justice must obey only one idea, that of achieving victory. In times like the present, no one can insist on his established rights, but everyone must know that today there are only duties.
I therefore ask the German Reichstag to confirm expressly that I have the legal right to keep everybody to his duty and to cashier or remove from office or position without regard for his person or his established rights, whoever, in my view and according to my considered opinion, has failed to do his duty.[246] And that just because among millions of decent people, there are only a few exceptions. For, today, one single common duty takes precedence over all rights, even the rights of these exceptions. It does not interest me therefore whether, in the present emergency, leave, etc., can be granted or not to an official or employee in every individual case, and leave which cannot be granted should not be saved up for a later date.
If there is anybody who is entitled to ask for leave, it would be first of all only our front soldiers and secondly the men and women workers who supply the front.
For months I have been unable to grant leave to the eastern front, and nobody at home, whatever his office, should dare therefore to insist on his so-called “established right” to leave. I myself am justified to refuse because since 1933 I have not taken 3 days’ leave—a fact which is probably not known to these individuals.
Furthermore, I expect the German legal profession to understand that the nation is not here for them but that they are here for the nation, that is, the world which includes Germany must not decline in order that formal law may live, but Germany must live irrespective of the contradictions of formal justice. To quote one example, I fail to understand why a criminal who married in 1937, ill-treated his wife until she became insane and finally died as a result of the last act of ill-treatment, should be sentenced to 5 years in a penitentiary at a moment when tens of thousands of honorable German men must die to save the homeland from annihilation at the hands of bolshevism, that is, to protect their wives and children.
From now on, I shall intervene in these cases and remove from office those judges who evidently do not understand the demand of the hour.
The achievements and sacrifices of the German soldier, the German worker, the farmer, our women in town and country, that is, the millions of our middle classes, imbued only with the idea of victory, demand the corresponding attitude on the part of those who themselves have been called by the people to protect their interests. In times like the present there can be no sacrosanct individual with established rights but all of us are merely obedient servants of the nation.
Deputies!
Men of the Reichstag!
A tremendous winter battle is behind us. The hour will strike when the fronts will come out of their rigidity, and then history will decide who was victorious in this winter—the aggressor who insanely sacrificed his masses or the defender who simply held his position. During the past few weeks I have read continuously about the violent threats of our enemies. You know that my duty is far too sacred to me and that I take it far too seriously ever to be careless.