STATE SECRETARY FOR THE RUSSIAN PROTECTOR IN THINGS AND IN MORAVA, PRAGUE, inv. 2617, sig. 109-12/265

Page 93

English Translation

63a Today's crisis of democracy results from the fact that circumstantial intelligence is repulsed from the national core, or how - after the example of Masaryk - at least in a serious time, it is able to cling to this core again. We have come to such a state that such expensive political freedom loses its value, if the will of an official is sufficient, mutually supported by other colleagues, to thwart a number of people's lives far more painful and cynical than both worthy and intentional murderers. Even the right of the president- the republic becomes nothing if his own office since the r. 1926 is not interested in his own act, although otherwise it is known how almost promptly the complainant gets for trust - a criminal. The gendarmerie arrests the writer of a documented complaint without waiting to be dealt with by an accused official. Atd..... The power of democracy undermines the arrogance of the administration. No one has the right to feel the chosen one just because he may have previously arrived or won any papers. Even on the doctrines and on the paper there is no life. On the pa- feather it can be stated what was, but not what is. If any editor may have confirmed how he learned in school during that time, today's telegraph editor confirms with his chaos that he did not learn in life. For the selfishness of his privilege he suffers from the reader's right to know the truth and suffers the state, in the end-to-be confusion of the citizens. In my rich experience, I only recall these circumstances to demonstrate the pettyness of so many cultural and political struggles. For all the social struggles that have occurred in history, for 56