STÁTNÍ TAJEMNÍK U ŘÍŠSKÉHO PROTEKTORA V ČECHÁCH A NA MORAVĚ, PRAHA, inv. 481, sig. 109-4/227 Page 58 · 58 of 91
STATE SECRETARY FOR THE RUSSIAN PROTECTOR IN THINGS AND IN MORAVA, PRAGUE, inv. 481, sig. 109-4227
English Translation
32a - 8- about who and what the Czechoslovak Republic negotiated with in Mscow, I did not know, nor did I know anything about it. In this angularity, General Syrovy, General Krejčí and the married General Husarek, and especially the wifely chief of our flying company, Hus General Faifér, could certainly testify. On this occasion, I remember that at that time, as in the past, we (on the board of the agricultural party) were talking about the danger that will threaten all European and American cultural states for the future by the Soviet industrial competition. 1 Various industrial experts, but also some officers, who had seen various factories and industrial enterprises of the Soviets, casually expressed themselves this way: "Europe and America in the future do not threaten so much the danger of an industrial Kun competition from Japan (which the world is so afraid of), much more so the Soviet competition. As a result of its fabulous workfulness, population growth and the incredibly low living standards of the broad masses, Japan is indeed a great conclusion for the industry of the whole world, - but Soviet Russia will still be on a larger scale. We recognized this great danger (as told in Soviet Russia) ak we had seen the fabulous factory companies sxken, which grow up in the whole of Soviet Russia like mushrooms after the rain. The Soviet Union, in which everything belongs only to the state, where the state determines the working conditions (almost incredibly never-dry), where the State alone determines the life atandard of the working strata, - there in the Soviet Union they are in a few years (so our industrialists declared that they can produce such an innumerable amount of all possible industrial products it, that they will be able to flood the whole world. The quality of these products will be average and below average, but the Soviets will have the opportunity to offer and sell them so cheaply that no one will be able to compete with them. No one/and nowhere can sell the goods at such real dumping prices as the SSSR, where they not only have all the raw materials, but also where the people are state property and where the Soviet dictatorship the labor performance HAS 06754 valtro