×
Create a new article
Write your page title here:
We currently have 2,529 articles on Polcompball Wiki. Type your article name above or click on one of the titles below and start writing!



Polcompball Wiki

Paetelism: Difference between revisions

No edit summary
 
(15 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown)
Line 8: Line 8:
|caption = “We have become sceptical of the many revolutionary strategists who immediately predicted the German Revolution.”
|caption = “We have become sceptical of the many revolutionary strategists who immediately predicted the German Revolution.”
|aliases =  
|aliases =  
Gruppe Sozialrevolutionärer Nationalisten<br>
Pætelism <br>
Pætelism <br>
[[File:Nazbollite.png]] Proto-Nazbol <br>  
[[File:Nazbollite.png]] Proto-Nazbol <br>  
Line 15: Line 16:
Group Of Social Revolutionary Nationalists
Group Of Social Revolutionary Nationalists
|alignments={{Info/AuthLefts}}<br>
|alignments={{Info/AuthLefts}}<br>
{{Info/CultRights}}<br>
{{Info/Socialists}}<br>
{{Info/Socialists}}<br>
{{Info/CultRights}}<br>
{{Info/Communists}}<br>
{{Info/Nationalists}} <br>
{{Info/Nationalists}} <br>
{{Info/Ethnonationalists}}<br>
{{Info/Ethnonationalists}}<br>
Line 22: Line 24:
[[File:Councom.png]] [[Council Communism]] <br>
[[File:Councom.png]] [[Council Communism]] <br>
[[File:Natcom.png]] [[National Communism]] <br>
[[File:Natcom.png]] [[National Communism]] <br>
[[File:Revolutionary Conservatism.png]] [[Reactionarism|Conservative Revolutionarism]] <br>  
[[File:Revolutionary Conservatism.png]] [[Revolutionary Conservatism]] <br>  
[[File:PanGerman.png]] [[Pan-Nationalism|Pan-Germanicism]]<br>
[[File:PanGerman.png]] [[Pan-Nationalism|Pan-Germanicism]]<br>
[[File:Ormarxf.png]] [[Marxism]] <br>
[[File:Ormarxf.png]] [[Marxism]] <br>
Line 29: Line 31:
[[File:RevNat.png]] [[Nationalism|Revolutionary Nationalism]] <br>
[[File:RevNat.png]] [[Nationalism|Revolutionary Nationalism]] <br>
[[File:AntiNazism.png]] [[Anti-Fascism|Anti-Nazism]] <br> [[File:Anti-Christian.png]] Christophobia <br>
[[File:AntiNazism.png]] [[Anti-Fascism|Anti-Nazism]] <br> [[File:Anti-Christian.png]] Christophobia <br>
[[File:PagTheo.png]] [[Pagan Theocracy|Paganism]]
[[File:PagTheo.png]] [[Pagan Theocracy|Paganism]] <br>
[[File:Blacknat.png]] [[Black Nationalism]] (Sympathetic)<ref> https://aggb-katalog.de/vufind/Search/Results?page=2&lookfor=%22Paetel%2C+Karl+O.+1906-1975%22&type=Author</ref>
|influenced= [[File:Nazbol.png]] [[National Bolshevism]]
|influenced= [[File:Nazbol.png]] [[National Bolshevism]]
|song=[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=acPvvv1gqGg Katjuscha]
|song=[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=acPvvv1gqGg Katjuscha]
|theorists= [[File:Paetel.png]] [[w:Karl_Otto_Paetel|Karl Otto Patel]] (1906-1975)
|theorists=  
 
*[[File:Paetel2.png]] [[Völkism|Fritz Wolffheim]] (1888-1942), [[File:Cball-Germany.png]] Germany
*[[File:Paetel.png]] [[w:Karl_Otto_Paetel|Karl Otto Paetel]] (1906-1975), [[File:Cball-Germany.png]] Germany
*[[File:Paetel.png]] [[Marxist Feminism|Elisabeth Paetel]] (1905-1984), [[File:Cball-Germany.png]] Germany
 
|likes= [[File:Councom.png]] Councils <br>  
|likes= [[File:Councom.png]] Councils <br>  
[[File:Nation.png]] Nationalism <br>  
[[File:Nation.png]] Nationalism <br>  
[[File:Cball-Prussia.png]] Prussian work ethic
[[File:Cball-Prussia.png]] Prussian work ethic <br>
[[File:Junger.png]] Ernst Jünger <br>
|dislikes= [[File:Cball-France.png]] French "people" <br>
|dislikes= [[File:Cball-France.png]] French "people" <br>
[[File:Christy.png]] Christians <br>
[[File:Christy.png]] Christians <br>
Line 51: Line 60:
[[File:Paetel.png]] '''Paetelism''' is based on the thoughts of German political figure Karl Otto Paetel. Paetel sought to combine ordinary [[File:Ormarxf.png]] [[Marxism|Marxist thought]] with [[File:Ultranat.png]] [[Ultranationalism]]. He, unlike the meme version, hated [[File:Fash.png]] [[Fascism]] and [[File:Nazi.png]] [[Nazism]] due to their [[File:Anti-Marx.png]] Anti-Marxism and, according to him, non-German nature. Also unlike the modern, stereotypical NazBol, he was opposed to the [[File:Strasser.png]] [[Strasserism|Strasser brothers]], specifically Otto, accusing him of not understanding Marxism and being insufficiently socialist. [[File:Christy.png]] [[Christian Theocracy|Christianity]] was also something that he despised as he saw it as a philosophy which was alien to German society.
[[File:Paetel.png]] '''Paetelism''' is based on the thoughts of German political figure Karl Otto Paetel. Paetel sought to combine ordinary [[File:Ormarxf.png]] [[Marxism|Marxist thought]] with [[File:Ultranat.png]] [[Ultranationalism]]. He, unlike the meme version, hated [[File:Fash.png]] [[Fascism]] and [[File:Nazi.png]] [[Nazism]] due to their [[File:Anti-Marx.png]] Anti-Marxism and, according to him, non-German nature. Also unlike the modern, stereotypical NazBol, he was opposed to the [[File:Strasser.png]] [[Strasserism|Strasser brothers]], specifically Otto, accusing him of not understanding Marxism and being insufficiently socialist. [[File:Christy.png]] [[Christian Theocracy|Christianity]] was also something that he despised as he saw it as a philosophy which was alien to German society.


==Personality ==
[[File:Paetel.png]] '''Paetelism''' is less prone to memes and is more serious compared to his [[File:Nazbol.png]] [[National Bolshevism]]. Despite being called a "fascist" by progressives like [[File:Ancom.png]] [[Anarcho-Communism]] and [[File:ML.png]] [[Marxism-Leninism]], he is still very much anti-nazi.
==Karl Otto Paetel Biography==
==Karl Otto Paetel Biography==
[[File:Paetel.png]] '''Karl Otto Paetel''' (23 November 1906 – 4 May 1975) was a German political journalist. During the 1920s, he was a prominent exponent of [[National Bolshevism]]. During the 1930s, he became a member of anti-[[Nazism|Nazi]] [[Anti-Fascism|German resistance]].
[[File:Paetel.png]] '''Karl Otto Paetel''' (23 November 1906 – 4 May 1975) was a German political journalist. During the 1920s, he was a prominent exponent of [[National Bolshevism]]. During the 1930s, he became a member of anti-[[Nazism|Nazi]] [[Anti-Fascism|German resistance]].


[[File:Karl Otto Patel.jpg|thumb|307x307px|Karl Otto Paetel]]
[[File:Karl Otto Patel.jpg|thumb|left|150x150px|Karl Otto Paetel]]


Paetel was born on 23 November 1906 in Berlin.<ref name="library"/> He attended the ''Siemens-Oberrealschule'' where he got involved in the Köngener Bund youth group.<ref name="library"/> He later studied at the Friedrich-Wilhelm University of Berlin.<ref name="library"/>
Paetel was born on 23 November 1906 in Berlin.<ref name="library"/> He attended the ''Siemens-Oberrealschule'' where he got involved in the Köngener Bund youth group.<ref name="library"/> He later studied at the Friedrich-Wilhelm University of Berlin.<ref name="library"/>
Line 63: Line 69:
Paetel was involved in the [[Nationalism|German Youth Movement]] and became a prominent leader in the ''Deutsche Freischar'' that formed part of it.<ref name="library"/> He belonged to its [[File:RevNat.png]] "national revolutionary" tendency, which sought to marry elements of both the radical left and the radical right in order to form a [[Third Positionism|Third Position]] between the [[Nazism|Nazi Party]] and the [[Council Communism|Communist Party of Germany]]. To this end he established his own ''Arbeitsring Junge Front'' and subsequently the [[National Bolshevism|Group of Social-Revolutionary Nationalists]] to promulgate his syncretic views.<ref>Timothy S. Brown, ''Weimar Radicals: Nazis and Communists Between Authenticity and Performance'', Berghahn Books, 2009, pp. 31-32</ref> The latter group was established in 1930 due to his disillusionment with the [[File:Nazi.png]] Nazi Party, a group he had hitherto been well disposed towards, as he felt that their revolutionary rhetoric was insincere and that their essential nature was conservative.<ref>Brown, ''Weimar Radicals'', p. 78</ref> Nonetheless, he felt that the Nazi Party still contained "useful" revolutionary elements and was particularly active in attempting to win over members of the Hitler Youth to his side.<ref>Brown, ''Weimar Radicals'', p. 134</ref> In 1930 he became co-editor of ''Die Kommenden'' with prominent nationalist [[File:Junger.png]] [[National Anarchism|Ernst Jünger]].<ref name="library">[http://library.albany.edu/speccoll/findaids/ger072.htm Karl M. Otto Paetel Papers, 1907-1984], accessed 17 December 2011</ref>
Paetel was involved in the [[Nationalism|German Youth Movement]] and became a prominent leader in the ''Deutsche Freischar'' that formed part of it.<ref name="library"/> He belonged to its [[File:RevNat.png]] "national revolutionary" tendency, which sought to marry elements of both the radical left and the radical right in order to form a [[Third Positionism|Third Position]] between the [[Nazism|Nazi Party]] and the [[Council Communism|Communist Party of Germany]]. To this end he established his own ''Arbeitsring Junge Front'' and subsequently the [[National Bolshevism|Group of Social-Revolutionary Nationalists]] to promulgate his syncretic views.<ref>Timothy S. Brown, ''Weimar Radicals: Nazis and Communists Between Authenticity and Performance'', Berghahn Books, 2009, pp. 31-32</ref> The latter group was established in 1930 due to his disillusionment with the [[File:Nazi.png]] Nazi Party, a group he had hitherto been well disposed towards, as he felt that their revolutionary rhetoric was insincere and that their essential nature was conservative.<ref>Brown, ''Weimar Radicals'', p. 78</ref> Nonetheless, he felt that the Nazi Party still contained "useful" revolutionary elements and was particularly active in attempting to win over members of the Hitler Youth to his side.<ref>Brown, ''Weimar Radicals'', p. 134</ref> In 1930 he became co-editor of ''Die Kommenden'' with prominent nationalist [[File:Junger.png]] [[National Anarchism|Ernst Jünger]].<ref name="library">[http://library.albany.edu/speccoll/findaids/ger072.htm Karl M. Otto Paetel Papers, 1907-1984], accessed 17 December 2011</ref>


After escaping from internment by the French police in May 1940, he fled via southern France to Spain, and then to New York. There, he resumed his journalistic activities and worked as a correspondent. In 1943, he married his fiancée Elisabeth Zerner. After the war, he edited the magazine ''Deutsche Gegenwart'' and wrote about Jünger. In 1975, he died in Forest Hills, Queens, in New York City.<ref>Diethart Kerbs: Walter Reuter: Berlin - Madrid - Mexico, 1906-2005. A life of Bund origins. In: Botho Brachmann, Helmut Knüppel, Joachim-Felix Leonhard and Julius H. Schoeps (eds.): The Art of Networking. Festschrift for Wolfgang Hempel. Verlag für Berlin-Brandenburg, Berlin 2006, ISBN 3-86650-344-X, p. 116 ([Online http://opus4.kobv.de/opus4-fhpotsdam/files/14/Kerbs.pdf PDF], accessed April 17, 2013).</ref>
After escaping from internment by the French police in May 1940, he fled via southern France to Spain, and then to New York. There, he resumed his journalistic activities and worked as a correspondent. In 1943, he married his fiancée Elisabeth Zerner. After the war, he edited the magazine ''Deutsche Gegenwart'' and wrote about Jünger. In 1975, he died in Forest Hills, Queens, in New York City.<ref name=BJ>Diethart Kerbs: Walter Reuter: Berlin - Madrid - Mexico, 1906-2005. A life of Bund origins. In: Botho Brachmann, Helmut Knüppel, Joachim-Felix Leonhard and Julius H. Schoeps (eds.): The Art of Networking. Festschrift for Wolfgang Hempel. Verlag für Berlin-Brandenburg, Berlin 2006, ISBN 3-86650-344-X, p. 116 ([Online http://opus4.kobv.de/opus4-fhpotsdam/files/14/Kerbs.pdf PDF], accessed April 17, 2013).</ref>
 
==Personality ==
[[File:Paetel.png]] '''Paetelism''' is less prone to memes and is more serious compared to his [[File:Nazbol.png]] [[National Bolshevism]]. Despite being called a "fascist" by progressives like [[File:Ancom.png]] [[Anarcho-Communism]] and [[File:ML.png]] [[Marxism-Leninism]], he is still very much anti-nazi.


==How to Draw==
==How to Draw==
===Normal===
{{Flag|Paetelism Flag.png}}
{{Flag|Paetelism Flag.png}}
#Draw a very dark, but not completely black circle
#Draw a very dark, but not completely black circle;
#Draw Group of Social Revolutionary Nationalists design in the middle in red 
#Draw Group of Social Revolutionary Nationalists design in the middle in red;
#Add the glasses
#Add the glasses;
And you're done!
And you're done!
{{Flag-auto
{{Flag-auto
|c1 = Black
|c1 = Black
|h1 = #000000
|h1 = #141414
|c2 = Red
|c2 = Red
|h2 = #EC1C24
|h2 = #EC1C24
Line 90: Line 98:
*[[File:Irridentism.png]] [[Irredentism]] - We must reclaim Germanys lost terretories!  
*[[File:Irridentism.png]] [[Irredentism]] - We must reclaim Germanys lost terretories!  
*[[File:PanGerman.png]] [[Pan-Nationalism|Pan Germanism]] - We must create greater germany!
*[[File:PanGerman.png]] [[Pan-Nationalism|Pan Germanism]] - We must create greater germany!
*[[File:Orthlen.png]] [[Leninism]] - Great ideas, you have been a great inspiration for me.
*[[File:Antiimp.png]] [[Isolationism|Anti-Imperialism]] - Down with the illegal Treaty of Versailles!


===Frenemies===
===Frenemies===
Line 95: Line 105:
*[[File:ML.png]] [[Marxism-Leninism]] - Good system but too internationalist. I'm really disapointed by the KPD
*[[File:ML.png]] [[Marxism-Leninism]] - Good system but too internationalist. I'm really disapointed by the KPD
*[[File:Nazbol.png]] [[National Bolshevism]] -  My son who stole my name! But why do you love [[National Socialism|him]] so much?
*[[File:Nazbol.png]] [[National Bolshevism]] -  My son who stole my name! But why do you love [[National Socialism|him]] so much?
*[[File:Natcom.png]] [[National Communism]] - Very close but drop this internationalism thing
*[[File:Natcom.png]] [[National Communism]] - Very close but drop this internationalism thing.
*[[File:Stalin.png]] [[Stalinism]] - That's what I meant man! But I think you should tone down your authoritarianism…
*[[File:Antifa.png]] [[Anti-Fascism]] - Fuck fascism! Although, please stop calling me a fascist.


===Enemies===
===Enemies===
Line 107: Line 119:
*[[File:Strasser.png]] [[Strasserism]] - You aren't a true National socialist and I know that you will betray the national revolution. Also why do you love Christian invaders so much?
*[[File:Strasser.png]] [[Strasserism]] - You aren't a true National socialist and I know that you will betray the national revolution. Also why do you love Christian invaders so much?
*[[File:Euras.png]] [[Fourth Theory]] - An eurasian empire controlled by Russia is not in the interest of Germany
*[[File:Euras.png]] [[Fourth Theory]] - An eurasian empire controlled by Russia is not in the interest of Germany
*[[File:Lib.png]] [[Liberalism]] - Capitalist and globalist garbage. You are the reincarnated antichrist.


==Further Information==
==Further Information==
Line 147: Line 160:
[[Category:IRL ideologies]]
[[Category:IRL ideologies]]
[[Category:Socialists]]
[[Category:Socialists]]
[[Category:German_Ideologies]]


{{#css:
{{#css:
img{image-rendering:pixelated;}
body #mw-content-container {padding-top:7.3%;}
body #mw-content-container {padding-top:7.3%;}
body #mw-content-text {color: #efefef;}
body #mw-content-text {color: #efefef;}

Latest revision as of 23:17, 12 February 2024

This page is about an important IRL ideology
"This knowledge is essential to political science!" - Scientocracy
This page is about an ideology that not only exists in the real world, but is also of reasonable importance. Please do not make major edits to this page without citing sources, so that it may stay accurate.


“Is clearly visible, hoisting the banner of Eternal Germany that was rolled up by their fathers and forming the columns of German Nationalist Communism in the camp of the revolution.”


Paetelism is the forefather ideology to Error creating thumbnail: Unable to save thumbnail to destination National Bolshevism and all variants of it. This Ideology differentiates from Error creating thumbnail: Unable to save thumbnail to destination modern National Bolshevism as it's less esoteric and more strictly about Cultural Rightism with Error creating thumbnail: Unable to save thumbnail to destination Leftist economics, due to his lack of satisfaction with the KPD.

Beliefs

Error creating thumbnail: Unable to save thumbnail to destination Paetelism is based on the thoughts of German political figure Karl Otto Paetel. Paetel sought to combine ordinary Error creating thumbnail: Unable to save thumbnail to destination Marxist thought with Error creating thumbnail: Unable to save thumbnail to destination Ultranationalism. He, unlike the meme version, hated Error creating thumbnail: Unable to save thumbnail to destination Fascism and Error creating thumbnail: Unable to save thumbnail to destination Nazism due to their Error creating thumbnail: Unable to save thumbnail to destination Anti-Marxism and, according to him, non-German nature. Also unlike the modern, stereotypical NazBol, he was opposed to the Error creating thumbnail: Unable to save thumbnail to destination Strasser brothers, specifically Otto, accusing him of not understanding Marxism and being insufficiently socialist. Error creating thumbnail: Unable to save thumbnail to destination Christianity was also something that he despised as he saw it as a philosophy which was alien to German society.

Karl Otto Paetel Biography

Error creating thumbnail: Unable to save thumbnail to destination Karl Otto Paetel (23 November 1906 – 4 May 1975) was a German political journalist. During the 1920s, he was a prominent exponent of National Bolshevism. During the 1930s, he became a member of anti-Nazi German resistance.

Karl Otto Paetel

Paetel was born on 23 November 1906 in Berlin.[2] He attended the Siemens-Oberrealschule where he got involved in the Köngener Bund youth group.[2] He later studied at the Friedrich-Wilhelm University of Berlin.[2]

Paetel was involved in the German Youth Movement and became a prominent leader in the Deutsche Freischar that formed part of it.[2] He belonged to its Error creating thumbnail: Unable to save thumbnail to destination "national revolutionary" tendency, which sought to marry elements of both the radical left and the radical right in order to form a Third Position between the Nazi Party and the Communist Party of Germany. To this end he established his own Arbeitsring Junge Front and subsequently the Group of Social-Revolutionary Nationalists to promulgate his syncretic views.[3] The latter group was established in 1930 due to his disillusionment with the Error creating thumbnail: Unable to save thumbnail to destination Nazi Party, a group he had hitherto been well disposed towards, as he felt that their revolutionary rhetoric was insincere and that their essential nature was conservative.[4] Nonetheless, he felt that the Nazi Party still contained "useful" revolutionary elements and was particularly active in attempting to win over members of the Hitler Youth to his side.[5] In 1930 he became co-editor of Die Kommenden with prominent nationalist Error creating thumbnail: Unable to save thumbnail to destination Ernst Jünger.[2]

After escaping from internment by the French police in May 1940, he fled via southern France to Spain, and then to New York. There, he resumed his journalistic activities and worked as a correspondent. In 1943, he married his fiancée Elisabeth Zerner. After the war, he edited the magazine Deutsche Gegenwart and wrote about Jünger. In 1975, he died in Forest Hills, Queens, in New York City.[6]

Personality 

Error creating thumbnail: Unable to save thumbnail to destination Paetelism is less prone to memes and is more serious compared to his Error creating thumbnail: Unable to save thumbnail to destination National Bolshevism. Despite being called a "fascist" by progressives like Error creating thumbnail: Unable to save thumbnail to destination Anarcho-Communism and Error creating thumbnail: Unable to save thumbnail to destination Marxism-Leninism, he is still very much anti-nazi.

How to Draw

Flag of Paetelism
  1. Draw a very dark, but not completely black circle;
  2. Draw Group of Social Revolutionary Nationalists design in the middle in red;
  3. Add the glasses;

And you're done!

Color Name HEX RGB
Black #141414 20, 20, 20
Red #EC1C24 236, 28, 36


Relationships

Friends

Frenemies

Enemies

Further Information

References

  1. https://aggb-katalog.de/vufind/Search/Results?page=2&lookfor=%22Paetel%2C+Karl+O.+1906-1975%22&type=Author
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 Karl M. Otto Paetel Papers, 1907-1984, accessed 17 December 2011
  3. Timothy S. Brown, Weimar Radicals: Nazis and Communists Between Authenticity and Performance, Berghahn Books, 2009, pp. 31-32
  4. Brown, Weimar Radicals, p. 78
  5. Brown, Weimar Radicals, p. 134
  6. Diethart Kerbs: Walter Reuter: Berlin - Madrid - Mexico, 1906-2005. A life of Bund origins. In: Botho Brachmann, Helmut Knüppel, Joachim-Felix Leonhard and Julius H. Schoeps (eds.): The Art of Networking. Festschrift for Wolfgang Hempel. Verlag für Berlin-Brandenburg, Berlin 2006, ISBN 3-86650-344-X, p. 116 ([Online http://opus4.kobv.de/opus4-fhpotsdam/files/14/Kerbs.pdf PDF], accessed April 17, 2013).

Articles

Videos

Books

Political Parties

Gallery


Navigation


Recent changes

  • Itapi • Yesterday at 23:46
  • Itapi • Yesterday at 23:45
  • JAcket • Yesterday at 20:50
  • JAcket • Yesterday at 20:42