FOREIGN PRESS
Regarded By Germany As Public Enemy London, March 10. The Berlin correspondent of “The Times” states that the foreign Press, which Apparently the German authorities regard as public enemy No. 1, was severely attacked by tlie Minister of Propaganda, Dr. Goebbels, speaking at a reception to German journalists. Dr. Goebbels thanked the German Press for its support of the Nazi movement and added that German journalists need not envy their foreign colleagues, who enjoyed neither spiritual nor professional freedom, as at the most they served the secret powers either of Jewry, Freemasonry, international Marxism, or Capitalism. The Germans, on the other hand, worked in the service of the nation and for the honour and freedom of the people. If attacks by the foreign Press continued, he said, it would not be long before the German Press was officially called on to answer similarly.
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Bibliographic details
Dominion, Volume 31, Issue 142, 12 March 1938, Page 11
Word Count
145FOREIGN PRESS Dominion, Volume 31, Issue 142, 12 March 1938, Page 11
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