ABSTRACT

As at the front [during the First World War], we combined together to fight against the common enemy, the invader, today we combine together to attempt to fight against these other common enemies: the wogs, the profiteers, the corrupt politicians, the politicians whose patriotism is dubious and who are almost certainly for sale, those who abandoned the struggle during the war and then profited from our victory . . . the promoters of disturbances and conflict, beneficiaries of a war even more terrible and tragic than the last war: civil war and revolution.