. ©MAZAL LIBRARY

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. NUERNBERG MILITARY TRIBUNAL
Volume III · Page 469
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 I
Reflections on a National Socialist Judicial Reform 
 
I
 
Since 1914 the world has found itself in one of the greatest revolutions of history. National socialism, which was born during the First World War, is the pivotal point of this revolution. Having welded the German nation together politically from 1918 to 1933 into a national community it is about in the present World liar to "organize" Europe anew and to create a new world philosophy. It goes without saying that during such a "world revolution" certain fields of human endeavor cannot keep pace. Among such fields belongs, in particular — along with all the arts and sciences — jurisprudence. The first decisions in history were always made by men and nations in the elementary struggle for power. But the aim of this tremendous reorganization of the world is that for the first time in history not power, but justice will be victorious. In periods of transition this justice must prevail in different ways from the ways it chooses in untroubled times of peace. The scope of a peacetime administration of justice is often too narrow to do justice to present events. Thus, a historical revolution such as the present one will, of necessity, bring about a crisis in law, and particularly a crisis in the administration of justice; and the extent and intensity of this crisis depend on the extent of the revolution. A crisis is customarily defined as a state of the most violent intensification of the symptoms of a sickness, which is followed by a decisive turn, either toward the worse, to final descent — death in the case of man, and dissolution in that of a public institution — or the pendulum swings to the other side after the climax of the crisis, toward recovery. The present crisis in the administration of justice today is close to such a climax. A totally new conception of the administration of justice must be created, particularly a National Socialist judiciary, and for this the druggist's salve is not sufficient; only the knife of the surgeon, as will later be shown, can bring about the solution.  
 
II  
 
What is the present state of German justice? Complete and clear fronts are drawn-on the one side are all the activist forces in Germany, particularly the old guard of the Party, to whom today's justice is a hindrance in the pursuance of their aims. Natural friction occurs daily between elementary law, such as it is experienced by the activists, and the law as it is administered by the legal authorities of today. In every German village, and in every German city, modern jurisprudence, as the representative of the law, especially the judge and his verdict, have lost
 
 
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