1948,   Churchill   described   the rise    of  National    Socialism   in
the  1920s   as  a   new,    fanatical,  religion    of  war,    something
more    akin    to  Islam   than    to  anything    else    in  history:
When    eventually  he  [Hitler]    came    to  power,
[in Mein    Kampf]   there   was     no  book    which
deserved     more    careful     study   from    the
rulers,  political   and     military,   of  the    Allied
Powers. All  was     there   –   the     programme   of
German   resurrection;   the     technique   of  party
propaganda; the plan    for combating   Marxism;
the  concept     of  a   National-Socialist  State;  the
rightful    position    of  Germany at  the summit  of
the world.  Here    was the new Koran   of  faith
and  war:    turgid,     verbose,    shapeless,  but
pregnant    with    its message.^126Churchill    equated    Mein     Kampf   with    the    Koran,   and     like
David    Cameron     sixty   years   later,  Churchill   equated     Islam
with     Nazism.     As  Churchill   indicates   in  describing Mein
Kampf   as  “the    new Koran   of  faith   and war:    turgid, verbose,
shapeless”, he  considered  the Koran   likewise    to  contain the
programme   of  war to  enable  Islam   to  take    over    the world.
Churchillʼs  complaint   was     that    the     political   class   ignored
Mein     Kampf   and     thus    did     not     foresee     the     threat  from
National     Socialism.  The     difference  now     is  that    our
contemporary     political   class   are     Quislings,  aligned     with
Islam    and     lying   to  the     public  about   the     contents    of  the
Koran    and     lying   about   the     history     of  Islamic     violence
against the world.  As  we  will    show,   in  recent  decades,    our
