When I was in grad school we were required to read chapter 11, which is called something like "Volk und Rasse" - it's the bit where Hitler explains his views on race and Aryans and Jews, etc. I think it's well worth reading to understand where he's coming from, but also to see how he makes his points. It's not the kind of emotional rant you might expect if you've heard some of his speeches; it has a reasonable, scientific tone and appears to construct a rational argument. It's all pseudo-science, of course, along with some mistaken history - but you have to know that to understand why it's wrong. If you read it with no knowledge of who wrote it, it would seem dated, but it wouldn't seem like the ravings of a mad man. And if you read it in 1929, it probably wouldn't even have seemed dated, given the widespread belief in eugenics that was present at that time.
But that's kind of the true message to take away from reading it - that the people to worry about aren't the ones whose destructive proclivities are obvious; the people to worry about are going to be those who come across as educated and reasonable.
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