For the roots of National Socialist political theory, consult the following for starters
'Marx und Hegel' (1911) by Johann Plenge
'Haendler und Helden' (1915) by Werner Sombart
'Mitteleuropa' (1915) by Friedrich Naummann
That should get you started for now. After it we can move into pre-WWII German political literature...er...since you deny WWII happened let's call it 1920's German literature.
For the roots of National Socialist political theory, consult the following for starters.
That won't do. You post the text that supports your premise in this thread-- the way I do.
The fact is that you won't find any text, either from Hitler's mouth or from any historian, that says Hitler tried to take over the world, because he never dreamed of such a thing.
"Hitler's goal was Napoleonic: to establish a German Continental System under the aegis of Germany. Also, his means were not far removed from the great emperor: to liberate Germany from the shackles of intermational loan-capitalism, to unite all Germanic peoples into the Third Reich, and to establish in Eastern Europe what he called the German lebensraum (living space) which he considered as sessential to the economic security of Germany as Napoleon had considereded the Confederation of the Rhine essential to the strategic security of France."
--"A Military History of the Western World" Vol III, p. 368, by General J.F.C. Fuller
I have now provided three different sources for my statements regarding Hitler and his plans for world domination. Such plans never existed.
All you have done is run your mouth.
But don't worry, the lurkers will give you a free pass.
Walt