Pilgrim's formula of the "serial killer" Hitler is making waves. Like all serial killers, Hitler derived satisfaction from murder, initiated by him on a monstrous scale. What was initially only an initial suspicion was proven in the first and second books of "Hitler 1 and Hitler 2": Hitler's "normal" sexuality was "low" as a result of the genetic damage caused by the serial killers. The investigation into the question of whether Hitler was a lover of women ended with the conclusion and title of the first book, The Sexual No Man's Land. In the second book, the author came to the conclusion that the young Hitler loved men until the end of 1918 without finding any real satisfaction. And so he turned his attention to Germany, where the entire nation allowed itself to be captured by Hitler 2 in a unique spectacle. But what everyone overlooked was that their jubilation had to be repaid in a certain coin, his lust for killing.
. This third book of "Hitler 1 and Hitler 2" deals with the four key paths that Hitler had to take to become a mass murderer and which are entwined around his military service in the First World War. All of them turn out to be secrets, deciphered here for the first time. Firstly, Hitler's journey from Vienna to Munich between 24 and 26 May 1913 was illegal. Secondly, the Austrian Hitler deliberately gained access to the Bavarian regiment List in August 1914. Thirdly, in mid-October 1918 he was poisoned in a British gas attack, but he was not blind, as he led posterity to believe, but mute. This step describes the tortuous path to the reserve hospital in the Pomeranian town of Pasewalk. Gaps in knowledge about Hitler's fourth movement from Pasewalk via Munich to Berlin are also filled: his acquisition of German citizenship in 1916/1919 (not just in 1932) and the important role played by Justice Minister Franz Gürtner in Hitler's change of character from silent to energetic serial killer.