Hitler describes a strategy that would isolate his party as the only source of information for citizens under its government. Poignantly, he uses religion as a model for politics, specifically citing the practices of the Catholic Church when faced with scientific facts that seem to. Its formula of unyielding dogmas, refusing to give an inch or attempting to give an explanation even where science or reason conflicts, strengthens the loyalty of the adherents. He believes that this unswerving faith strengthens an institution above all, and intends to make the political belief in his party analogous to religious belief. He desires “blind adherence” above all. He believes that “The N.S.G.W.P. must not become a bailiff of public opinion, but its ruler. It must not be the masses’ slave, but their master!” and means to do this through standing beside their teachings to the fullest extent and restricting access to information that may contradict or challenge their beliefs to the extreme. Interestingly, in early chapters about his time in Vienna, he described communist party members’ practice of only reading news controlled by their party wil great derision for their intelligence and the sentiment that he pitied them as deluded and misguided fools being used by the party for its own ends. This sentiment is gone when he later seems to describe only reading party information sources as best practice for nazi party members. He also begins a campaign of smearing and destroying trust in other news sources by referencing “popular opinion, stirred up by the Jew” and “Marxist-Jewish mendacity” while promoting his anti-semetic beliefs and ideas relating to the proposed conspiracy in the Protocols of the Elders of Zion. Thus he uses the narrative of a jewish controlled media spreading misinformation to advance both his ideology of anti-semitism and begin the process of alienating his readers from sources of information not controlled by his party as part of his design for his party’s ideological control of the German people.