Natural Selection is the volume of The Protocols series, which chronicles the rise and consequences of authoritarianism from the Industrial Revolution through the end of the Second World War. It's title is drawn from Charles Darwin's theory of natural selection, a scientific framework later appropriated and distorted by Benito Mussolini and Adolf Hitler to justify national expansion, racial hierarchy, and political repression. Their interpretation-commonly reduced to the slogan "the survival of the fittest"-was a simplification that bore little resemblance to Darwin's actual work, yet it proved rhetorically powerful and continues to resonate among large audiences today.
In biological terms, natural selection operates through diversity, variation, and adaptation to changing environments-not through homogeneity, conformity, or imposed hierarchy. These latter qualities were hallmarks of the authoritarian regimes that claimed Darwin as intellectual cover, even as they violated the very principles his theory described.
The historical setting of Natural Selection is the Battle of Britain and the Blitz, the phase of the Second World War following the defeat of France and the collapse of the democracies of Western Europe, when Great Britain stood alone. Its central figures are the pilots of the Royal Air Force and the Luftwaffe, engaged in a sustained struggle for air superiority over the English Channel as a precondition for the planned German invasion of Britain. When that objective failed, the Luftwaffe continued its bombing campaign while Germany turned its attention eastward toward the Soviet Union-a shift examined in the next volume of the series, Front & Homeland.
Like all volumes in The Protocols, Natural Selection is constructed from carefully selected excerpts drawn from memoirs, diaries, newspapers, speeches, and official documents. These materials are chosen not only for their capacity to illuminate the past, but for their continuing relevance to the moral, political, and psychological conditions in which we live.
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History