No. It's Wikipedia article.
You misunderstood the referent of "this."
The Nazi propaganda pamphlet from 1932 is in the link below:
http://research.calvin.edu/german-propaganda-archive/sofortprogramm.htm#g
At any rate, a few brief words on the remainder:
I obviously don't think that the Nazis were socialists any more than "democratic socialists" are socialists. I do, however, think that they had solid left wing economic ideas, and whether you want to ascribe them to Hitler and the Nazis directly or not, it is undeniable that the government enacted solid Keynesian economic policies, economic policies that an economic right winger like Reagan (a standard "lower taxes and deregulate" Republican) likely would have rejected.
At any rate, historical questions aside, I think that my initial point is basically correct:
If there were a party that combined Keynesian economics with a nationalist agenda (limit immigration; deport illegal immigrants, etc.), a party that approaches actual historical naziism (like the National Front and Golden Dawn), I think that such a party would likely have a wider following in the US than the Alt-Right currently does.