The Nazis did very little to implement any of this other than by dispossessing and murdering people of Jewish decent.
I find it difficult to believe that you would take a document produced in 1920, even before the beer hall putch, as a serious analysis of Nazi intentions or actions. It is Nazi propaganda designed at that stage to attract people from the popular Socialist and Communist movements that existed at that time. This was just a few years after the Russian revolution and a year after the failed German Communist revolution. They were attempting to form a mass movement Nationalist party and used some of the language of Marxism to attract people (just as Marx used the language of Hagel who was not regarded as left-wing).
Nazi ideology did change between 1920 and 1936 when they took power. But although they continued to use anti-Capitalist rhetoric it was usually aimed solely at Jewish businesses and not at 'German' capitalist.
Furthermore, just because the manifesto states that "We demand freedom for all religious faiths in the state", it does not mean that the holocaust was not designed and implemented by the Nazis.