Do you understand the term "DICTATOR"? That is how he was able to accomplish all of the nasty things he did.
2007-04-20 15:22:33
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answer #1
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answered by ttpawpaw 7
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Girly q read hitler's book....
most of the german people were misled by a strong sense of nationalism, they were a conquered people, Hitler gave them a reason to feel whole again. I'm willing to guess the average German didn't know about the halocaust. they knew the Jews were taken away, but most had no idea what was going on. Those that opposed were dealt with severely as well. I'm sure that played a big factor. I reaaly do believe the goodnes in humans, I believe that if the average person found himself stacking bodies of innocent men women and children up like cordwood, maybe it would dawn on him that he just might be fighting for the wrong side....I don't know.
2007-04-20 15:30:49
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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What was his justification for the halocaust?
Prior to WW2 and post WW1 the german leadership was known as the Weimar republic. They were paramilitary and the grass roots enabler of Hitler.
Hitler enacted a number of unfair laws targeted at stripping Jews from power, influence and then their freedom.
sadly, the german public supported Hitler and enabled this persecution as a society. Many people blame Hitler for the holocaust. Unfortunately, he was supported and assisted by many, many german citizens, christians as well. Anti-semitism was the root cause of Hitlers power and made the holocaust possible.
HOW exactly was he able to project all of Germanys problems onto the jews? - The german people were anti-semetic and enabled Hitler to pass and enforce ever more terrible laws to inflict damage and death on german jews.
What were his justifications for invading neighboring countries?
Lebensraum - room to live. He started with "liberating" germans living in neighboring countries such as Austri and czechoslovakia, saying they were in danger and oppressed minorities. From there, victory and more evil acts taking full advantage of their power.
2007-04-21 06:47:25
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answer #3
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answered by tk 4
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He lied to them. He made statements about a superior race and desensitized those who carried out his orders to the point where they could pick up rotting corpses and toss them into a mass grave without a micro-expression of remorse or acknowledgment of the taking of human lives. He told them that they would rule the world, exterminate all the undesirables, and repopulate the earth with a race of Aryans. There was no justification for what he did, just the persuading speeches that allured his audiences and convinced them that they were superior to everyone else. It still happens to this day, all over the world in thoughts and deeds. By people on this forum as well. A good reference for an American example of the destructiveness of that mentality would be the film American History X. You'll never think the same about prejudice again.
2007-04-20 15:26:21
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answer #4
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answered by Hot Coco Puff 7
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They say that the people that win the wars write the history books. I believe this with all of my heart. Zionism was the ruling force after (and before) the WWI and WWII (and even now).
Wealthy Zionist bankers and oil barons rule the world to this day, even the United States. They control us through the Federal Reserve System.
The real enemy Hitler was fighting was Communism; he wasn't declaring war specifically on the Jews as our "historians" want us to believe, but rather on Communism.
Since most of the Ashekenazi Jews come from the Soviet Union, they have communist tendencies and Hitler felt them to be a threat to Germany's nationalism.
He believed that the Jews would destroy German culture. Hitler loved Germany, and wanted to keep it free from Communism. It really just boils down to that.
2007-04-20 15:37:25
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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He did the predictable snow job and said they were under threat of attack, which was the scenario used by him to pre-emptively attack Poland.
He had to focus hatred somehow. People will always use fear as a weapon because it is effective. Jews were looked at with hatred because after WW1, they still survived and flourished while others around them floundered. They were also loaning money and this made people like the diminutive Hitler hate even more.
2007-04-20 15:43:17
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answer #6
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answered by thequeenreigns 7
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First, Hitler passed Victim Disarmament laws, so the people couldn't refuse to do as he wished.
Second, he justified the war on the basis of National Greatness and "Lebensraum," which means living space.
Third, he justified the Holocaust on the basis of the Jews' alleged inferiority using the junk science called Eugenics. Eugenics was actually an American-dominated "science" and Hitler got most of his ideas from America and Italy.
We still haven't learned. We've got people demanding Victim Disarmament laws. We've got a president justifying imperialism on the basis of National Greatness and of spreading "Democracy." We've got a junk science called Psychiatry that sticks people on anti-depressants, causing them to shoot up colleges, and that drugs out little kids who are bored in our substandard schools.
Germany also has Nazi-era laws still on the books. They still have a ban on all non-Government Schools, including homeschooling. They still practice Military Slavery, also known as the draft.
People still haven't learned very much.
2007-04-20 15:28:42
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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The economy of Germany was in trouble. He was able to turn all the "true" Germans ( ironic since he himself was not a true german but austrian) against the Jewish population by saying too many were in Germany and they were taking jobs and money away from the "true" Germans.
He got his people to believe that not only jews but russian gypsies polish and the like basically anyone they came across who wasnt "pure" or Aryan needed to die in order to preserve the true race of people.
He used propaganda and manipulation. He is a frightening man to watch a speech of. He was charismatic and people latched on to his every word. You should check some of them out some time, it is interesting stuff.
2007-04-20 15:26:52
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answer #8
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answered by Stephanie is awesome!! 7
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I think what happened was, he blamed the Jewish people for all the hard luck germany had. They had alot of businesses and money, other germans didn't have much. He got everyone hyped up and in a frenzy. His reasons for invading other countries I think were, that germans were superior, and that they should take over the world. They should rule everyone. It's completely crazy what happened over there. It boggles my mind. The German people got caught up in it, and I think by the time they realized they had gone too far, it was too late. They themselves were scared. He was taking their children away and brainwashing them to turn against their families. How did he get all of those people involved to carry out his ideas? All those doctors, military people. Crazy.
Whoa Faoi, you pulled me out of the r and s section. Good one. I've never been in the politics section before. I'm not smart enough, and it's scary. I'm going back to r and s now. Take care.
2007-04-20 15:25:22
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answer #9
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answered by Rosalind S 4
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He found the right issues to attract the kinds of activists he needed to create an organization that would achieve their common goals.
There was a great deal of resentment in Germany after the First World War. He used that resentment along with an effective media driven message to attract his followers.
2007-04-20 15:24:21
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answer #10
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answered by Floyd G 6
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He convinced enough confused people that the Jews were the reason for the financial ruin of the nation, and second-class citizens.
2007-04-21 01:10:45
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answer #11
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answered by Anonymous
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