English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

7 answers

Adolf Hitler, the rest is history, It might also be said that if France and Britain at that time had a little more back bone it might not have happened WW II, but they had been in a war on their soil; so that might explain it, the libs of yesteryear history, learn from your mistakes or re-live your mistakes later.........

2007-06-03 05:30:13 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

Western Europe was very harsh on Germany after World War I. It was funny but even Americans didn't pass the Treaty of Versailles because it didn't pass the Senate because they believed that the treaty was too harsh on Germany. It required Germany to pay for everything and required them to sign a treaty to say that the War was their fault entirely. Half their coal production (Germany's major export at the time) was to go to France England to help pay for the War Debt, which was something like 33 Billion dollars. Adjusted for inflation, that would be something like 3.8 trillion dollars now. This left Germany (and due to the great depression, alot of the Western World) in economic turmoil. There weren't many jobs, inflation went crazy so food supplies were so expensive. During WW1 Germany just printed more money with nothing to back it with, so money was no longer worth the paper it was printed on. Germans were starving, and the government at the time, The Weimar Republic was run by ineffectual fools. The trouble with people when they're miserable and starving, is that they'll elect anybody who gives them hope. Hitler promised to put people to work, rebuild the military factories and restore German honor. Hitler managed to transform a failing German economy back to a superpower. He had no love for the Jews, but to Germans that didn't matter, There was plenty of anti-semitism in Germany to begin with. He brought them back from the brink, and that's how Hitler came to power. In many respects, the harsh conditions imposed by the Treaty of Versailllses after World War I sewn the seeds that gave rise to the Nazi Regime.

2007-06-03 05:34:03 · answer #2 · answered by arkainisofphoenix 3 · 2 0

specific, through fact the reparations Germany became required to pay all yet bankrupted the rustic. Inflation interior the 1920's reached 10,000 p.c. according to day and money became valueless, different than for the recyclable fee of the paper. So if a individual had to purchase, say, some bread and milk, he/she would take as many banknotes as obtainable alongside to the food market, the money would be weighed and the fee of the paper calculated. If the burden became adequate, the guy would get his/her groceries. If no longer, no bread and/or milk. to guard against a repeat of this style of cycle, and the potential of a 0.33 worldwide conflict taking place for an identical reason, the allies desperate after the 2nd to no longer require harsh reparations, and additionally to make a contribution to the rebuilding of the two Germany and Japan attempt google for websites with extra information.

2016-11-03 12:52:24 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Germany had to take the blame for the war and pay reparations, which led to a rise in Naziism and a poor economy.

2007-06-03 05:28:40 · answer #4 · answered by Big Bear 7 · 1 0

This topic is worth more attention

2016-09-20 21:31:52 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

thats arguable and there are in fact many answers to this question...

2016-08-24 04:30:52 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

WW2

2007-06-03 05:22:11 · answer #7 · answered by jd4evah 1 · 1 0

fedest.com, questions and answers