Communist party

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    best course of action. In the meantime, American troops are advancing and it’s becoming clearer that Germany will lose the war, which provokes tension between the SS officers and manifests into a crack-down on the previously over-looked group of Communist resisters. Having smuggled in guns and other weapons, the resistance members are waiting for the right moment to act, while also struggling to hide the child. Following their refusal to reveal the whereabouts of the child, Höfel and Kropinski…

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    Ultimately, the widespread power of the Nazi’s was due to the mixture of parliamentary and violent methods. One without the other would not have led to the same level of control that the Nazi party held at that time. All the basis of the Nazi regime was legal due to the many laws that the Nazis put in place in their rise and consolidation of power. Without the legal basis for the Nazi regime, they would not have created the widespread dictatorship…

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    and lived in homeless shelters. Hitler lived at the homeless shelters until 1919. In 1919, Hitler joined the German workers party along with many other men. During 1921, Hitler assumed leadership of the German workers party and renamed it to the Nationalist Socialist German Workers’ (Nazi) Party. Through the 1920’s Hitler explained all problems would be solved if communists and Jews were driven from the nation. In 1929, Germany entered a…

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    the NSDAP party during the period of 1925-1933 can be attribute to many factors, which can be categorized into external and internal factors. The external factors that will be looked at are the circumstances many German’s found themselves in due to the Great Depression, these circumstances in turn led to an increase in support for the NSDAP. The Great depression also created another external factor that helped the NSDAP gain more power, and that factor was the inability of the other parties,…

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    The Holocaust: Extermination or simple segregation? The spark that ignited the flame of Adolf Hitler’s hate started in 1918, when he learned of the German surrender to the Allies of World War One. Enraged, he blamed the surrender on the people in Germany, such as the Jews and Slavs, which he considered to be undesirable and sought to build a Germany were no weakness could hold it down. Hitler sent the undesirables of Germany’s occupation to camps where they were exterminated, and the evidence of…

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    Hitler's Nazi Party

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    World War I, Hitler’s Nazi Party grew into power in hope to alleviate Germany from crippling military and economic terms imposed by the Versailles Treaty. German citizens were indoctrinated that the Fuhrer would use his “superhuman efforts to free Germany from the enslavement endured since its defeat in WWI and to restore its old glory and preeminence” (pg 1). After World War I, citizens discerned the Weimar Republic as a weak democratic government. Therefore, the Nazi Party grew prominently…

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    Hitler's Turning Points

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    Hitler believed that there were four main ideas that would create a supreme Germany and for it to be seen as a great nation again. He believed that he needed to expand Germany to grow his following. He wanted complete power to redeem WW1 and get revenge on the people that discriminated against Germany. It did not help that Germany had to abide by the Treaty of Versailles laws. The Treaty laws were mostly aimed at Germany and how they could pay for WW1. Hitler also believed that Jews contaminated…

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    Hitler's Racist Policies

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    During the 1930s, Hitler was in power and built a racist state in Germany through the Nazi party by his impeccable speeches, segregation, and of course the propaganda he flooded the citizens with that slowly changed their opinions about the people around them. Through the documents there was evidence of such behavior that was shocking, but very well written that would make Hitler’s point very clear, and get others to write like him. Hitler made many speeches when he was in power, such being when…

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    Hitler and Mussolini came into power to establish single party states while Germany and Italy were under severe tension and depression. Hitler acquired power in Germany from 1933 to 1945 as compared to Mussolini who ruled for 21 years starting in 1922 to 1943 in Italy.…

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    easily turn into the support of, or participation in, hate crimes, if one member exhibits extremist views or commits violent actions without retribution from other, less radical, individuals holding membership. This could end up corrupting whole parties who previously teetered on the line separating ultranationalism and nationalism. Apart from separating nation-states into groups pit against each other and inciting racial street violence, nationalism can also encourage colonialism and…

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