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Nazis: The Most Interesting Stories

Posted By: Free butterfly
Nazis: The Most Interesting Stories

Nazis: The Most Interesting Stories by Toma Lucille
English | September 7, 2020 | ISBN: N/A | ASIN: B08HGRWCSR | 134 pages | AZW3 | 0.24 Mb

A collection of the most interesting stories about nazism or in other words National Socialism. Why did they fight against religion? Did they manage to overcome gravity and how did they help in flying into space? Did baptism look like any other and how they used Jesus Christ? You will learn everything from this book. National Socialism, Nazism, sometimes also referred to as Hitlerism (from the name of Adolf Hitler) - the racist, anti-communist, anti-democratic and anti-Semitic ideology of the National Socialist German Workers' Party (NSDAP). The German extremes of fascism, based on social Darwinism, biological racism, and especially anti-Semitism, grew out of Prussian and German chauvinism, drawing on both nationalist and social slogans, difficult to place unequivocally on the classical right-left axis, and easier to place with the help of a two-axis division. State ideology during the NSDAP's rule in totalitarian Germany from 1933 to 1945.The spread of National Socialist propaganda and the use of National Socialist symbols has been legally prohibited in Germany (and Austria) since 1945. Similar prohibitions also exist in other countries, including Poland. In practice, there are nowadays marginal neo-Nazi groups, and organizations such as the National Democratic Party of Germany and the Golden Dawn are partly based on the Nazi idea. The National Socialist ideologists were Adolf Hitler (Mein Kampf), Alfred Rosenberg and Joseph Goebbels.In the context of German history, the term National Socialism appeared in the program of the German Workers' Party (DAP), founded in 1919, which changed its name to NSDAP in 1920. Party supporters described themselves as Nazis. This form was also used by opponents of ideology after 1920. Researchers attribute the name of the doctrine to the conservative thinker Oswald Spengler, who, in his essay The Prussian Spirit and Socialism (1919), presented his own conception of the term socialism, different from that of the revolutionary left, which was commonly associated with it. Spengler's perspective represented Germany's centuries-old struggle for a favourable position among other nations and the struggle for national revolutionary domination over them. The socialism of the German people in this sense was contrasted with British parliamentarianism, which was described as ineffective, and Marxism, which was regarded as a conflicting factor for the conservative elite and ordinary workers. Spengler was not the only conservative to draw on Nazism. Other conservative thinkers referred to by the Nazis included Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, Arthur Schopenhauer and Friedrich Nietzsche. However, the Nazis did not draw on German conservatism alone, as their party was based on the models of Italian fascism, and the NSDAP itself resembled the Italian National Fascist Party in structure. The doctrine of National Socialism also showed clear inspiration from the ideology of the racist French right (Arthur de Gobineau).

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