Boom baby
The Nazis were first and foremost a hate party. They simply loathed: * Jews * Gypsies * Communists * Socialists * Liberals * Homosexuals * Democracy * SlavsJews
The Nazis loathed democracy and made it perfectly clear that they wanted to get rid of it.
If I am correct, many/most of the liberals in Germany were Communists. If so, the liberals were indeed a prime target of the Nazis. ___ However, you are quite mistaken. At no time did the liberals make common cause with the Communists. The liberals were supporters of democracy, which the Nazis detested. (Incidentally, this zest for regarding liberals as Communists is something that hardline right-wingers in the US share with the Nazis).
The concept of "full democracy" does not make any sense. Germany is a liberal democracy, which means that there are two opposing forces of law in Germany: (1) the people's votes and (2) countermajoritarian rights. Countermajoritarian rights are specific legal doctrines which the state has exempted from the usual process of popular sovereignty in order to protect minorities from the majority. The banning of the Nazi Party in Germany was an extension of this protection by outlawing political parties that have made discrimination against minorities part of their political platform and, specifically, the Nazis because of Germany's past with the Nazis.
They were called Nazis.
Nowadays many historians of the period divide the question into two parts: firstly, why did democracy fail in Germany in the early 1930s? Secondly, given that democracy failed, why did the Nazis rather than the German Nationalists (DNVP) benefit? As for the first question, in Germany democracy was burdened by the 'stab-in-the-back legend'. This was a conspiracy theory that claimed that Germany hadn't really been defeated in World War 1 but had been treacherously done down on the home front by liberal and socialist subversives. I think it is unlikely that the republic could have withstood the very damaging effects of the Great Depression, given the relative weakness of democracy in Germany. It is the second question that is relevant to your question, and I think the answer is No. Without Hitler's rabble-rousing leadership the Nazis would still have been a small splinter group and would have been almost unknown outside Bavaria.
It's both!
they were moved by the Nazis, not from the Nazis, the Nazis were in Poland. Most long distance travel was made by train.
liberal democracy. Democracy altogether. socialist democracy. Democracy elite. A pluralist democracy.
"Lend Lease Act." The arsenal of democracy; allowed the recieving nations to pay back the loans after the war, when they were fully recovered.
The Nazis trained them.
No, the Nazis did not have schools in the US.No, the Nazis did not have schools in the US.