Pros: Fascism can promote unity and a strong sense of national identity, leading to social cohesion and discipline. It also emphasizes order and security, which can be appealing in times of instability.
Cons: Fascism often suppresses individual rights and freedoms, promoting authoritarianism and censorship. It can lead to oppression of minority groups and violent nationalism. The concentration of power in a single leader or party can also result in corruption and abuse of power.
to make Italy a great nation again
Fascism was the ideology that played a pivotal role in the rise of Nazi Germany and the Holocaust. The Holocaust was the systematic genocide carried out by the Nazis, in which approximately six million Jews were murdered, along with millions of other victims, including Romani people, disabled individuals, and political dissidents. The fascist ideology of the Nazis, characterized by extreme nationalism, authoritarianism, and racial purity, laid the groundwork for the dehumanization, persecution, and ultimately the extermination of targeted groups during the Holocaust.
Fascist intolerance towards minorities often culminates in discrimination, segregation, and ultimately persecution. This can include systematic oppression, violence, and even genocide against targeted minority groups.
communism and economic instability. Fascism is characterized by authoritarianism, nationalism, and the suppression of political dissent. It places strict control over the economy and promotes the dominant role of a single leader or party.
Both ideologies were used to support totalitarian regimes.
A mix of Nationalism, Socialism and Social-Darwinism + the idea of a superior caucasian race.
By lying and propaganda primarily. They broke up meetings of Hitler's rivals and made sure that they had the majority in their hands, not caring about anything else.
The German people were basically (and a bit indirectly) compelled to give Hitler leadership and eventually supreme leadership.
they had a very (sick) belief that they where the dominant humans and that any other human was low life non important human, and so they went on a killing spree trying to take over the world.
there are three things that Hitler achieved on his mission 1-lots of BS 2- insanity 3- the right to commit suicide .
Adolf Hitler, while still in the German army, was sent to observe a meeting of the German Workers Party, a small fringe group, and report back on what he saw. He wasn't impressed by everything he saw and heard, but was moved enough to voice his own opinions, before he walked out. The next morning, Hitler found a letter in the mail from a party secretary, relating the impression he'd made on the members, and inviting him to join. After he became their leader, the party reorganized as the National Socialist German Workers Party... or Nazi Party for short.
During German fascism, the women's uterus had high value. Women were extremely valuable as they were able to create populations and the German fascist party wanted to expand their "racially inclined" people and women were the key to accomplish this.
They cut the hair.Put it in a container with the rest of the victims hair.Then they sent it to Germany to be put in factories and farms to make wool or fabric clothing.Most of the victims in the camps who lost their hair were bald and they couldn't grow their hair back.And most of the victims who got their hair cut were either,disinfected got a tatto number and were sent off to work factories and work barraks for slave labour.The rest of them were gassed to death in the camps gas chambers or in their gas vans.
Pope Benedict was never a true Nazi by choice. When he turned 14 years of age in 1941 he was automatically inscribed into the Nazi Party organization for young people as this was the law. He did not choose to join.
No, France is a Republic, although it was occupied by Fascist Germany for a period during WWII.
Adolf Hitler based a lot of his racial theories on the works of Madison grant, an American eugenicist. Hitler wrote to him saying "the book is my Bible". Madison Grant described the Nordic race as "It is everywhere characterized by certain unique specializations, namely, wavy brown or blond hair and blue, gray or light brown eyes, fair skin, high, narrow and straight nose, which are associated with great stature, and a long skull, as well as with abundant head and body hair." He also theorized that they have more stamina, high metabolism, and mature later. Today most people only consider people of wholly Scandinavian descent to be the true Nordics, so it would probably be more appropriate to call the race Madison Grant described as Germanic.
The the Nazi's idealized the stereo-typical Nordic with blonde hair and blue eyes, but they didn't believe that they constituted an entire race. If you were a blonde/blue eyed Slavic, then you wouldn't be the center of attention. Anybody who was of wholly Germanic descent was considered Aryan by Hitler. When it came down to naming the Jew, Gypsy or the Asian they did not look at people and say "blonde hair, blue eyes, check", they took facial structure, cranial shape, and many other things into consideration. Perfection was not mandatory, however they did have high standards. Hitler did background checks on everybody, to make sure they had no Jewish, Gypsy, or Asian admixture.
1. Nazi was an Political party
2. An leading party of Nazi Germany
3. Leaded by Hitler
theirs many facts just search up Nazi Facts or Facts about Nazi Party and you'll find a lot of facts.
The Nazi Party was a German Political party that opposed Russian Communism, among other things, although they mad a temporary alliance with the Russian in 1939 that lasted until 1941. Hitler and the Nazis were in power in Germany from 1933 until the War ended in 1945.
Actually, Fascism (at least the Nazi Germany version) was basically Communism without the idea of Nationalism. Hitler revered the Communist philosophy, he just believed Fascism was better because it described ones primary loyalty to the state.
b. 1933: Most Jews were banned from working in the public sector, from higher education and from working in the media.
c. 1935: The Nuremberg Laws in effect deprived German Jews of citizenship.
d. 1938: Jews banned from the professions; organized, large scale violence against Jews on 9-10 November (and longer in many parts of Germany) - the Night of Broken Glass (Kristallnacht). 30,000 Jews sent to concentration camps and 2,000 of these were dead within six weeks.
e. 1939: Jews forbidden to own businesses. Jews forced to live in designated apartment blocks marked with a huge J over all entrances. When World War 2 broke out in September, further restrictions were imposed on Jews. For example, they were not allowed to own pets or radios and had to stay at home from 9pm till 6am.
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f. September 1939 onwards: Invasion of Poland and later other European countries greatly increased the number of Jews under German control. Ghettos (sealed off Jewish districts) established in Poland.
g. 1941: Following the Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union (June), mobile killing units (SD-Einsatgruppen) went into action behind German lines, slaughtering the Jews. September - Jews forbidden to leave Germany and German controlled territory and ordered to wear a yellow Star of David. October - first deportations from Berlin and other German cities to 'the East'. In practice, this meant that they were taken to 'killing fields' in Latvia and Belarus. Some were dumped in ghettos in Poland.
h. 1941: 8 December - routine mass gassings start at Chelmno. Start of the 'Final Solution'
i. 1942: Wannsee Conference (20 January) establishes full co-ordination between the various branches of the German state.
Further extermination camps come into operation: Auschwitz II (Birkenau), Belzec, Sobibor, Treblinka, with Majdanek as a kind of 'back-up' for use when killing facilities at the other camps had insufficient capacity! Holocaust lasts till 1945.
In April 1933, Hitler proclaimed a one-day boycott against Jewish shops; a few days later most Jews were dismissed from employment in the public sector; three weeks later most Jewish students were expelled from universities and colleges, and Jewish children began experiencing restrictions in public schools. Then Jews were banned from the media. It was the beginning of a hailstorm of anti-Jewish decrees (about 430 (!) in ten years).
By 1935, the Nuremberg Laws deprived German Jews of citizenship. By 1936, Jews were prohibited from participation in parliamentary elections and signs reading "Jews Not Welcome" appeared in many German cities. (Incidentally, these signs were taken down in the late summer in preparation for the 1936 Olympic Games in Berlin), then in 1938 there was a night of rampage where Nazi thugs called brownshirts smashed Jewish businesses and burned synagogues. That terrible night was called "Kristallnacht" or "Night of the Broken Glass". It was the beginning of the end for the Jews.
Jews were banned from most occupations and forbidden to own businesses. They had to sell any businesses that they owned (at laughably low prices). They were denied the means of earning a living ...
After that came deportations and the infamous ghettos. Jewish houses were given to German families and their original Jewish owners were herded into these places caged in by armed guards and slowly starved to death.
Obviously a more effective and less noticeable way had to be found to get rid of the Jews so the many work camps that had sprung up during the 1930s were converted to death camps, Jews were then transported to these places and the more able bodied used as slave labour, but the real use of the concentration camps was extermination, Jews were shot and gassed in their thousands and then burned in massive crematoriums, horrific experiments were also carried out like the breaking and resetting of bones, altitude experiments and testing the effects of freezing a person and then immersing them into hot water, this mass extermination of the Jews was not confined to Germany, all over nazi occupied Europe - but especially in the main death camps in occupied Poland - this practice was taking place the numbers of these death camps rose and by the end of the War an estimated 6 million Jews had been killed.
Mass murder and genocideThe Nazis deemed the Jewish people sub-human (among many others, such as the Poles, homosexuals, etc)They wanted to get rid of them, they sent them off to extermination (death) camps. They were killed by being sent into gas chambers for the most part, others were worked to death or shot. A few were used for medical 'experiments'.
Yes, anyone can be a Nazi. It was a political party, like the Democrats or the Republicans.
Hitler believed he would win the war. The Nazi Ideal was that all German women would keep the traditional roles at home and not be independent. Since Hitler believed he'd win he wanted all women to stay home and raise kids, have more children in order to maintain a high German population so that they would one day dominate the world after the believed victory in WWII.