The US really didn't do anything to stop the Holocaust in Europe because, it wasn't until 1944 when they had the full scale of what was happening in Europe. The Allies decide to continue the push for Berlin to stop the Holocaust that way. The main reason for this was because, they thought that if they bombed the Concentration Camps, the prisoners would be killed from the explosions. Despite this, they did bomb few parts of the Concentration Camps and train tracks but this was only due to they bombed German Factories.
The Nazi were attacking American Jews so America fought back due to the killing of the Jews.
The US was in no position to comment as their anti-black laws were just as bad. The US did nothing.
cock
The persecution (systematic harassment by the government) of the Jews in Nazi Germany very soon after the Nazis came to power in 1933. Please see the related question for details. Moreover, if Jews were beaten up by Nazi stormtroopers the police did nothing to protect them.
Kristallnacht or the Night of Broken Glass in November 1938 changed the tone of Jewish persecution in Nazi Germany from only a legal segregation between Germans and Jews to actual violent persecution, theft, and murder of Jews.
I don't think the Nazi persecution of the Jews had any bearing on the '''outcome''' of World War 2. The war (unlike the Holocaust) was not about the Jews.
Kristallnacht
cock
The world did nothing while people died. The United States even sent a ship of escaped Jews back to Europe and wouldn't let them off the ship in NY.
that it was nonsense.
the world was being re-shaped, the Jews did not figure into the Nazi vision of an ideal society, the persecution was their way of realizing their vision
The persecution (systematic harassment by the government) of the Jews in Nazi Germany very soon after the Nazis came to power in 1933. Please see the related question for details. Moreover, if Jews were beaten up by Nazi stormtroopers the police did nothing to protect them.
By the issue that it was an action of Nazis against Jews.
politics, Christianity and the human condition
The rapid radicalization of Nazi antisemitism.
Kristallnacht or the Night of Broken Glass in November 1938 changed the tone of Jewish persecution in Nazi Germany from only a legal segregation between Germans and Jews to actual violent persecution, theft, and murder of Jews.
I don't think the Nazi persecution of the Jews had any bearing on the '''outcome''' of World War 2. The war (unlike the Holocaust) was not about the Jews.
By the issue that it was an action of Nazis against Jews.
Kristallnacht