The Nazi party thought Jewish people were to blame. That was the main. Adolf Hitler was also against Gypsies, people with disorder's, and more.
They are a group of people who love animals and anime! There are 6 people in this group. Their names are Noel, Meep, Catt, Greyclaw, lildevil, & Kiba.
The Andrews Sisters was a group that toured for the USO in World War II.
Gasolin'
Is there any evidence of art for thi hominid group?
roman
JewsCommunistsFreemasonsSocialistsLiberalsPacifists
Those in the minority group are more convinced about the negative characteristics with which they have no direct contact. Also, it is in fact that human nature itself appoints blame instead of accepting it. Hope this helps your question.(:
It depends. A lot of them agreed with Hitler because it is within our nature to blame someone-the Germans blamed the Jews for economic problems. However a few thought it was unfair to blame a religious group for the collapse of the world economy.
Mein Kampf and he blamed Jews and communists.
There is no single person or group responsible for all world problems. In a way, all people in the world - or at least most of them - are responsible in part.
Scapegoating
scapegoating
Scapegoating
The blame can't be placed on just one group of people in regards to deforestation. It varies depending on locations. Farmers may be to blame in some locations and the construction of buildings and homes is also to blame.
When many people have a problem and want to blame it on another group of people.
Scapegoating is when a person (an individual, a country's leader, a politician) or an entire society places the blame for a social problem on a particular group, even though that group is really not the main cause of the problem. For example, Adolph Hitler scapegoated the Jews and blamed them for all of Germany's economic problems. Currently, in many countries, people are scapegoating immigrants (whether legal or undocumented), and in certain countries, a particular tribe or ethnic group is scapegoated, often leading to civil unrest. While it is certainly true that some individual members of a group may have contributed to a problem, scapegoating places the blame squarely on the entire group and often encourages prejudice or even hatred of that group. Political leaders, especially those in countries where there is no freedom of thought, often use scapegoating to distract from the country's real problems and keep the public busy by giving them a group at whom they can safely direct their anger. The problem of scapegoating is it leads to no solutions-- it just promotes a culture of blame; it can sometimes lead to violence, and it rarely results in positive change.
League of Nations