"It was belief in master race" In my oppion the time wasted to kill the jews wasnt nessary in the sense that they could gain the tittle master race its very stupid and retared to think that.
belief in a 'master race'
Stalin’s rule in the USSR was clearly totalitarian, but he didn’t establish it as much as continue with the existing system that he took over.
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Joseph Stalin
In 1930 there were a number of totalitarian nations in the world. The most prominent were : A. The Soviet Union. In 1930, the Soviet dictator, Stalin was conducting purges of other communists that he believed were a danger to his regime; B. Imperial Japan was planning the invasion of China. This war against China would begin in 1931; and C. The fascist government of Mussolini in Italy, was planning its expansion in the Mediterranean Sea. The goal was to reestablish what was once part of the ancient Roman empire.
Lenin was the first leader of the Soviet Union and under him the totalitarian system was established.
Stalin’s rule in the USSR was clearly totalitarian, but he didn’t establish it as much as continue with the existing system that he took over.
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Joseph Stalin
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Both Vladimir Lenin and Joseph Stalin imposed harsh totalitarian governments in Russia and the Soviet Union. Stalin's was harsher and more totalitarian than Lenin's though.
It was a fatal blow to the German war effort on the Eastern front. It also resulted in the loss of millions of Soviet caualtiesRead more: Did_operation_Barbarossa_do_more_to_harm_USSR_or_Germany
In 1930 there were a number of totalitarian nations in the world. The most prominent were : A. The Soviet Union. In 1930, the Soviet dictator, Stalin was conducting purges of other communists that he believed were a danger to his regime; B. Imperial Japan was planning the invasion of China. This war against China would begin in 1931; and C. The fascist government of Mussolini in Italy, was planning its expansion in the Mediterranean Sea. The goal was to reestablish what was once part of the ancient Roman empire.
Perhaps the most famous Totalitarian system would be Nazi Germany during the second world war or perhaps Stalin's regime in The Soviet Union, Cuba under the rule of Fidel Castro is another good example
Usually, totalitarian regimes have a secret police (KGB in the Soviet Union, Gestapo in Nazi Germany, SAVAK in Imperial Iran etc.) and this secret police will arrest suspected dissidents, jail them, torture them, and disappear them. Anyone who does not agree with the regime is summarily removed this way.
Nazi Germany: The weakness of democratic institutions and the economic turmoil by the Treaty of Versailles and the Great Depression in the Weimar Republic of Germany opened the doors for the Nazis under Adolf Hitler to come to power----basically through a democratic election. Soviet Union: The authoritarian monarchy of the Czarist Russia was cruel and unjust on Russia's poor people, and that galvanize a revolution under VI Lenin. WWI brought the weakness of the Czarist regime and when the February Revolution occured, where hundreds of Russians in St. Petersburg were gunned down by the Czar's Imperial Guards, the Czarist regime ended and opened a power vacuum for Lenin to takeover after the overthrow of the weak provisional government. Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union were Europe's two big totalitarian twins, while all other totalitarian governments were basically propped up either by Soviet or Nazi occupation or through Communist-led post-WWII liberation as in the case in Yugoslavia and Albania.
Lenin was the first leader of the Soviet Union and under him the totalitarian system was established.
the soviet unoin