It was a gradual process starting with making socialist and communist parties illegal, merging some of the Conservative parties into the Nazi's and encouraging Liberals and the Catholic Centrist parties to disband as there were going to be no more elections.
may 1933
The ban was not a ban on foreigners. In 836 an imperial decree forbade the Chinese from having relations with "people of color" (foreigners). Provincial administrations were controlled by eunuch army supervisors, who were resented by officials, and factional conflicts between the Niu and Li political parties weakened the Tang regime. The ban was usefull in keeping the race intanct.
He was never elected either Chancellor or President of Germany, but he did win a majority of seats in several elections, including the most important one in 1933. He was appointed Chancellor in January 1933 from Paul von Hindenburg, the president, who was under great pressure, and who actually despised him. As the undisputed leader of his party he was then able to first pass the enabling act which made him effectively dictator, then ban all other parties, then after Hindenburg's death merge the offices of President and Chancellor into one office, "Führer und Reichskanzler".
Germany pursues a policy of active commitment to democracy - and this involves among other things - a ban on Nazi writings.
When Adolf Hitler took control of Germany, the first thing he began was to consolidate his power by suppressing political dissent and eliminating opposition. He implemented authoritarian measures such as censorship, propaganda, and persecution of minority groups, particularly Jews. This led to the establishment of a one-party dictatorship under the Nazi regime.
At the end of March 1933, Hitler's coalition government was able to pass an amendment to the constitution which is commonly called the "Enabling Act". The Enabling Act took most of the government's power and basically gave it directly to Hitler himself. So Hitler could make up laws as he wanted, and had full control of all military and police forces, in addition to the Nazi Party's own paramilitary forces. In less than three months, he had successfully outlawed other political parties or had used the threat of arrest or violence to intimidate allied political parties into disbanding and joining his Nazi Party.
may 1933
yes
The ban was not a ban on foreigners. In 836 an imperial decree forbade the Chinese from having relations with "people of color" (foreigners). Provincial administrations were controlled by eunuch army supervisors, who were resented by officials, and factional conflicts between the Niu and Li political parties weakened the Tang regime. The ban was usefull in keeping the race intanct.
in 1919 and lasted until 1933
1919 (until repealed in 1933)
Any music composed by Jewish composers.
Because if he was, Germany would ban the game.
a total ban on the manufacture, sale, and transportation of liquor throughout the United States. 1919-1933.
Slavery was finally made illegal in the US through the ratification of the 13th Amendment to the Constitution on December 6, 1865. This amendment abolished slavery and involuntary servitude, except as punishment for a crime.
Thousands of pages have been written on that subject alone, so a description here can only be very brief. Until the early Thirties, Hitler's NSDAP party had been mostly a political force in south Germany's Bavaria area. His effort to grab power there (the so-called Beer Hall Putsch in 1923) had ended in failure. The ensuing Court trial however gave him much national exposure, and since the NSDAP's activities were now banned in Bavaria, he sought to expand the party's activities into northern Germany. He was then helped by the Great Depression that started in 1929 and that hit Germany especially hard. It discredited the mainstream political parties that proved unable to stop the depression, while Hitler gained much popularity by cleverly playing a blame game, accusing those parties plus Germany's victors in WW I plus an international 'conspiracy' of Jewish bankers, politicians and behind-the-scenes power brokers of being the cause of all Germany's problems. A number of leading German industrialists and bankers, aided by the prominent German politician Franz von Papen then pushed Hitler forward on the national political stage, supplying him with much-needed and generous finincial support. Their mistaken idea of Hitler was that he was just a brilliant 'propagandist' but not much more, and the kind of personality who would do their bidding. They succeeded in having Hitler appointed as Germany's Chancellor. At the time Hitler's party did not have a majority in Parliament. But in 1933 the parliament building (the 'Reichstag") was burned down by a Dutch Communist. Whether or not he was helped by the Nazis is still unclear, but the result was that Hitler could now ban the Communist party and discredit the Socialist party. Using the powers granted to him by the "Reichtag Fire Decree" issued by Germany's President he then managed to push through legislation (the so-called Enabling Act) that gave him and the SDAP absolute power in Germany in 1933.
He was never elected either Chancellor or President of Germany, but he did win a majority of seats in several elections, including the most important one in 1933. He was appointed Chancellor in January 1933 from Paul von Hindenburg, the president, who was under great pressure, and who actually despised him. As the undisputed leader of his party he was then able to first pass the enabling act which made him effectively dictator, then ban all other parties, then after Hindenburg's death merge the offices of President and Chancellor into one office, "Führer und Reichskanzler".