People out in the sun
It targeted anyone whom Hitler openly viewed as against him or racially or ethnically inferior.
Poorly.
During the Holocaust the Jews were first sent to ghettos and from there to extermination camps and concentration camps.After the Holocaust many Jews were unable to go home and had to live in camps for Displaced Persons until they could find somewhere permanent.
He viewed them as a lower class of person, as such he did not want them around.
Homosexuals, disabled persons, gypsies.
It targeted anyone whom Hitler openly viewed as against him or racially or ethnically inferior.
Eldery Jews were treated the same way as all the other Jews were.They were also in subjection to all the normal punishments as well
Poorly.
Not at all - they lived in a state of constant fear.
Before and during World War II, Jewish persons were persecuted by Nazis (and many other Germans) because of the German view that Jews were responsible for their economic hardships, even for their defeat in World War I. Such criticism of Jews can be traced back many centuries, but it led to especially violent (and horrific) persecution due to the keen hatred expressed by Hitler and other German leaders for Jews.
Hitler's Nazi Germany invaded many European countries. Where a Nazi-friendly regime was installed, the Nazis could get some of the locals to point the finger at Jews, thus the Jews could be rounded up and transported.
In the period c. 1880-1914 many Jews wanted to get away from persecution by the Tsarist regime.
They all deleted system 32
They were exterminated by the Nazi regime.
In April 1933 the Nazi regime dismissed most Jews and people of Jewish origin from public sector jobs in Germany - in other words, well before the start of the Holocaust. It was the very first Nazi measure against the Jews.
Jews, gays, poles, anyone against his regime, etc.
About 30.3 million persons.