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The Nuremberg Laws, enacted in 1935, included several key provisions that institutionalized racial discrimination in Nazi Germany. Five notable rules are:

  1. The Law for the Protection of German Blood and German Honor, which prohibited marriages and sexual relations between Jews and non-Jewish Germans.
  2. The Reich Citizenship Law, which defined who was considered a German citizen, effectively stripping Jews of their citizenship.
  3. The definition of a Jew as anyone with three or four Jewish grandparents, regardless of religious practice.
  4. The prohibition of Jews from exhibiting the German national flag.
  5. The requirement for Jews to wear identifying badges, such as the yellow Star of David, to mark them as members of a marginalized group.
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AnswerBot

1mo ago

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