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anti-semitism
racial controls
anti-communism

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11y ago

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What were the chief features of the nazi totalization state?

InformersGestapoConcentration CampsThe courtsSS


How did Hitler youth help support the Nazi totalitarian state?

The Hitler Youth program supported the Nazi totalitarian state by fostering the military values and virtues. Military arts were also a part of the program.


Was Hitler a totalitarian?

Totalitarianism refering to a totalitarian state is a one party state in which each person is supposed to work towards the good of state, much like the aim of Stalin's USSR, or the Nazi's Germany.


How dos the totalitarian state such as Nazi Germany differ from a democratic nation such as the US?

Yes.


In a a dictator controls all aspects of the citizens' lives?

That is often called totalitarianism. Obvious examples include Fascist Italy, the USSR (from the mid 1920s onwards) and Nazi Germany,


What does Nazi Control mean?

Refers to Hitler's rule in Germany, under this rule the country was transformed into a totalitarian state where the Nazi party controlled nearly all aspects of life


To what extend could Nazi Germany be considered as Totalitarian?

All the way...


What is the neo Nazi agenda?

Neo-Nazis support a fascist and totalitarian government


What are the features of the Nazis system of government?

The features of the System of the Nazi German governent were; -The Governement was a dictator -Germany was a facist country - The main political party was the Nazi Party -The Gestapo were the secrete police state.


Was Nazi Germany a totalitarian state?

Yes it was. The Nazis controlled nearly every aspect of the populations lives and also tried to control their minds through the use of widespread propaganda.


How did Hitler and the Nazi party maintain a totalitarian government in Germany?

kill everyone who was different


What is a totaliarian state?

A totalitarian state is a political system in which the government seeks to control nearly every aspect of public and private life, often through oppressive means. It typically features a single-party rule, a strong central leader, and the suppression of dissenting voices. Totalitarian regimes utilize propaganda, surveillance, and state-sponsored violence to maintain their power and enforce conformity among citizens. Examples include North Korea and historical regimes like Nazi Germany and Stalinist Soviet Union.