You have to write the essay. We don't do homework for students. We will be glad to give support and suggestions, but not do your work.
East Germany was communist and West Germany was democratic.
Totalitarian
Communism is not totalitarian. A Communist world would have no government or classes or money.
Light energy is transformed into chemical energy
Germany (Adolf Hitler) and Russia (Josef Stalin). Many people believe Italy was a totalitarian government, but historians aren't sure whether Mussolini intended to have complete control over the people. Another possibly totalitarian government was Japan under Hirohito's rule. However, most people don't believe it was a totalitarian government.
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
Law of Conservation of Mass: mass can not be created or destroyed, it can only be changed (transformed).
Dunno when, but After the fall of Hitler, the German people said no more totalitarian hose head for us
At the time of the third reich, Adolf Hitler was the totalitarian dictator, or "the fuehrer" (german for leader).
A totalitarian regime rose in Germany in the 1930s due to a combination of economic instability, political fragmentation, and social unrest following World War I. The Treaty of Versailles imposed harsh penalties on Germany, leading to widespread resentment and economic hardship, particularly during the Great Depression. The Nazis, led by Adolf Hitler, capitalized on these grievances by promoting a nationalist and anti-communist agenda, promising to restore Germany's former glory and provide jobs. Their use of propaganda, violence, and intimidation effectively dismantled democratic institutions, allowing them to establish a totalitarian state.
yeah during WWII
From approximately 1933 into early 1945, Nazi Germany was governed by a "totalitarian" nationalism which caused the deaths of millions of innocent people, especially through the ravages of World War II. The "totalitarian" government of Germany wielded "total" control over the country, tolerating no political competition and demanding of all Germans the will to sacrifice themselves for the sake of Germany's expansion through Europe.