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Hitler's Popularity

Abstract: 5 pages in length. Adolph Hitler sought to create a world where only a certain populace was allowed to live and flourish. He and his men believed that all nations were as devious as they were, instilling within themselves a sense of betrayal even before it ever was to occur. Indeed, Hitler's paranoia knew no bounds. With the overwhelming influence of anti-Semitism, power worship, morality disdain and quest for world domination, Hitler proved as dangerous an entity as history has ever seen. The underpinning of the Nazi Party and his own popularity grew by leaps and bounds upon these fundamental beliefs, as Hitler sought to annihilate any and all peoples he deemed unworthy. Clearly, the Nazi objective was aimed at systematic dehumanization, a sobering concept duly noted in Richard Bessel's Life in the Third Reich and Mary Fulbrook's The Divided Nation : A History of Germany, 1918-1990. No additional sources cited.


Catagory:

Subcatagory: Holocaust Studies


 

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