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nazisBreve historia y presentación sobre ideología nazi
Bajo el espectro del final de la Primera Guerra Mundial,[1] en 1919, se formó el “Partido Obrero Alemán” (Deutsche Arbeiter Partei, DAP). Ese año ingresó Adolf Hitler como miembro, asumiendo el nazis rol de jefe de propaganda. En 1920 se cambió el nombre a “Partido Nacional Socialista Obrero Alemán”, más conocido como Partido Nazi.[2] El Partido Nazi fue uno de los que manifestaba su descontento con la rendición de Alemania y la imposición de fuertes medidas compensatorias al país después de la Primera Guerra Mundial, lo cual provocó una reacción nacionalista en la población que no comprendía el resultado de la guerra.El nuevo régimen que se estableció, la República de Weimar, tuvo que enfrentar problemas económicos, sociales y políticos. Esto incluyó levantamientos de distintos sectores políticos y la dificultad para establecer su autoridad. Entre los distintos intentos de golpe de Estado ocurrió el del Partido Nazi, en noviembre de 1923, bajo el liderazgo de Adolf Hitler. Hitler fue condenado a cinco años de cárcel, aunque es liberado tras 10 meses. Durante esos meses en prisión escribió su libro “Mi Lucha” (Mein Kampf).En esta obra presenta su plataforma ideológica con la cual Partido Nazi crecerá durante la década de 1920, y llegará al poder en 1933. El texto expone:Autoritarismo y autoridad total del líder: el Führer, o líder supremo, tenía la autoridad y control frente a todas las instituciones y nazis organizaciones del régimen nazi y sobre todos los ciudadanos. Se esperaba una lealtad total al líder.Estado totalitario: se establecía un control en todos los aspectos de la vida cotidiana, que los límites entre el espacio público y el privado se borraron. Toda actividad dentro de Alemania pasaba a estar supeditado a contribuir al partido nazi y a la lealtad al Führer.Antiparlamentarismo: rechazo a la forma democrática de elecciones por mayoría, porque considera que el líder y el partido tienen la autoridad absoluta. Rechazan la participación de todas las personas, sólo acepta la de aquellos considerados ciudadanos.Libertades individuales: son sometidas al interés general del partido, y son sólo para aquellos que son considerados ciudadanos.Racismo/Estado racista: el r……
nazisGerman casualties in World War II
Statistics for German World War II military casualties are divergent. The wartime military casualty figures compiled by the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht (the German High Command, abbreviated as OKW) through January 31, 1945 are often cited by military historians in accounts of individual campaigns in the war. A study by German historian Rüdiger Overmans concluded that total German military deaths were much higher than those originally reported by the German High Command, amounting to 5.3 million, including 900,000 men conscripted from outside Germany’s 1937 borders, in Austria and in east-central Europe. The German government reported that its records list 4.3 million dead and missing military personnel.Air raids were a major cause of civilian deaths. Estimates of German civilians killed only by Allied strategic bombing have ranged from around 350,000 to 500,000.Estimates of civilian deaths due to the , Soviet war crimes and the forced labor of Germans in the Soviet Union are disputed and range from 500,000 to over 2.0 million. According to the German government Suchdienste (Search Service) there were 300,000 German victims (including Jews) of Nazi racial, political and religious persecution. This statistic does not include 200,000 German people with disabilities who were murdered in the and Action 14f13 euthanasia programs.In the post-war era the military search service Deutsche Dienststelle (WASt) was responsible for providing information to the families of those military personnel who were killed or went missing in the war. They maintained the files of over 18 million men who served in the war. By the end of 1954, they had identified approximately 4 million military dead and missing (2,730,000 dead and 1,240,629 missing). After German reunification, the records kept in the former German Democratic Republic (East Germany) became available to the WASt. The German Red Cross reported in 2005 that the records of the WASt showed total Wehrmacht losses to have been 4.3 million men (3.1 million dead and 1.2 million missing) in World War II. Their figures include men conscripted from Austria and conscripted ethnic Germans from lands in Eastern Europe.The German historian Rüd……
nazisGroup Hatred in Nazi Germany: 80 Years Later
As we are approaching the 80-year mark since Germany invaded Poland in 1939, which was the start of World War II and the Holocaust, we are still asking why.Hundreds of thousands of ordinary Germans willingly and knowingly participated in the torture and mass murders of innocent people, and a significant number of those who didn’t participate were passive bystanders who knew about the mass killings and the intentions of the Nazi regime.How could it happen?The Germans were not psychopath killers. The vast majority of active German participants and passive bystanders had quiet normal and stable personalities before Hitler came to nazis power. Their family lives were remarkably similar to those of average middle-class American families today. They had jobs to support their families, sent their children to school, donated to local charities, and socialized with friends and family on weekends.Neither participants nor passive bystanders showed signs of having or sadistic dispositions prior to the Nazi era. Nor were they immune to feelings of empathy and moral indignation and disgust. A number of the ordinary middle-aged German men recruited to shoot children and women in Jewish villages willingly embarked on the mission but “only” shot a few before succumbing to moral disgust—an unfamiliar to killer psychopaths and sadists.Nor is there any evidence that people (for the most part) participated exclusively out of of retribution from the Nazi military leader or others in power. Political and social forces made people fearful of protesting the atrocities they knew were taking place. There were clear limits to the kinds of free speech and choices the dictatorship would tolerate. Those who explicitly condemned the regime or obstructed the elimination of the Jews were sent to death camps.But although anti-Nazi speech and obstruction nazis of “justice” was punishable by death, no one was coerced to actively contribute to the “final solution.” Even when explicitly given a chance to opt-out, most recruits went on to participate in killing and torture. Out of the 500 ordinary men in Germany who were recruited to do roundups of the 1,800 Jews in the village of Józefów, only fifteen decided ……