Check out Hitler, A Career on Netflix. Good doc.
| vengeful indirect expression | 09/21/21 | | talking tattoo heaven | 09/21/21 | | Vivacious mischievous really tough guy parlor | 09/21/21 | | cheese-eating crackhouse dysfunction | 09/21/21 | | crimson coffee pot | 09/21/21 | | jet principal's office | 09/21/21 | | plum shaky stage | 09/21/21 | | jet principal's office | 09/21/21 | | vengeful indirect expression | 09/21/21 | | crimson coffee pot | 09/21/21 | | jet principal's office | 09/21/21 | | Concupiscible coral institution internal respiration | 09/21/21 | | Snowy Potus | 09/21/21 | | Concupiscible coral institution internal respiration | 09/21/21 | | crimson coffee pot | 09/21/21 | | plum shaky stage | 09/21/21 | | talking tattoo heaven | 09/21/21 | | plum shaky stage | 09/21/21 | | talking tattoo heaven | 09/21/21 | | crimson coffee pot | 09/21/21 | | plum shaky stage | 09/21/21 | | plum shaky stage | 09/21/21 | | Vivacious mischievous really tough guy parlor | 09/21/21 | | khaki zippy doctorate site | 09/21/21 | | crimson coffee pot | 09/21/21 | | Adventurous business firm | 09/21/21 | | crimson coffee pot | 09/22/21 | | thriller native | 09/21/21 | | plum shaky stage | 09/21/21 | | thriller native | 09/21/21 | | Adventurous business firm | 09/21/21 | | Ocher Mind-boggling Box Office | 09/22/21 | | thriller native | 09/22/21 | | crimson coffee pot | 09/22/21 | | Ocher Mind-boggling Box Office | 09/22/21 | | jet principal's office | 09/22/21 | | jet principal's office | 09/22/21 | | spruce den cuck | 09/22/21 | | pearly arrogant theater stage | 09/22/21 | | jet principal's office | 09/22/21 | | pearly arrogant theater stage | 09/22/21 | | pearly arrogant theater stage | 09/22/21 | | pearly arrogant theater stage | 09/22/21 | | Ocher Mind-boggling Box Office | 09/22/21 | | spruce den cuck | 09/22/21 | | plum shaky stage | 09/22/21 | | Nofapping Blood Rage | 09/22/21 | | Ebony brethren | 09/23/21 | | Hairraiser area laser beams | 09/21/21 | | vengeful indirect expression | 09/22/21 | | Purple volcanic crater travel guidebook | 09/22/21 | | crimson coffee pot | 09/22/21 | | Bistre harsh toaster garrison | 09/22/21 | | spruce den cuck | 09/22/21 | | jet principal's office | 09/22/21 | | spruce den cuck | 09/22/21 | | thriller native | 09/22/21 | | plum shaky stage | 09/22/21 | | up-to-no-good cordovan cumskin | 09/22/21 | | stirring pontificating skinny woman faggotry | 09/22/21 | | plum shaky stage | 09/22/21 | | Ebony brethren | 12/05/21 |
Poast new message in this thread
Date: September 21st, 2021 10:14 AM Author: crimson coffee pot
It's awesome
also see Hitler's Circle of Evil
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4926474&forum_id=2#43151596) |
|
Date: September 21st, 2021 10:42 AM Author: crimson coffee pot
he was pretty witty
i remember watching one speech where people were complaining about him banning Communists or something... and he was like I'm not singling out Communists -- I banned all other political parties
Democrats would LOVE to do this unfortunately they don't have half the backbone of Hitler
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4926474&forum_id=2#43151727) |
Date: September 21st, 2021 4:27 PM Author: thriller native
watching now
wow
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4926474&forum_id=2#43153871) |
|
Date: September 22nd, 2021 10:26 AM Author: jet principal's office
"If you want to read about Post-WWI Germany (Weimar Era) there were a lot of shenanigans going on. To put it bluntly, France and GB absolutely were interested in fucking over Germany and separating it into smaller countries that could be more easily controlled."
France yes, GB no. In fact the whole idea of Versailles as too punitive, etc. was trumpeted by British economists, including Keynes, I think. But you are basically right.
The other thing is that Hitler's appeal was not limited to lower middle class, ex-soldiers, etc. Once he became Chancellor, a lot of intellectuals and academics came on board. He was basically saying, the modern, capitalist system is rotten and it drags German people down into its rottenness. This kind of message-- that modern democracy and capitalism had led people down a path of degeneracy and drudgery-- had a lot of appeal to Germans of all classes.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4926474&forum_id=2#43158216) |
|
Date: September 22nd, 2021 11:42 AM Author: pearly arrogant theater stage
Again and again, Hamilton shows below-average support for Hitler in working-class districts, and higher support in upper-middle-class and wealthy ones. There were pockets of rabid support for the Nazis in rural areas. But what we see repeated in chapter after chapter of Who Voted for Hitler? is the disproportionate support for Hitler from the well-heeled districts, motivated by their sense that Hitler would be their weapon against Communism; and because the Nazis had also successfully nurtured a covert anti-Semitism among the upper classes. Working class-neighborhoods were split more evenly, drawn to the Communists or Social Democrats, not strongly anti-Semitic, though susceptible certainly to the Nazi’s organizing exertions.
Hamilton devotes an entire chapter to what he terms “travelers and vacationers.” In the late 1920s and early ’30s, the Depression raged through war-scarred Germany. The country had seen the establishment of the eight-hour workday, and of unemployment insurance that was intended to cover three-quarters of a million unemployed workers. But the immediate effect of these measures was to make German manufacturing and industry less competitive with their counterparts in other European countries, and these worthy projects proved to be unsustainable in a country with an economy in free fall.
So when Hamilton decides to look closely at the votes of “travelers and vacationers,” what he is really examining is the votes of those who were well-enough off to be more or less completely untouched by the economic ruin all around them, who still took their usual vacations during July (when the first 1932 election occurred). And what he finds was that in the key elections of 1928, 1930, and 1932, these travelers gave two-thirds of their votes to Hitler.
Chillingly, Hamilton writes,
It is a point of some irony that the educated upper- and upper-middle-class populations, who react so enthusiastically to the claims of mass-society theories, should themselves have been the victims of a process that they, with such evident disdain, assume to be moving other people. In this case, it would appear that the demagogues, with some aid from the media, had considerable success in moving the upper- and upper-middle class masses.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4926474&forum_id=2#43158527) |
|
|