History, asked by Anonymous, 10 months ago

Difference Between Fascism and Nazism :-- ???​

Answers

Answered by sriti88
3

Fascism

Nazism

It was practice in Italy.

It was practice in Germany.

It was started during the regime of Benito Mussolini.

It was started during the regime of Adolf Hitler.

It is socialism with a capitalist veneer.

It is a form of fascism and showed that ideology's disdain for liberal democracy and the parliamentary system, but also incorporated intense emotion of antisemitism, scientific racism, and eugenics into its creed.

It took inspiration from sources as ancient as the Spartans for their focus on national purity and their emphasis on rule by an elite minority. In other words, it substituted the particularity of nationalism and racialism—“blood and soil”—for the internationalism of both classical liberalism and Marxism.

It subscribed to theories of racial hierarchy and Social Darwinism, identifying the Germans as a part of what the Nazis regarded as an Aryan or Nordic master race.

It’s intended to worship the state. In fact, it was an extreme form of Statism.

It elevated the party above the state. In fact, it did not venerate the state as it was only a “means (vessel) to an end”.

It recruited thousands of ‘Black Shirts’ to break up strikes and terrorize communists at the behest of Industrialists and landlords.

It organized armed gangs of Nazis called ‘Brownshirts’ which went on murderous spree and killed many communists and anti-Nazis.

Both the term, i.e. Fascism and Nazism were influenced by the rise of nationalism, fear from communism, crisis of the capitalist economic system and dissatisfaction with the outcome of World War I.


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Answered by 1keshav123
0

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The crisis of the European political system from the late nineteenth century to the end of World War I. led to the rise of two ideologies, i.e. ... Nazism is a far-right ideology of Adolf Hitler’s National Socialist German Workers’ Party, especially including a totalitarian ...

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