Social Sciences, asked by sidhu6951, 10 months ago

Discuss in breif the ideology of nazism in short words ​

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Answered by Anonymous
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azi stands for 'Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei', or National Socialist German Workers Party. Nazism took the Socialist idea of the community and applied it on a nationalist scale. The Nazi party wanted to unify Germany under a collective purpose. The leader of the Nazi Party was Adolf Hitler, and he established the ideology of Nazism.

Nazi ideology can be defined as:

expansion

Hitler sought to create a National Socialist policy that put Germany first. This ideological perspective enabled Hitler and the Nazis to pursue a policy of lebensraum. Literally meaning, 'living space,' it justified Germany taking over territory in the name of 'the mother land.'

racial purity

The Nazis ideology was also rooted in extreme racism. Hitler and the Nazis argued that the German strength existed in its Aryan race, which they saw as 'the perfect race' and superior to all others. The Nazis established a racial ideology that viewed racial impurity as threatening to this Germanic perfection. For the Nazis, Jewish people were the embodiment of racial imperfection, and people of the Judaic faith were categorized as having 'alien blood.' Nazism was based on the idea that the Aryan race had a responsibility to expand its 'perfection' and should not be threatened by the 'impurity' of Jewish people, an obstacle that would have to be eliminated., power, and militarism. Each one explains a specific part to the philosophy of Nazism.

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