Social Sciences, asked by arubaprvn, 5 months ago

how did Hitler make the nazi worldview attractive in Germany ​

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Answered by Anonymous
7

The Nazi Party was attractive to the majority of the German people because  Hitler and his party proposed a solution to nearly every problem that was facing the various segments of the population.  For example, the Party agenda addressed the problem of Germany’s loss of WWI.  The Nazis exploited the popular myth that Germany’s army was “stabbed in the back” by the Weimar Republic’s first politicians.  In this way they seduced the German people into associating the loss of the war with Democracy.  

Another popular goal of the Nazi’s was to abolish the Treaty of Versailles. This treaty, written by the Allies after Germany’s defeat in WWI, was designed to humble Germany.  In it, Germany was required to abolish compulsory military service, demilitarize the territory on the left bank of the Rhine River, pay an almost unbearable fine in reparations, relinquish its colonial lands and assume complete responsibility for starting the war.  This treaty was extremely unpopular among Germans.  There were no politicians who would want to be perceived as supporting it.  Yet the Nazi movement used it as a rallying point

Answered by Anonymous
3

\tt\blue{Hello\:Mate}

The Nazi Party was attractive to the majority of the German people because Hitler and his party proposed a solution to nearly every problem that was facing the various segments of the population. For example, the Party agenda addressed the problem of Germany’s loss of WWI. The Nazis exploited the popular myth that Germany’s army was “stabbed in the back” by the Weimar Republic’s first politicians. In this way they seduced the German people into associating the loss of the war with Democracy.

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