Math, asked by shashiprakash1, 1 year ago

nazism was a system explain in easy mean

Answers

Answered by Rahulsinghbhadauriya
3
Nazi 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 in four parts: expansion, racial purity, power, and militarism. Each one explains a specific part to the philosophy of Nazism.

German Strength Through 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.'

The Nazis believed that Germany needed to expand into more European nations. Hitler himself believed expansion was essential when he said, 'We are overpopulated and cannot feed ourselves from our own resources.' This desire to increase German living space was at the center of Nazism, and it was the reason that Germany invaded nations like Austria and Czechoslovakia to the west and sought to expand into Russia to the east.

Answered by rohit557
2
Nazi 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 in four parts: expansion, racial purity, power, and militarism. Each one explains a specific part to the philosophy of Nazism.

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