History, asked by ds8076388, 5 months ago

please ell few lines to see this picture​

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Answered by adhirajsinghrekhi
0

Answer:

Explanation:

events unfold in India today might be very tempted to draw an eerie parallel: Weimar Germany, circa 1933, and Congress India, circa 2013. Separated by over 80 years and thousands of miles, the similarities appear worrisome.

Then in Germany, as now in India, there was a single leader seen as the panacea for all the country's ills: Adolf Hitler in Germany, Narendra Modi in India.

In both cases, they were outsiders to the mainstream -- Hitler was from Austria; Modi is a backward class person in a party historically dominated by the upper castes -- who pushed for majorityism politics, both were/are backed by strong right-wing nationalist parties that had/have anti-minority agendas.

Besides these evident political events, there are other even more important economic events where one can draw parallels. Hitler's rise to power was linked to the global depression of the 1930s. That depression actually began in 1929, when the US markets crashed, leading to runaway inflation in Germany, which was still paying reparations for World War I.

In fact, inflation was so steep that at one point people did not count money, but weighed the notes that were to be paid for regular commodities.

Then, demographers have often noted that a sudden surge in the population of the young in a country where they cannot find gainful employment is a recipe for disaster. In the 1920s and 1930s, Germany had a youth bulge, but many of the young men were unemployed, thanks to the debts Germany was forced to pay, which limited investments in new jobs.

In their anger and frustration, the youth readily believed Hitler when he blamed all of Germany's ills on the Jews.

Answered by kavindraskd01
2

Answer:

i think he is Rudolf hitler he was the responsible for world war 2 and also for the deaths of 50 million peoples

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