Social Sciences, asked by kapilsps0161, 3 months ago

What was the effect of Nazism on Germany​

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Answered by mirage2402
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Answer:

Explanation:

Nazism was “applied biology,” stated Hitler deputy Rudolf Hess. During the Third Reich, a politically extreme, antisemitic variation of eugenics determined the course of state policy. Hitler’s regime touted the “Nordic race” as its eugenic ideal and attempted to mold Germany into a cohesive national community that excluded anyone deemed hereditarily “less valuable” or “racially foreign.”

United States Holocaust Museum: Mosaic of Victims

Although the Jews were their primary targets, the Nazis and their collaborators also persecuted other groups for racial or ideological reasons.

Britannica: The Totalitarian State

The main purpose and goal of the Nazi revolution was to establish a Volksgemeinschaft. Its creation required the purification and increase of the German “race” as well as its biological separation from the Jews, whose infusion of evil into the German bloodstream, the Nazis said, served to pollute and undermine Germany’s well-being.

BBC Bitesize GCSE History: Impact of Nazi Rule

By 1933 Hitler was one large step closer to his goal of having complete control of Germany. Before the March elections of that year he had been made Chancellor - the second most powerful political job in Germany. Using the powers that the job gave him, he actively sought to increase his power even more.

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