
Originally Posted by
Darcy88
I felt the need to put a different perspective on the matter.
I do not condone National Socialism and do not approve of it, but it is necessary to see it from another viewpoint. And I need to agree with Emil Miller on this point. Astounding as it may seem, it is true.
It is not because you particular relatives did not like Hitler that the greatest part of German civilians could not be completely taken in by him and the great big shows he put on. In fact I would contend the opposite, that there were very few who were smart enough to see through it (like there are very few who see through the war on terror these days) and that there were even fewer who tried to do anything against it.
I suppose it was the naïvety of the vast majority of people (as that is still the case today) and the overall economic situation which caused the whole thing.
The Treaty of Versailles, now widely considered amongst historians to be one of the causes of WWII and National Socialism, made sure that Germany was unable to benefit from the gay twenties and thus sank into deeper recession than even America. There were places in Germany where unemployment got to 30%! To put this in perspective, we are now getting edgy when things come to 15%... There was no wellfare system unlike now and people would just die of hunger because there were no jobs available. Think Greece right now times two probably. After WWI buying a loaf of bread in Berlin could cost you a piano. And the allied, instead of helping the poor people who had not asked for this war, left them to die in the streets of Berlin. Mainly down to the French (Pétin if I am not mistaken) who held a rather conservative view of warfare...
So Germany spent the booming twenties paying compensation to other countries and not investing in its own economy so that the already vast levels of unemployment before the recession did not go down, an effect of WWI which solved itself in places like the UK through government investment partly, but which could of course not be solved in Germany because the German government had to spend all its money on compensation to countries like the UK while the latter was living it up on champagne so to say. You can see why the first thing Hitler did when he got to power was to stop those payments and behold, the Wirtschaftswunder. Not a miracle in itself, rather a New Deal à la Roosevelt, but one that certainly caught on.
And then there were vast amounts of Jewish shop owners, bankers etc. They were rich, they were still rich in the thirties, and they kept themselves to themselves so they were an ideal target.
By the time Hitler got to power in 1933, people were sick of no pleasure and so he gave it to them, with good effect... The old Roman tactics of bread and games distracted most naive people from the real stuff that was going on.
Videos in the museum of the Nürnberg rally grounds show two women, friends, now in their 80s, but back then teenagers telling of a story they heard about a Jewish man who was lifted from his bed and at least severely beaten (if not shipped off or battered to death). They said, at the time, they wondered whether, I quote, 'the Führer did not know about this. Surely he cannot have approved this.' They said they were now ashamed of their own naïvety, but at the time, they were indoctrinated by the system, their school the Hitler Mädel (Hitler youth, but for girls) and did not think about Hitler in a bad way (Führer cult). They also said they knew nothing about democracy when they got out of school at 18 and they said about the deportation of the Jews, I quote again, that 'they thought they were going to a place all together, and that surely can't [have] be[en] a bad thing.' After the war and indeed during it, when they learned about things like Auschwitz they found it hard to believe they said and felt quite disheartened by having been so naïve. Hardly surprising though, as even the Americans refused to believe that Jews were being killed in a industrial manner from the Jews in the Warsaw ghetto at the time of the uprising there. They only really believed it when they saw piles of real, human and dead bodies in the camps they liberated. What chance did normal citizens have in believing that something like this was at all possible? Sure, we would believe it now and if in Hungary the same were close to happening, everyone would put a stop to it, but we know it is possible, abck then in the 1940s it was unprecedented and so intensely evil that it is almost inconceivable.
A man, displaying army positions they had to practice for a parade, ironically with an umbrella said that it was hard not to be pulled along by the enthusiasm of other boys. He said that they were permanently prepared for war and the idea of dying for the honour of Germany.
I think it would have been very hard to disagree with that regime if you had been living in a place where everyone was hungry before, without a job. As Emil Miller said, times were sh*t before uncle Adolph...
Forced Arianisation of shops will have added a lot of money to the system as well. Think about it. A shop like that one that burned down in London, bed shop. How much money is it worth? Let's say 500,000 pounds. If that had been a Jewish family's, they would have had to sell it to an Arian for maybe a quarter (at best, in the beginning), so for 125,000. If they refused after a while it was confiscated and literally given to an Arian. That is just pure profit. No loans from the bank, instant business and the money flows straight into the system because the owner can employ people with it or buy things with it which benefits other people in turn.
The people in Coventry were an unfortunate first case of carpet bombing, but why, pray, were the people and not least the wonderful city of Dresden to be subjected to a perfected version of it? Yes, a lot of people died in Coventry, but was it necessary to make even more people die in Dresden? Those people who died over there did not ask for this war to happen and asked even less to die in a pretty unstrategic bombing just for revenge.
I would not say that life was a breeze under Nazism, but it wasn't all that hard if you leave bombings to one side. Bombings were not on little villages and were not duting the 30s, but Nazism penetrated the whole thing, also little villages. I lived in a small village called Wiltingen in Rheinland-Pfalz which has now a population of 2,000. Back then less, no doubt and it contained a Jewish population of one family. They had a shop (as Jews do) with collonial goods. A few of them evidently escaped to South-Africa, but the eldest generation stayed and had to sell the shop and eventually died in Auschwitz. In my small market town (essentially that is what it is) now, the population steadily decreased. I am quite confident that the people were not malicious, only people do not care about the system, because people are only interested in their own lives (only look at the Daily Mail headlines about Polish people sometimes). If their lives are good or adequate (and that was evidently the case, at least in the beginning), then sod the rest.
The Third Reich was much more intricate and clever than you presume. By the time anyone knew what was going on, Hitler had secured power through emergency status after the Reichstag burned down and he blamed the commis for it.