Topic > Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party - 867

“We may be inhuman, but if we save Germany we will have accomplished the greatest feat in the world. We may commit injustices, but if we save Germany we will eliminate the greatest injustice in the world. We may be immoral, but if our people are saved, we have paved the way for morality. "- Adolf Hitler Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party have probably been the most discussed topics over the past seventy years. To date, hundreds of thousands of texts have been written discussing the brutality of Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party. However, in Germany There's more to the Nazi than the Holocaust and defeat in World War II. Let's take a moment to explore what some would say is the political brilliance of the Nazi Party. It was founded in 1919 after World War I by Anton Drexler with the name Deutsche Arbeiterpartei, the German Workers' Party, the name was changed in 1920 to Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei, National Socialist German Workers' Party, or what is more commonly known as the Nazi Party, in 1920, formulated a program in 25 points that became the permanent logic of the Nazi Party. The first notable incident in the history of the Nazi Party occurred in 1923, when the party had over 55,000 members. Hitler led the "Beer Hall Putsch" which was a failed attempt by the Nazis to overthrow the government of Bavaria hoping that it would start a nationwide rebellion against the Weimar Republic. Following the incident the Nazi Party was banned for a short time and Hitler was sent to prison. From Hitler's liberation until 1933 they were quiet years. During this period the party grew slowly at first and then very rapidly as the world slipped into what became known as the Great Depression. The Nazi Party... at the center of the card... totalitarianism. The swastika, his symbol, could be seen throughout Germany. His ideology could be read in pamphlets or newspapers every day. The Reichsministerium für Volksaufklärung und Propaganda, the Reich Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda, exercised total control over the media, playing an important role in the production and direction of films and monitoring every image and thought shown or expressed to the German people. The vast and complex German hierarchy was structured like a pyramid, with party-controlled mass organizations for youth, women, workers, and other groups at the bottom, party members and officials at the center, and Hitler and his closest associates at the top exercising undisputed powers. authority. During the twelve-year reign of the Third Reich, the Nazi Party controlled and defined Germany, and was in turn controlled and defined by Hitler.