They used his ideas of religion to try and keep the majority of the money in their own German area rather than sending it to Rome, therefore giving them more political independence. ... Later on in English rule, Edward I and Elizabeth I, brought England closer to being Protestant. ...
First he formed his anti-semitic political party, next he used propaganda to gain power and spread hatred against Jews, then he created laws to cause uttermost suffering for Jews, and at last he expanded his rule to other European countries. ... Moreover, he was able to convince a large majority that Jews were to blame, and he, Hitler, was Germany's last hope. ... Hitler knew from the start that, in order to occupy the majority of countries in Europe, war would need to break out. ...
The US has a market for corporate control, the "Wall Street Rule," there a board of directors is nominated by management, encouraging corporate takeovers because business shareholding is fragmented. ... A majority of the US capital was initially accumulated by individual entrepreneurs like Rockefeller; whereas, Germany had little capital in the hands of individuals. ...
In response to the laws and policies implemented during Hitler's rule, various countries and individuals chose either to act or not to act. ... The vast majority of the population in Nazi Germany remained bystanders to the wrongdoings of the Nazi government. ...
No single party ever had won a majority in the Reichstag but a rather many small parties existed. Even though the Social Democrats did receive the most votes, the party was not big enough to rule of its own. ... Furthermore, there were twenty-five separate government in fourteen years of rule in the republic. ...
Bruning and Schleicher had both unceremoniously been sacked by the president after their plans for Germany had failed, whilst the grand coalition had fallen apart and Hindenburg was forced to rule by decree from 1930, with his chancellor Von Papen having less than 10% of Reichstag seats and the central parties at an irrevocable stalemate. ... This shows that it was not popular support which led to Hitler being appointed, with the Nazis at the height of their power still well short of a Reichstag majority. ...
In the past, Presidents had powers that gave them the ability to annul basic laws as well as rule with emergency law.7 After government reconstruction and unification in 1990 there was a decrease of power for the presidential role. ... The Senate's members are indirectly elected by an electoral college to serve six-year terms; where as the National Assembly are elected by popular vote under a single-member majority system to serve five-year terms.15 While Germany's Bundestag, along with an equal number of delegates elected by the state parliament, unite as a Federal Convention to ...
A majority of the children were killed by lethal injection or starvation and the adults at these killing centers were sent to cleverly disguised shower rooms. ... If we do not then we will become just like those during Hitler's rule who rationalized and compromised the truth enough to commit such crimes. ...
Women were no longer included in the statistics so any women who remained out of work under the Nazi's rule did not exist as far as the statistics were concerned. ... As Hitler brainwashed many of the Germans into thinking it was the Jews fault people thought they should agree with Hitler's policies and in a way follow the majority vote. ...
Topic: Why did the German people support Hitler and the Nazi Party in the 1930's? The German people supported Hitler and the Nazi Party in the 1930's because of various reasons. The main reasons were the way that the Treaty of Versailles took Germany's land from them, the weakness of the Weimar R...
It will be argued that, "The nationalists movement in Germany were dependent on the charismatic qualities of its leader Otto Von Bismarck". It will be proven that German unification was a turning point in European history due to the fact that Germany was reliant on their leader Bismarck. Before ...