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Search results 251 - 260 of 712 matching essays
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251: The Stuggle For Europe
... how and why the western allies crushed the Nazi regime; yet, they allowed the Soviet Union to overtake Eastern Europe and block the Atlantic Charter from taking effect in those nations. Third, the author discusses Hitler's defeat and Stalin's victory. Fourthly, he endeavors on a mission to explain how the Soviet Union replaced Germany as the dominant European power. Beginning with the Battle of Britain, the book takes the reader through the war up to the surrender of Germany. In this process Wilmot touches on Hitler's alliance with Mussolini, Hitler's conquest of France, the Lowlands, and the Balkans, and the Nazi dictator's collapse in the expansion of the Soviet Union. The author strategically builds the Allied alliance, through the book's course, ...
252: FRIEDRICH NIETZSCHE
... the hazards of natural selection." Master Race Nietzsche is often referred to as a pre-Nazi thinker, by his idealism of The Master Race. He was, in fact, a prime influence on the writing of Hitler's highest men, and quoted in Hitler's speeches. But, his writings were mostly taken out of context, because he was very open about his distaste for "those anti-semites." If one is able to come from a more intelligent place, regarding the breeding of best-fit humans, Nietzsche was far beyond Hitler. Nietzsche understood the necessity for variation in a population, and especially was able to appreciate the contributions of other races and cultures. His ideal society would be a race that included select bits from ...
253: Animal Farm
... as the Bible states, the serpent uses the technique of propaganda to p[ersuade Eve to eat of the tree that God has forbidden. people in the qworld are persuaded very easily. Like napoleon, adolph hitler is a good example opg a human using propganda in a negtaive sense./ Hitler killed many Jews as well as Christians, and brainwashed the people into thinking that the jews were evil and wrong. People often make the mistake of fo9llowing characters like hitler, napoleon opr the devil-characters who abuse power and intelligencew to fulfill their needs and desires/ By6 manipulating people. they deceive them into thinking that what they are doing is helping someone in a ...
254: Animal Farm 2
... as the Bible states, the serpent uses the technique of propaganda to p[ersuade Eve to eat of the tree that God has forbidden. people in the qworld are persuaded very easily. Like napoleon, adolph hitler is a good example opg a human using propganda in a negtaive sense./ Hitler killed many Jews as well as Christians, and brainwashed the people into thinking that the jews were evil and wrong. People often make the mistake of fo9llowing characters like hitler, napoleon opr the devil-characters who abuse power and intelligencew to fulfill their needs and desires/ By6 manipulating people. they deceive them into thinking that what they are doing is helping someone in a ...
255: The Crucible
... to bring only a puzzled smile to the next. I remember how in 1964, only twenty years after the war, Harold Clurman, the director of "Incident at Vichy," showed the cast a film of a Hitler speech, hoping to give them a sense of the Nazi period in which my play took place. They watched as Hitler, facing a vast stadium full of adoring people, went up on his toes in ecstasy, hands clasped under his chin, a sublimely self-gratified grin on his face, his body swivelling rather cutely, and they ... of a blacklisted person crossing the street to avoid being seen talking to him; the overnight conversions of former leftists into born-again patriots; and so on. Apparently, certain processes are universal. When Gentiles in Hitler's Germany, for example, saw their Jewish neighbors being trucked of, or rs in Soviet Ukraine saw the Kulaks sing before their eyes, the common reaction, even among those unsympathetic to Nazism or
256: Remains Of The Day
... because you may find in the end that it was not worth it. Ishiguro draws a comparison between the intense loyalty of a butler to his lord and the loyalty of the German people to Hitler. Though Stevens insists on referring to his father as "sir," his loyalty to him leads to a break in his professional duty to his employer, since he supports his father’s attempts to hide the ... that Darlington Hall needs butlers who can effectively mediate and discuss emotional problems, rather than mindlessly approving everything the boss says. This issue can be related to Neville Chamberlain’s policy of dignified appeasement to Hitler: while he was busy trying to be polite, he helped expose his country and Europe at large to the threat of a man for whom dignity was quite beside the point. Ishiguro reveals to the reader the moral lapse in England’s leaders who failed to prevent Hitler from gathering power, so idealistic conditions such as peace, loyalty and duty could be maintained. The English who shared Chamberlain’s weak, conciliatory attitude may have been part of the reason Great Britain declined ...
257: Anti-semitism In Nazi Germany
... and securely bring them up to the dominant position in the state the state must place race as the central point of the life of the community and must safeguard the preservation of its purity."(Hitler, A 1925). The Nazi party used the works of Chamberlain and Wagner to leave a deep impression of racialism and paganism on the German mind and unfortunately the historical bias in mainstream German culture and ... at a villa on the shore of the Wannsee, near Berlin. This meeting, that took place on the 10th of January 1942, was to become known as the Wannsee conference. Ten days after this conference Hitler announced that "the result of this war will be the complete annihilation of the Jews". The herding of the Jews into ghettos, and the deportations to camps followed. An elaborate system had been constructed to ... into the genocide and depravity. Anti-Semitism was a political bandwagon for the Nazis to ride to power on and that once, in power, the Nazis took anti-Semitism to the point of genocide. BIBLIOGRAPHY Hitler, A 1928 Mein Kampf. Great Britain: Hutchinson & Co. (Publishers) Ltd. Pinson, K.S. 1966 Modern Germany: Its History And Civilization. New York: The Macmillan Company. Speer, A 1970 Inside The Third Reich. New York: ...
258: Night
Night by Elie Wiesel “Hitler won’t be able to do us any harm, even if he wants to.” So begins the book, Night, by Elie Wiesel an autobiographical work about Elie’s struggle to survive the Holocaust while living ... the disbelief that the prisoners felt. Even as they lived these inhumane events, they could not believe that the Nazi’s could be so horrible. Elie Wiesel started his story as a young boy doubting Hitler’s desire to destroy a race, and ended it witnessing many inhumane and deadly acts.
259: An Economic Intrepration Of Th
... to new ideas and allowing them to become part of the publics supply and demand, Summers prevents the people from withdrawing from the group. It also prohibits them from becoming the most efficient workers. Adolph Hitler is the closest person I can relate to Mr. Summers. He has the ability to manipulate these vulnerable townspeople causing them to follow his lead. Hitler had the power to choose who was going to die and who was going to live. Summers has a similar ability: he controls the lottery and, therefore, kills a person each year. It would be ...
260: Benito Mussolini
... anti-imperialism to an extreme aggressive nationalist. He succeeded to set up puppet governments in Albania and Libya. It was his dream to make the Mediterranean Italy's sea. He helped Austria create an anti-Hitler front in order to defend their independence. But without the support of the League of Nations, because their opposition of his war against Ethiopia, Mussolini was forced to seek an alliance with Nazi Germany. Mussolini ... Allied invasion of Sicily, and with his supporters deserting him, he was overthown and arrested. Rescued from imprisionment by German paratroopers, he forced to make the Liberal Italy into the puppet Italian Social Republic for Hitler. This showed his defeat, he lost his good-natured reasons for even becoming a socialist. In 1945 he was captured by the Italian Resistance and shot. After Mussolini's dimise, the new Italian republic would ...


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