Hitler (1889-1945)
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A Hitler (1889-1945) is a person. genocidal ideology.
- AKA: Adolf Hitler, Der Führer, Führer und Reichskanzler.
- Context:
- It can typically implement Nazi Totalitarian Systems through party control mechanisms and state terror apparatuses.
- It can typically orchestrate Nazi Genocide Programs through systematic persecution policys and extermination camp systems.
- It can typically pursue Nazi Expansionist Wars through lebensraum ideology and military aggression campaigns.
- It can typically establish Nazi Propaganda Systems through mass media controls and personality cult developments.
- It can typically destroy Weimar Democratic Institutions through enabling acts and political opposition eliminations.
- It can typically be associated with Hitler War Crimes and Hitler Totalitarian Policys.
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- It can often demonstrate Nazi Demagogic Methods through scapegoating propaganda and mass rally orchestrations.
- It can often employ Nazi Racial Theorys through Nuremberg Laws and eugenics programs.
- It can often pursue Nazi Economic Militarization through rearmament programs and autarky policys.
- It can often manifest Hitler Megalomaniac Tendencys through architectural gigantism plans and world domination ambitions.
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- It can range from being a Failed Artist Hitler (1889-1945) to being a Totalitarian Dictator Hitler (1889-1945), depending on its Hitler life trajectory.
- It can range from being a Political Agitator Hitler (1889-1945) to being a War Criminal Hitler (1889-1945), depending on its Hitler historical phase.
- It can range from being a Regional Demagogue Hitler (1889-1945) to being a Genocidal Dictator Hitler (1889-1945), depending on its Hitler power scope.
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- It can cause World War II through Polish invasion and European conquest attempts.
- It can perpetrate Holocaust resulting in six million Jewish deaths and millions of other victims.
- It can establish Nazi Party as totalitarian movement destroying German democracy.
- It can inspire Hatred Emotion through antisemitic ideology and racist propaganda.
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- Example(s):
- Hitler Life Periods, such as:
- Early Life Hitler (1889-1918), including:
- Austrian Youth Hitler (1889-1907) experiencing family dysfunction and academic failure.
- Vienna Period Hitler (1907-1913) failing as artist and absorbing antisemitic ideology.
- Munich Period Hitler (1913-1914) avoiding Austrian military service.
- WWI Soldier Hitler (1914-1918) serving as messenger and receiving Iron Cross.
- Political Rise Hitler (1919-1933), including:
- Beer Hall Putschist Hitler (1923) attempting failed Munich coup.
- Prisoner Hitler (1924) writing Mein Kampf in Landsberg Prison.
- Nazi Party Leader Hitler (1925-1933) building political movement through legal means.
- Chancellor Appointment Hitler (1933) achieving power through conservative coalition.
- Dictatorship Period Hitler (1933-1945), including:
- Consolidation Phase Hitler (1933-1934) eliminating trade unions and political partys.
- Führer Hitler (1934-1945) combining chancellor and president offices.
- Prewar Aggressor Hitler (1936-1939) remilitarizing Rhineland and annexing Austria.
- Wartime Leader Hitler (1939-1945) directing military operations and genocide programs.
- Bunker Hitler (1945) facing defeat and committing suicide.
- Early Life Hitler (1889-1918), including:
- Hitler Regime Actions, such as:
- Enabling Act (1933) destroying parliamentary democracy.
- Nuremberg Laws (1935) codifying racial persecution.
- Kristallnacht (1938) escalating antisemitic violence.
- T4 Program (1939) initiating disability murders.
- Final Solution (1941-1945) implementing systematic genocide.
- Total War Declaration (1943) mobilizing entire population.
- Hitler Aggressions, such as:
- Rhineland Remilitarization (1936) violating Versailles Treaty.
- Anschluss (1938) annexing Austria.
- Sudetenland Crisis (1938) dismembering Czechoslovakia.
- Poland Invasion (1939) starting World War II.
- Soviet Union Invasion (1941) launching Operation Barbarossa.
- Hitler Impact Periods, such as:
- Immediate Aftermath (1945-1949) with Nuremberg Trials and denazification.
- Cold War Period (1949-1990) dividing Germany and shaping postwar order.
- Memory Period (1945-present) establishing Holocaust remembrance and genocide prevention education.
- ...
- Hitler Life Periods, such as:
- Counter-Example(s):
- Winston Churchill (1874-1965), who defended democracy against totalitarianism rather than destroying it.
- Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882-1945), who led through democratic institutions rather than dictatorial power.
- Charles de Gaulle (1890-1970), who resisted Nazi occupation rather than collaborating with it.
- Konrad Adenauer (1876-1967), who rebuilt democratic Germany rather than destroying it.
- Nelson Mandela (1918-2013), who pursued racial reconciliation rather than racial persecution.
- Mahatma Gandhi (1869-1948), who advocated nonviolent resistance rather than violent aggression.
- See: Nazi Party, Holocaust, World War II, Totalitarianism, Genocide, Antisemitism, German Nazi Political Ideology, Racist, Germany (1871-), The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich, Nuremberg Trials, War Crime, Fascism, Weimar Republic, Third Reich.