The Holocaust and many events such as the Nuremberg Race Laws began additional movements and opposing differences throughout Nazi Germany. Uniformly, these events also contributed to the amount of rights that were deprived among the various groups and various races ' beliefs throughout the Nazi controlled areas. Subsequently, the Holocaust and events within were direct results of Adolf Hitler 's theory surrounding superiority and the rights and responsibilities that are to be deprived of a race that is deemed inferior. Throughout this time of development of infinitive control over Nazi Germany, the Nuremberg Race Laws, and the Nuremberg Trials contributed to the development of superiority and inferiority within the Nazi regime and the German-Jewish traditions. As a result, the people of the Jewish religion received an infringement and restriction upon their legal, economic, and social rights under Hitler 's pessimistic reign over a nation, causing others to abandon their previous lives. While there were many events that administered authority to Adolf Hitler over various groups and areas, the Declaration on Judaism and Human Rights and the Nuremberg Trials essentially solved the disputes of superiority and inferiority within the Nazi controlled regions and caused the replenishment of stability within life and rights to begin. During an annual rally diversion held in Nuremberg Germany in the year of 1935, Nazi executives and soldiers declared and broadcasted neoteric laws, known as the Nuremberg Race Laws. The first decree of the Nuremberg Race Laws extends the prohibition on interactions with those of non-German blood, eliminating a portion of the available social rights that were offered to the Jewish and German-Jewish citizens. After becoming known, the Nuremberg Race Laws essentially institutionalized many of the racial theories prevalent in Nazi ideology such as
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