When World War I ended in 1918, the mood in Germany, as summarized in two words, was grim and ashamed. Germany was obligated to pay a U.S. equivalent of 33 billion dollars, forced to deal with defeat, and left …show more content…
If anyone had bothered to look at or care about how well he explains plagiarism and how passionate he seems about it, not to mention that he practically thinks of it as an art form, red flags would have gone up before he had even been elected chancellor, and he may have never been able to declare himself dictator (in a very conceited fashion). In the book, he describes people as a huge, stupid horde or mass. He accredits them to having absolutely no self thought or mental ability, and therefore, he explains a variety of ways of how one can gain control through psychological manipulation. It is all in the book, almost every tactic he used in his massive manipulation of the German …show more content…
The concept itself basically consists of private business owners working to produce what the government requires and keeping their profits. As is mentioned in the name of the ideology itself, National Socialism puts nationalism first. It was wise of Hitler to employ this form of nationalism in a world where communism and socialism, which is not the same as National Socialism because it involves sharing money and ideals similar to communism, were becoming somewhat prevalent. It was also wise of Hitler (and very necessary of him to get people to listen to his propaganda) to spread such passionate ideas of nationalism and how good Germany was to its people after the shame the people endured internationally after the first world war. He knew that this nationalism was what the people of Germany needed even though the people themselves were unaware of this, and because of it, he gained more support and trust from the