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Description:
In an otherwise broke, depressed, and crumbling post-WWI Germany, Hitler's crazy promises appeared like a gleaming pot of gold at the end of the rainbow. Clearly people weren't exactly thinking straight.
Transcript
- 00:04
Historical Context, a la Shmoop. In hindsight, it seems pretty incredible that
- 00:09
so many Germans lined up to support Adolf Hitler when he came to power in 1933.
- 00:15
Did they completely miss the crazy eyes?
- 00:19
Thing is, the rise of the Third Reich didn't happen in a vacuum.
- 00:23
Various events that took place in the early decades of the twentieth century contributed
Full Transcript
- 00:28
to the German population's openness to National Socialism.
- 00:32
First, there was World War One. It may have been one of the most senseless conflicts in
- 00:38
human history, but it still managed to decimate Germany.
- 00:41
Also, since the Germans lost, they were forced to take sole responsibility for the war in
- 00:46
the Treaty of Versailles. That wasnÕt received too favorably back in Berlin.
- 00:51
The Treaty of Versailles also required Germany to pay 132 billion marks in reparations for
- 00:58
the damage caused by the war. Since that was 131 billion marks more than Germany actually
- 01:04
had...
- 01:05
...the country was obliged to pay in natural resources, like coal and beer andÉ schnitzel.
- 01:11
Again, the German people were less than pleased. Then, in 1923, France invaded the Ruhr<<rue-er>>,
- 01:17
also known as Germany's industrial heartland, because Germany had missed a reparations payment.
- 01:25
After struggling to come to terms with the idea that the French could do anything with
- 01:29
their military other than lose...
- 01:32
...Germany's Weimar<<vie-mar>> government ordered the workers in the Ruhr to go on strike.
- 01:36
This was such a bad idea, because when the government printed more money to pay the workers,
- 01:40
the result was hyperinflation and an economic shambles.
- 01:47
In November 1923, the German currency stabilized. The economy still sucked, but folks held out
- 01:53
hope for recovery. Imagine how they must have felt when Black Tuesday rolled around in 1929.
- 02:02
Germany became politically polarized, with extreme parties on the Left and the Right.
- 02:07
YeahÉ they had clowns to the left and jokers to the rightÉ
- 02:10
At any rate, most people held the Left responsible for the Treaty of Versailles and the economic
- 02:15
cluster-mess of the 1920s.
- 02:18
Anti-semitism and violence against other minority groups rose, as right-wing nutjobs, like the
- 02:23
National Socialists, became more popular.
- 02:25
According to the crazies, Jews were synonymous with the Left, and so should serve as scapegoats
- 02:30
for the many, many problems Germany had experienced since World War One...
- 02:34
...which the Germans had a significant role in starting. Boy, were these guys floating
- 02:39
down a river called de Nile or what? By 1933, Germans were willing to vote for
- 02:46
just about anyone who promised significant change...
- 02:49
...like a failed artist named Adolf Hitler.
- 02:53
The guys was a jerk, National Socialism was awful, and the Third Reich was monstrous.
- 03:01
But all that stuff really shouldnÕt have come out of left fieldÉ
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