How Did The Rise of Nazism and Fascism Lead To World War 2
How Did The Rise of Nazism and Fascism Lead To World War 2
How Did The Rise of Nazism and Fascism Lead To World War 2
The Nazis drew more support from small towns than they did from large cities. In
rural areas, Protestants were overrepresented in the party, and Catholics were
underrepresented. In less-industrialized countries—such as
Spain, Portugal, Poland, Romania, and Hungary—fascists relied more heavily on
rural support. In Japan many fascist activists were originally young army officers,
low-level civil servants, small landowners, small factory owners, masters of small
workshops, primary school teachers, and Shintō and Buddhist priests.
Fascism arose during the 1920s and ’30s partly out of fear of the rising power of
the working classes; it differed from contemporary communism (as practiced
under Joseph Stalin) by its protection of business and landowning elites and its
preservation of class systems.
Although fascism is a notoriously difficult ideology to define, many 20th-century
fascist movements shared several characteristics. First, these movements sourced
their political strength from populations experiencing economic woes, real or
imagined. Fascists tended to capitalize on these economic anxieties by shifting the
blame away from government or market forces. Jews, immigrants, leftists, and
other groups became useful scapegoats. Redirecting popular anger toward these
people would, in theory, rid a country of its ailments
The most prominent 20th-century fascist regimes were those in Germany and
Italy. German fascism took the form of Nazism, which rose out of the ashes of
the post-World War I Weimar Republic. Inflation, soaring unemployment rates,
and deep political divisions paralyzed the republic during the Great
Depression and helped create the conditions that allowed Nazism to prosper.
The Nazi Party, led by Adolf Hitler, promised stability and a return to prewar
German pride. It espoused militaristic nationalism, derided cultural decadence,
and blamed various marginalized groups—chiefly Jews—for Germany’s social ills.
The Nazis governed Germany beginning in 1933 and attempted to spread their
ideology through conquest and genocide until their defeat in 1945.
WORLD WAR 2 was between italy ,germany and japanand its allies
(france,great britian,us,china,soviet union)
Both nazis an fascists did not believe in diplomacy and were an
authoritarian regime,so they believed in violence and resorted to it in
any given opputunity
Expansionist mindset of both led to ww2. Both wanted to expand
their ideology to far end of the world ,espcially nazis,they even took
over many neighbouring parts of the
countires(POLAND,DENMARK,BELGIUM,NORWAY,NETHERLAND,FRA
NCE,LUXEMBURG,GREECE ETC) but lost at the hands of Russia(led by
stalin).
The holocaust of jews was not seen positively by the westerners
The Americans feared the total disctatorship of nazis in the area of
cental europe , and as a resutl affceting their trade activities. While
germany was going through great economic depression post world
war 1 period,america was prospering and the obv did not want to loe
that .
Racism : Adolf Hitler’s Nazism was a nationalist and expansionist
ideology. Nazism claimed that Germans needed to conquer new
territory and supplant the people who lived there. This was because
Germans were members of the Aryan race, which was superior to all
other races. Waging war enabled the Aryan race to take the land it so
desperately needed, purge “inferior races,” and achieve hegemony
over the world.
Hungarian Fascistic Ideology:after ww1 hungary became barely 1/3
of its originalsize,to restore its political and territorial
status ,hungarian leader sided with germany and italy.and execution
of jews stareted there too.
http://www.historyisnowmagazine.com/blog/2019/6/30/why-did-
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