Topic > Nazi Germany: rights and responsibilities of a superior...

“The deepest sense of social responsibility for creating a better basis for our development, combined with brutal determination to eradicate incurable tumors.”-Adolf HitlerGermany Nazi: Rights and responsibilities of a "superior" race INTRODUCTIONThe Holocaust, perpetrated by the leader of the Nazi party, Adolf Hitler, between 1933 and 1945 in various European countries led to the extermination of minority groups deemed inferior by the Nazis, while other groups were displaced, taken from their families, removed from their homes and left to start a new life. Hitler's actions were unknown before then and did not only involve German states, but instead brought in countries from all over the world and caused the creation of many new international ideas, such as the lawlessness of Nazism and the term "genocide". ' The Nazis believed it was their responsibility to address “Jewish nuisance” and severely restricted the rights of oppressed groups. Hitler came to power thanks to the desperation of the German state, which had recently lost a major world war and was accused of being the cause of the war in the first place. They were constantly looking for an answer to their woes, so when a respected and fantastic public speaker named Adolf Hitler pointed to the Jews as the problem, the public was more than happy to accept these sentiments. Adolf Hitler became chancellor of the German Third Reich and leader of the Nazi Party on January 30, 1933. He assumed absolute control of the government, and the Nazi Party adopted the motto: "Ein volk, Ein Reich, Ein Führer," meaning "One voice, one nation, a sovereign". This marked the beginning of a series of widespread events that cost millions of innocent people... middle of paper... people drove these groups from their homes or simply killed large groups of them outright. These events went unnoticed for so long that when other countries began to understand what was happening, many countries even from other continents felt the need to get involved and ended up putting an end to these events, instead of the Germans. . This marked the death of Hitler, Nazism and, for the most part, the German Nazi Party. Although Nazism has been declared an illegal practice, there is no doubt that it is still practiced today in various places around the world, since no one can say exactly what is happening everywhere at once. Other states welcomed these groups with open arms, and Germany and the states it controlled found themselves with severely depressed economies, populations, and a mountain of debt added to the enormous lump sums already owed to foreign countries..