Thursday, November 14, 2019
The Brilliant and Evil Hitler Essay -- Exploratory Essays Research Pap
      The Brilliant and Evil Hitler           Hitler was both brilliant and evil. He won the following of nearly all German  people, and brought a desperate country out of poverty and post-war dissolution.  It was not by virtue that Hitler accomplished these things. Instead, it was  through evil planning, mass rallies, emotional appeal to a vulnerable  population, stirring military displays, and the eventual extermination of  millions of innocent people: Jews (anyone with one or more Jewish grandparent),  Communists, Negroes, the mentally ill, and anyone else in his way. He called his  plan to rid the world of "inferior" human beings the "Final Solution." Hitler  had a brilliant mind. He brought Germany out of post-war depression and create  jobs, comradere, and a better economy, yet he was very evil. He used his power,  coersion, and manipulation to convince Germans to committ unthinkable atrocites  against millions of innocent people.           The signing of the Treaty of Versailles on June 28, 1919, marked the end of  WW1 and the beginning of severe depression in Germany. The treaty mandated  disarmament, heavy reparations, a loss of 15% of German territory, which in turn  took 7 million of her citizens, 75% of its iron-ore, its entire Navy, and all  merchant men (Siegel 3). The effects of the treaty were devastating, causing  severe unemployment (nearly 6 million in Germany) and devaluation of the German  mark. Millions lost their life savings and became destitute. Other requirements  included "the surrender of goods in vast quantities and the requirement to sign  over future commercial opportunities" (Seigel 3). Germany's economy was  devastated and Hitler was waiting, hovering in the darkness, to take full  advantage of thi...              ...and, and Germany. In his effort to unify all  German-speaking people and eliminate non-Aryan races, Hitler was responsible for  more than 12 million deaths. Using coercion, manipulation, and threats he  convinced the German people if they did not comply with his demands, they would  be added to staggering list of the dead. This threat, fed by the desire for an  improved life is what led the German people into Hitler's hands.            Works Cited           Chambers, Mortimer., er al. The Western Experience. New York: Mcgraw Hill,  1995.     Perry, Marvin., er al. Sources of the Western Tradition. Ed. George W. Bock:  Houghton Mifflin Company, 1995.     Siegel, Scott J., On-line article, In Defense of the German Civilian  Population on Charges of Willing Accomplices to Crimes Against Humanity During  WW II. Location: http://members.tripod.com/~ssscott/defense.html.                             
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