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  2. Hitler's prophecy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hitler's_prophecy

    Hitler had associated the Jews and war in several speeches before 1939. [6] In 1931, Hitler said in the event of war, the Jews would be "crushed by the wheels of history"; [7] he also characterized the 1933 anti-Nazi boycott as a Jewish declaration of war against Germany. [6]

  3. Heath Hitler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heath_Hitler

    Isidore Heath Hitler (born 1973), formerly Isidore Heath Campbell, [1] sometimes called Nazi dad, is an American white supremacist and self-described Neo-Nazi [2] who attracted national media attention in December 2008 after the ShopRite in Greenwich Township, New Jersey, refused to make a cake celebrating his son Adolf Hitler Campbell's third birthday. [3]

  4. List of Nazi ideologues - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Nazi_ideologues

    Alfred Baeumler (1887–1968), German philosopher in Nazi Germany. He was a leading misinterpreter of Friedrich Nietzsche's philosophy as legitimizing Nazism. Thomas Mann read Baeumler's work on Nietzsche in the early 1930s, and characterized passages of it as "Hitler prophecy."

  5. Trust No Fox on his Green Heath and No Jew on his Oath

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trust_No_Fox_on_his_Green...

    On the other hand, the Jews are told to go away. A picture of grumpy-looking Jews walking under a sign that says "one-way road. Hurry. Hurry. The Jews are our misfortune" and in the text the phrase "what a disgusting picture" is used. This promoted a sense of urgency in ridding Jews in German society.

  6. Nazi racial theories - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazi_racial_theories

    An Austrian postcard in 1919 endorsing the Stab-in-the-back myth by showing a caricatured Jew stabbing a personified German Army soldier in the back with a dagger A fragment of the exposition Der Ewige Jude ("The Eternal Jew"), which demonstrates "typical" anatomical traits of the Jews. Hitler shifted the blame for Germany's loss in the First ...

  7. Themes in Nazi propaganda - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Themes_in_Nazi_propaganda

    Afterwards, Hitler publicly muted his antisemitism; speeches would contain references to Jews, but ceased to be purely antisemitic fulminations, unless such language would appeal to the audience. [7] Some speeches contained no references to Jews at all, leading many to believe that his antisemitism had been an earlier stage.

  8. Anti-Semite and Jew - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-Semite_and_Jew

    "Thus to explain his failure, he made use of two systems of interpretation… His thoughts moved on two planes without his being in the least bit embarrassed by it." [2]: 12 Sartre's classmate had adopted in advance a view of Jews and of their role in society. "Far from experience producing his idea of the Jew, it was the latter that explained ...

  9. Nazi analogies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazi_analogies

    In 2019, Pope Francis criticized politicians who lash out at homosexuals, Romani people, and Jews, saying that it reminded him of Adolf Hitler's speeches in the 1930s. [ 78 ] Some advocates of trans-exclusionary radical feminism have compared transgender medical care to Nazi human experimentation or transsexuality to Nazism.