March 23, 2005
How the Nazis stayed popular
A new book, Hitler's People's State (set to be published in English next year), argues that the Nazis kept ordinary Germans mollified with a generous welfare state, full employment and low taxes - mostly paid for with wealth plundered from the Jews and the conquered nations of Europe:
A well-respected German historian has a radical new theory to explain a nagging question: Why did average Germans so heartily support the Nazis and Third Reich? Hitler, says Goetz Aly, was a "feel good dictator," a leader who not only made Germans feel important, but also made sure they were well cared-for by the state.
To do so, he gave them huge tax breaks and introduced social benefits that even today anchor the society. He also ensured that even in the last days of the war not a single German went hungry. Despite near-constant warfare, never once during his 12 years in power did Hitler raise taxes for working class people. He also -- in great contrast to World War I -- particularly pampered soldiers and their families, offering them more than double the salaries and benefits that American and British families received. As such, most Germans saw Nazism as a "warm-hearted" protector, says Aly, author of the new book "Hitler's People's State: Robbery, Racial War and National Socialism" and currently a guest lecturer at the University of Frankfurt. They were only too happy to overlook the Third Reich's unsavory, murderous side.
Financing such home front "happiness" was not simple and Hitler essentially achieved it by robbing and murdering others, Aly claims. Jews. Slave laborers. Conquered lands. All offered tremendous opportunities for plunder, and the Nazis exploited it fully, he says.
Once the robberies had begun, a sort of "snowball effect" ensued and in order to stay afloat, he says Germany had to conquer and pilfer from more territory and victims. "That's why Hitler couldn't stop and glory comfortably in his role as victor after France's 1940 surrender." Peace would have meant the end of his predatory practices and would have spelled "certain bankruptcy for the Reich."
That may help to explain the Nazi invasion of the USSR, too. The book sounds interesting - though its thesis will almost certainly be abused by idiots all over the political spectrum, who will argue that low tax rates and/or social programs are "just like what the Nazis did". (You know someone in Germany is already saying the Americans conquered Iraq to get the oil to pay for tax cuts, because Bush is Hitler!!!.)
Posted by damian at March 23, 2005 05:34 PM