
408. The Nazis in Power: Hitler's Dream (Part 5)
The Rest Is History
00:00
Racism's Roots in Society
The pervasive language and concepts of race in the late 19th and early 20th centuries influenced general public beliefs, even outside extremist circles. During the 1920s and 1930s, societal norms accepted ideas of racial struggle, which were prevalent in democracies like the United States and France. Thomas Mann's perspective suggests that Hitler's rise was not merely the product of his own ideology but rather a reflection of the darker desires of educated German elites, indicating a broader complicity in the societal acceptance of racism and xenophobia.
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