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Essay about Nazi Politics: A Work of Art

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National Socialism achieved its zenith in Germany's Third Reich under Adolf Hitler. Hitler and the Nazi Party essentially turned politics into an art by using, and indeed abusing, power to benefit themselves in any possible way. Hitler sought perfection in his regime and attempted to achieve it through organization and assimilation of the volk, dealing swiftly and affectively with opposition, thus not allowing alternatives to the regime, and by emphasizing discipline and a chain of command." Through Hitler and the Nazi Party's efforts, politics in the Third Reich were turned into work of art. The Nazi Party of the Third Reich was very well organized. The party was not operated solely on a central or national level, rather the …show more content…

"Selected districts are...worked over with propaganda operations consisting of methodically and skillfully prepared written and verbal appeals...which...cannot be...matched by any other party or political movement." Political opponents were temporarily stifled by Nazi propaganda. Once in power, Hitler and the Nazi Party efficiently and totally eliminated all forms of political opposition; however, not before using them to his advantage. In 1931, the Nazi's worked with the Kommunistische Partei Deutschlands (KPD or German Communist Party) to jointly gain a majority of the Reichstag over the Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands (SPD or German Social Democratic Party). Two years later, on the night of February 27, 1933 the Reichstag building was burned and the Nazi's blamed the communists assuming they set the blaze signaling the beginning of a communist revolution. In response, Hitler proposed the Decree for the Protection of People and State, the Reichstag Fire Decree, which enabled the Nazis to "round up Communists, Social Democrats, and other opponents" in the best interests of the protection of volk and state. Shortly thereafter the Law for the Removal of the Distress of People and Reich (the Enabling Act) was passed legalizing the national socialist revolution essentially giving Hitler the power to issue laws freely. Subsequent laws pertaining to removal of people considered threats to the Nazi's followed, including the Decree for

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