Oh, but a significant number of the German leftist voters DID vote for the Nazi Party, Andy the little Nazi boy, and Hitler openly repudiated the Germany's older, conservative political parties as he adapted Marxist concepts as a means to his internationalist vision of a united people. And your notion that Hindenburg's appointment of Hitler somehow signifies something other than a temporary alliance is, by extension, to pretend that FDR's temporary alliance with Stalin to defeat Hitler meant that FDR was a Stalinist, Andy the little Nazi boy. Thus, your argument has been rendered categorically false, Andy the little Nazi boy.
Originally Posted by I B Hankering
If your alleged "German leftist voters DID vote for the Nazi Party," does that also mean Phil Gramm is a "closet nazi" when he started voting Rebublican?
And virtually all reputable historians agree that Hitler had adapted his "racial" concepts as a means to his internationalist vision of a united Germanic Aryan people. That's the right-wing nationalist fervor Hitler had utilized to his great advantage when he moved into the Rhineland, annexed Austria and the Sudetenland, and legitimized his claim on Polish Danzig, a city with predominant ethnic Germans.
FDR knew what he's doing. On the other hand, Hindenburg and his conservative allies were duped by Hitler's pledge to "make Germany great again."
You seem to have quite a bit of knowledge about history, but this time you are schooled, Little Hans.
http://www.historyplace.com/worldwar...tler/named.htm