Why Germans Supported Hitler

xoxoxoBruce • Aug 8, 2007 8:11 am
This Jacob Hornberger article explains why the German people didn't see Hitler as the monster history has painted in retrospect. The parallels with FDR and the methods adopted by GWB are intriguing.
~snip~
After all, it’s one thing to look at Nazi Germany retrospectively and from the vantage point of an outside citizen who has heard since childhood about the death camps and of Hitler’s monstrous nature. We look at those grainy films of Hitler delivering his bombastic speeches and our automatic reaction is that we would have never supported the man and his political party. But it’s quite another thing to place one’s self in the shoes of an ordinary German citizen and ask, “What would I have done?”

What we often forget is that many Germans did not support Hitler and the Nazis at the start of the 1930s. Keep in mind that in the 1932 presidential election, Hitler received only 30.1 percent of the national vote. In the subsequent run-off election, he received only 36.8 percent of the vote. It wasn’t until President Hindenburg appointed him as chancellor in 1933 that Hitler began consolidating power.

Among the major factors that motivated Germans to support Hitler during the 1930s was the tremendous economic crisis known as the Great Depression, which had struck Germany as hard as it had the United States and other parts of the world. What did many Germans do in response to the Great Depression? They did the same thing that many Americans did — they looked for a strong leader to get them out of the economic crisis.

Hitler and Franklin Roosevelt
In fact, there is a remarkable similarity between the economic policies that Hitler implemented and those that Franklin Roosevelt enacted. Keep in mind, first of all, that the German National Socialists were strong believers in Social Security, which Roosevelt introduced to the United States as part of his New Deal. Keep in mind also that the Nazis were strong believers in such other socialist schemes as public (i.e., government) schooling and national health care. In fact, my hunch is that very few Americans realize that Social Security, public schooling, Medicare, and Medicaid have their ideological roots in German socialism.

Hitler and Roosevelt also shared a common commitment to such programs as government-business partnerships. In fact, until the Supreme Court declared it unconstitutional, Roosevelt’s National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA), which cartelized American industry, along with his “Blue Eagle” propaganda campaign, was the type of economic fascism that Hitler himself was embracing in Germany (as fascist ruler Benito Mussolini was also doing in Italy).

As John Toland points out in his book Adolf Hitler, “Hitler had genuine admiration for the decisive manner in which the President had taken over the reins of government. ‘I have sympathy for Mr. Roosevelt,’ he told a correspondent of the New York Times two months later, ‘because he marches straight toward his objectives over Congress, lobbies and bureaucracy.’ Hitler went on to note that he was the sole leader in Europe who expressed ‘understanding of the methods and motives of President Roosevelt.’”

As Srdja Trifkovic, foreign-affairs editor for Chronicles magazine, stated in his article “FDR and Mussolini: A Tale of Two Fascists”, Roosevelt and his ‘Brain Trust,’ the architects of the New Deal, were fascinated by Italy’s fascism — a term which was not pejorative at the time. In America, it was seen as a form of economic nationalism built around consensus planning by the established elites in government, business, and labor.

Both Hitler and Roosevelt also believed in massive injections of government spending in both the social-welfare sector and the military-industrial sector as a way to bring economic prosperity to their respective nations. As the famed economist John Kenneth Galbraith put it,

Hitler also anticipated modern economic policy ... by recognizing that a rapid approach to full employment was only possible if it was combined with wage and price controls. That a nation oppressed by economic fear would respond to Hitler as Americans did to F.D.R. is not surprising.

One of Hitler’s proudest accomplishments was the construction of the national autobahn system, a massive socialist public-works project that ultimately became the model for the interstate highway system in the United States.

By the latter part of the 1930s, many Germans had the same perception about Hitler that many Americans had about Roosevelt. They honestly believed that Hitler was bringing Germany out of the Depression. For the first time since the Treaty of Versailles, the treaty that had ended World War I with humiliating terms for Germany, the German people were regaining a sense of pride in themselves and in their nation, and they were giving the credit to Hitler’s strong leadership in time of deep national crisis.
Toland points out in his Hitler biography that Germans weren’t the only ones who admired Hitler during the 1930s:

Churchill had once paid a grudging compliment to the Führer in a letter to the Times: “I have always said that I hoped if Great Britain were beaten in a war we should find a Hitler who would lead us back to our rightful place among nations.”

Hitler was a strong believer in national service, especially for German young people. That was what the Hitler Youth was all about — inculcating in young people the notion that they owed a duty to devote at least part of their lives to society. It was an idea also resonating in the collectivist atmosphere that was permeating the United States during the 1930s.

~snip~

Hitler’s war on terrorism
One of the most searing events in German history occurred soon after Hitler took office. On February 27, 1933, in what easily could be termed the 9/11 terrorist attack of that time, German terrorists fire-bombed the German parliament building. It shouldn’t surprise anyone that Adolf Hitler, one of the strongest political leaders in history, would declare war on terrorism and ask the German parliament (the Reichstag) to give him temporary emergency powers to fight the terrorists. Passionately claiming that such powers were necessary to protect the freedom and well-being of the German people, Hitler persuaded the German legislators to give him the emergency powers he needed to confront the terrorist crisis. What became known as the Enabling Act allowed Hitler to suspend civil liberties “temporarily,” that is, until the crisis had passed. Not surprisingly, however, the threat of terrorism never subsided and Hitler’s “temporary” emergency powers, which were periodically renewed by the Reichstag, were still in effect when he took his own life some 12 years later.

Is it so surprising that ordinary German citizens were willing to support their government’s suspension of civil liberties in response to the threat of terrorism, especially after the terrorist strike on the Reichstag?
During the 1930s, the United States faced the Great Depression, and many Americans were willing to accede to Roosevelt’s assumption of massive emergency powers, including the power to control economic activity and also to nationalize and confiscate people’s gold.

During the Cold War, the fear of communism induced Americans to permit their government to collect massive amounts of income taxes to fund the military-industrial complex and to let U.S. officials send more than 100,000 American soldiers to their deaths in undeclared wars in Korea and Vietnam.
Since the 9/11 attacks, Americans have been more than willing for their government to infringe on vital civil liberties, including habeas corpus, involve the nation in an undeclared and unprovoked war on Iraq, and spend ever-growing amounts of money on the military-industrial complex, all in the name of the “war on terrorism.”
piercehawkeye45 • Aug 8, 2007 8:16 am
I read this a few days ago, VERY good article.

I personally think I would have supported Hitler since of the depression and the treatment they got from Britain and France after the war but maybe not, probably depends on my age when he came to power.
xoxoxoBruce • Aug 8, 2007 8:24 am
I'm not sure the age thing would be all that important. All the Germans were suffering, except the very rural folks.
It was the same here. One of my Grandfathers worked in a rope factory and had hard times whereas my other Grandfather was largely self sufficient. Butter & egg money was scarce, and the clothing a little thin, but always food on the table.
piercehawkeye45 • Aug 8, 2007 8:30 am
I just mentioned the age thing because my political views have changed tremendously in the past five years not because how hard I was hit economically, which you are right about. I was a Bush supporter for most of high school and believed in higher power controlling the masses.

I changed with maturity and hate the idea of giving up liberties for protection.

If Bush came into power now I would never have supported him. While I would be in a completely different situation in Germany, the age could determine my loyalty.
Undertoad • Aug 8, 2007 8:34 am
Good old "Bumper" Hornberger; my friends have worked on all sorts of projects with him and I have seen him speak and met him on several occasions.

He has long pursued his theory that the Libertarian Party is not successful because it is not "pure" enough. If he was here he would be telling us why Radar is not a "real" Libertarian.
Griff • Aug 8, 2007 9:39 am
I like Hornberger's writing a lot (no suprise there). Many of us really don't think Bush is dangerous, thinking that the American system is too resilient to fall to tyranny. What is forgotten is that, while civil liberties have [COLOR="Red"]mostly[/COLOR] been protected, government has become ubiquitous in our daily lives. We may or may not yet have an Evil Empire underway, but we are building Kafkaesque bureaucracies in our vain attempts to control each other.
freshnesschronic • Aug 8, 2007 9:39 am
I thought it was because of....brainwashing? No?? :headshake

Great article! News to me.
skysidhe • Aug 8, 2007 11:11 am
There has been so many comparisons. Just one google search tells it all.
barefoot serpent • Aug 8, 2007 2:31 pm
Hitler also designed a People's Vehicle -- an affordable mode of transportation -- the Volkswagen.
glatt • Aug 8, 2007 4:15 pm
And all this time I thought Ferdinand Porsche designed it.
xoxoxoBruce • Aug 8, 2007 5:06 pm
He did, sort of. Actually he copied the concept and a dozen design features of the Czech Tatra. When Tatra sued, Hitler told Porsche, not to worry, I'll make that problem go away. After the war VW had to settle with Tatra.
glatt • Aug 8, 2007 5:39 pm
xoxoxoBruce;372902 wrote:
he copied the concept and a dozen design features of the Czech Tatra.


Very interesting.
spudcon • Aug 8, 2007 7:03 pm
Griff;372774 wrote:
I like Hornberger's writing a lot (no suprise there). Many of us really don't think Bush is dangerous, thinking that the American system is too resilient to fall to tyranny. What is forgotten is that, while civil liberties have [COLOR=Red]mostly[/COLOR] been protected, government has become ubiquitous in our daily lives. We may or may not yet have an Evil Empire underway, but we are building Kafkaesque bureaucracies in our vain attempts to control each other.

Bravo Griff!
rkzenrage • Aug 8, 2007 7:10 pm
I see no difference between what BushCo. wants and what Hitler did.
DanaC • Aug 8, 2007 7:17 pm
I really think the humiliating and financially devastating terms of the Versailles treaty was a big, big factor. Much of Hitler's advances were sold in terms of reclaiming territories, to a nation who'd seen their historic enemy dancing on the ashes of their defeat. A great nation, their greatness still in living memory for many, forced to accept total culpability for a world war.

I sometimes wonder: if Germany had been in the same state of economic collapse, but without the humiliation of Versailles, would Hitler have been able to get people behind him as effectively as he did? if Germany had been utterly humiliated at Versailles, but allowed (assisted in) some economic recovery prior to Hitler's rise, would he have risen as far? Could either one of these factors,on their own, be enough to make Hitler's success possible.
DanaC • Aug 8, 2007 7:19 pm
I see no difference between what BushCo. wants and what Hitler did.


I really think that deserves at least some brand of caveat, rk.
rkzenrage • Aug 8, 2007 7:30 pm
Sure, he does not want genocide... I am talking about what he wants for the nation.
xoxoxoBruce • Aug 8, 2007 9:16 pm
DanaC;372970 wrote:

I sometimes wonder: if Germany had been in the same state of economic collapse, but without the humiliation of Versailles, would Hitler have been able to get people behind him as effectively as he did?
It worked for FDR.
piercehawkeye45 • Aug 8, 2007 9:51 pm
Yeah, but FDR needed Pearl Harbor before he could wage war. If Hitler didn't have Versailles, he would most likely still be extremely popular, but would he be able to attack the rest of Europe without question?
xoxoxoBruce • Aug 8, 2007 10:03 pm
From part2 of the same link
Lies and wars of aggression

One might object that, since Germany was the aggressor in the conflict, the German people should have refused to support the war. That objection, however, ignores an important point: that in the minds of many Germans, Germany was not the aggressor in World War II but rather the defending nation. After all, that’s what they had been told by their government officials.

An aggressor nation will inevitably try to manipulate events so as to appear to be the victimized nation — that is, the nation that is defending itself against aggression. In that way, government officials can tell the citizenry, “We are innocent! We were just minding our own business when our nation was attacked.” Naturally, the citizenry can then assume that there was nothing that could have been done to prevent the war and will be more willing to defend their nation against the attackers.

That is exactly what happened in Germany’s invasion of Poland, which precipitated World War II. After several weeks in which tensions between the two nations were heightened, German soldiers on the Polish-German border were attacked by Polish troops. Hitler followed the time-honored script by dramatically announcing that Germany had been attacked by Poland, requiring Germany to defend herself with a counterattack and an invasion of Poland.

There was one big problem, however — one that the German people were unaware of: the Polish troops who had done the attacking were actually German troops dressed up in Polish uniforms. In other words, German officials had lied about the cause of the war.
piercehawkeye45 • Aug 8, 2007 10:08 pm
Ah, that makes more sense now.
rkzenrage • Aug 8, 2007 10:10 pm
There was one big problem, however — one that the German people were unaware of: the Polish troops who had done the attacking were actually German troops dressed up in Polish uniforms. In other words, German officials had lied about the cause of the war.

Dubya... is that you?
xoxoxoBruce • Aug 8, 2007 10:13 pm
"Naturally the common people don't want war; neither in Russia, nor in England, nor in America, nor in Germany. That is understood. But after all, it is the leaders of the country who determine policy, and it is always a simple matter to drag the people along, whether it is a democracy, or a fascist dictatorship, or a parliament, or a communist dictatorship. ...Voice or no voice, the people can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders. That is easy. All you have to do is to tell them they are being attacked, and denounce the pacifists for lack of patriotism and exposing the country to danger. It works the same in any country."
Hermann Wilhelm Göring
bluecuracao • Aug 9, 2007 4:51 am
xoxoxoBruce;373082 wrote:
"...All you have to do is to tell them they are being attacked, and denounce the pacifists for lack of patriotism and exposing the country to danger. It works the same in any country."


And in so many ways...
Urbane Guerrilla • Aug 13, 2007 3:27 am
Rkzen, I do. Start with the contrasting approaches towards private firearms.