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El Tercer Reich en el poder (IMPRESCINDIBLES) (Spanish Edition) by
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Tom
is on page 261 of 941
There's a niche idea that the Nazis prosecuted Christians. That's mostly false.
Christian thought leaders A.K.A priests/pastors who openly spoke against the Nazis on the basis of religion were prosecuted, but Christians, as a group, were not targeted by the Nazis like Jews or even "ideological enemies" such as Communists and Social Democrats.
Hardline Christians were seen as sheep to be converted - not prosecuted.
— 16 hours, 2 min ago
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Christian thought leaders A.K.A priests/pastors who openly spoke against the Nazis on the basis of religion were prosecuted, but Christians, as a group, were not targeted by the Nazis like Jews or even "ideological enemies" such as Communists and Social Democrats.
Hardline Christians were seen as sheep to be converted - not prosecuted.
Tom
is on page 248 of 941
Catholic CSA was already being talked about in the 1930s, but it's obvious that the Nazis motivation on reporting on it was purely due to their hatred of the fact that Catholic clergy, unlike Protestants, are not as susceptible to the disease which is (ethnic) nationalism.
It's a shame that Catholic voters were largely just as oblivious as their Protestant counterparts.
— Jun 02, 2026 08:34PM
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It's a shame that Catholic voters were largely just as oblivious as their Protestant counterparts.
Tom
is on page 234 of 941
The excellence of Evans' prose and navigation of this book is realized when you notice that throughout this chapter you've unknowingly been following the life of the man who wrote the "First they came for the..." poem until it's "revealed" at the very end.
And even then, Evans hits you skilfully over the head because he reminds you of the absence of one group in that poem: Catholics.
— May 31, 2026 12:34PM
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And even then, Evans hits you skilfully over the head because he reminds you of the absence of one group in that poem: Catholics.
Tom
is on page 220 of 941
It is clear that Evans does not agree with the phrase '[all] art is political'.
"Nazism anaesthetized politics; but it also politicized the arts."
Yet isn't that the crux of politics and the truth behind art?
This was something which Goebbels understood on an intellectual level. So far, he seems to have been the only truly intelligent member of the Nazi regime.
— May 30, 2026 04:30PM
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"Nazism anaesthetized politics; but it also politicized the arts."
Yet isn't that the crux of politics and the truth behind art?
This was something which Goebbels understood on an intellectual level. So far, he seems to have been the only truly intelligent member of the Nazi regime.
Boone Ayala
is on page 55 of 941
Night of the Long Knives and destruction of the SA quells internal disorder; the state becomes personalized and incoherent. “The mass of competing institutions and conflicting competencies effectively prevented the ‘normative’ state machine from asserting itself against the arbitrary interventions of the
‘prerogative’ apparatus and doomed it to a slow decline in its power and autonomy.” (49)
— May 28, 2026 12:40PM
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‘prerogative’ apparatus and doomed it to a slow decline in its power and autonomy.” (49)
Tom
is on page 141 of 941
Goebbels isn't incorrect in his statement: "All art is political."
It's an ignorance to this statement, which Evans engages in - which leads to the degradation of art, the acceptance of mediocrity and subservice to the status quo.
Goebbels, who seems to be the smartest top Nazi, pushed for 'subtle' propaganda while his colleges simply wanted overt propaganda. He overestimated the intelligence of the average Nazi!
— May 26, 2026 08:04PM
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It's an ignorance to this statement, which Evans engages in - which leads to the degradation of art, the acceptance of mediocrity and subservice to the status quo.
Goebbels, who seems to be the smartest top Nazi, pushed for 'subtle' propaganda while his colleges simply wanted overt propaganda. He overestimated the intelligence of the average Nazi!














