Quotes About Nazism
Nazism is not dangerous because it proffers a universal system that threatens to engulf the whole world but because it refuses to think universally. Its efforts at world conquest stem from its lack of universality, not an abundance of it.
~ Todd McGowan
BazillionQuotes.com
The wounded Goering was given first aid by the Jewish proprietor of a nearby bank
~ William L. Shirer
BazillionQuotes.com
As the year of 1931 ran its uneasy course, with five million wage earners out of work, the middle classes facing ruin, the farmers unable to meet their mortgage payments, the Parliament paralyzed, the government floundering, the eighty-four-year-old President fast sinking into the befuddlement of senility, a confidence mounted in the breasts of the Nazi
~ William L. Shirer
BazillionQuotes.com
Nazism appeared to be a dying cause. It had mushroomed on the country's misfortunes; now that the nation's outlook was suddenly bright it was rapidly withering away. Or so most Germans and foreign observers believed.
~ William L. Shirer
BazillionQuotes.com
cannot it be added that it was one of the world's misfortunes that so many in the interwar years either ignored or laughed off the Nazi aims which Hitler had taken the pains to put down in writing?
~ William L. Shirer
BazillionQuotes.com
A crude Darwinism? A sadistic fancy? An irresponsible egoism? A megalomania? It was all of these in part. But it was something more. For the mind and the passion of Hitler—all the aberrations that possessed his feverish brain—had roots that lay deep in German experience and thought. Nazism and the Third Reich, in fact, were but a logical continuation of German history.
~ William L. Shirer
BazillionQuotes.com
William L. Shirer
~ consternated.
BazillionQuotes.com
It was at this time that he published an open letter to a Communist leader assuring him that Nazism and Communism were really the same thing.
~ William L. Shirer
BazillionQuotes.com
And cannot it be added that it was one of the world's misfortunes that so many in the interwar years either ignored or laughed off the Nazi aims which Hitler had taken the pains to put down in writing? Surely the anti-Semitic points of the program promulgated in the Munich beer hall on the evening of February 24, 1920, constituted a dire warning.
~ William L. Shirer
BazillionQuotes.com
By any estimate it is certain that nearly half of them were exterminated by the Germans. This was the final consequence and the shattering cost of the aberration which came over the Nazi dictator in his youthful gutter days in Vienna and which he imparted to—or shared with—so many of his German followers.
~ William L. Shirer
BazillionQuotes.com
But Hitler was not entirely wrong in saying that to understand Nazism one must first know Wagner.
~ William L. Shirer
BazillionQuotes.com
There were some ten million Jews living in 1939 in the territories occupied by Hitler's forces. By any estimate it is certain that nearly half of them were exterminated by the Germans. This was the final consequence and the shattering cost of the aberration which came over the Nazi dictator in his youthful gutter days in Vienna and which he imparted to—or shared with—so many of his German followers.
~ William L. Shirer
BazillionQuotes.com
But the Third Reich owed nothing to the fortunes of war or to foreign influence. It was inaugurated in peacetime, and peacefully, by the Germans themselves, out of both their weaknesses and their strengths. The Germans imposed the Nazi tyranny on themselves
~ William L. Shirer
BazillionQuotes.com
The racial laws which excluded the Jews from the German community seemed to a foreign observer to be a shocking throwback to primitive times, but since the Nazi racial theories exalted the Germans as the salt of the earth and the master race they were far from being unpopular. A
~ William L. Shirer
BazillionQuotes.com
it might be argued that had more non-Nazi Germans read it before 1933 and had the foreign statesmen of the world perused it carefully while there still was time, both Germany and the world might have been saved from catastrophe.
~ William L. Shirer
BazillionQuotes.com
The cardinal error of the Germans who opposed Nazism was their failure to unite against it.
~ William L. Shirer
BazillionQuotes.com
The cardinal error of the Germans who opposed Nazism was their failure to unite against it. At the crest of their popular strength, in July 1932, the National Socialists had attained but 37 per cent of the vote. But the 63 per cent of the German people who expressed their opposition to Hitler were much too divided and shortsighted to combine against a common danger which they must have known would overwhelm them unless they united, however temporarily, to stamp it out.
~ William L. Shirer
BazillionQuotes.com
To sum up these three years: Personally, they have not been unhappy ones, though the shadow of Nazi fanaticism, sadism, persecution, regimentation, terror, brutality, suppression, militarism, and preparation for war has hung over all our lives, like a dark, brooding cloud that never clears.
~ William L. Shirer
BazillionQuotes.com
Thus a Western order that retrospectively mythologized its opposition to Nazism as opposition to the camp universe, and which denounced this too as the ultimate offence of Stalinism, patronised a regime in Spain that was, like the Soviet Union's, based on mass murder and its own gulag.
~ Helen Graham
BazillionQuotes.com
Under communism, there is collective ownership of property de jure. Under Nazism, there is the same collective ownership de facto.
~ Leonard Peikoff
BazillionQuotes.com
Nazism and use the alliance among Fascists to steer the Nazis away from the racial policies.
~ Tom Reiss
BazillionQuotes.com
most of its existence, Mussolini's regime had not been anti-Semitic, and early on, the Duce had explicitly criticized Hitler's racism—probably in part because Nazism did not include modern Italians in its pantheon of Aryan supermen.
~ Tom Reiss
BazillionQuotes.com
I saw quite plainly that Communism would be the peril civilisation would have to face after the defeat of Nazism and Fascism.
~ Winston S. Churchill
BazillionQuotes.com
I never had any doubts about it, for I saw quite plainly that Communism would be the peril civilisation would have to face after the defeat of Nazism and Fascism.
~ Winston S. Churchill
BazillionQuotes.com
