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đ. Well yeah. Morality aside, everything was working fantastically.
Apart from that to the economic point. Hitler either understood or ultimately figured out (or rather his advisors did) that large scale Keynesian state expenditures could rescue a morbid capital economy from destruction. Basically what American businessmen later learned during WW2.
But itâs difficult to say this is because they lived under a âNaziâ program specifically. âNazismâ faced the exact same problem âCommunismâ did in this sense. The Nazis werenât in power all that long and so nobody really got a chance to see what a âNational Socialist Stateâ would look like. They didnât just oppose Communism. They also opposed Capitalism. One reason they wanted lebensraum was to prepare for an autarkic economy because they knew their activities were going to lock them out of international markets; quite similar to the way North Korea is today. Hitler specifically wrote about this. They also opposed modern practices of the credit system. The amount of days you could analyze their political program and domestic policies numbers in the mere months at best, outside of the war effort.
The same with Communism. Marx never wrote about what a post-Capitalist system would look like. He died before he was able to do that. When people attack âMarxismâ and they point to the Soviet Union, what theyâre really attacking is âMarxist-Leninismâ which is one particular twist and variation that was grafted onto Marxâ ideology by others and at a different time.
Well, yeah of course morality aside. I actually think people were too easy on the germans of the time, my grandparents. We let them get away with their lies; that they didnât believe, or profit, that they didnât know, that they were threatened, that the war just happened to them, and that it was hard.
I think thatâs more true of japan; they thought that without the resources of an empire, they could never fight and win a long war, therefore they could not threaten one, therefore theyâd be relegated to the third rank of powers.
Hitler had a more dramatic, crazier theory: as more nations became industrialized and more populous, they would find it increasingly difficult to exchange their competing industrial goods for the limited food surplus from more agrarian countries, who themselves were industrializing and therefore there was less and less food surplus to trade. So he needed lebensraum to avoid the inevitable Malthusian starvation of his people. Not such a bad guy after all. Well, other people would still all starve. Anyway, itâs not that he loved autarky, it's that he thought all international trade would soon break down naturally. And then he planned to âkeep a balanceâ between the lebensraum-agrarian part (farms in the east)and the industrialized part(german factories) of his empire so that there would be no reduction of the agrarian food surplus and no starvation.
Yeah, I remember the Covid times too.
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Yeah he wouldnât be such a âbad guyâ were it not for the implications and designs that were baked into his desire for agricultural sustainability. This wasnât some national policy of ecology he was seized by. It was part and parcel for his desire for German colonies via the war effort.
Anyone else can speculate endlessly about his ideas for the future state.
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