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reading:the_coming_of_the_third_reich [2023-05-20 00:21] – [Descent into Chaos] section 2 notes asdf | reading:the_coming_of_the_third_reich [2023-05-20 01:41] (current) – [Descent into Chaos] section 3 notes asdf | ||
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* this outcome was a huge shock to most Germans, especially after the upward trajectory they'd been on since unification | * this outcome was a huge shock to most Germans, especially after the upward trajectory they'd been on since unification | ||
- | * the " | + | * the so-called |
* had Germany won, they would have demanded massive territory concessions and likely reparations as well; considering the territory Germany wanted to annex, Versailles was mild | * had Germany won, they would have demanded massive territory concessions and likely reparations as well; considering the territory Germany wanted to annex, Versailles was mild | ||
* Germany did have sufficient resources to pay the reparations, | * Germany did have sufficient resources to pay the reparations, | ||
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* the government itself was suspicious of the Fatherland Party; it banned soldiers from joining and told civil servants not to help it | * the government itself was suspicious of the Fatherland Party; it banned soldiers from joining and told civil servants not to help it | ||
* the Fatherland Party struggled to recruit among the working class (who were still primarily aligned with the Social Democrats) and wounded veterans (who were thrown violently out of a party meeting) | * the Fatherland Party struggled to recruit among the working class (who were still primarily aligned with the Social Democrats) and wounded veterans (who were thrown violently out of a party meeting) | ||
- | * the party was essentially a rehash of previous ultra-nationalist movements, though they lacked the spiciness of the Pan-German League | + | * the party was essentially a rehash of previous ultra-nationalist movements, though they lacked the spiciness of the Pan-Germans |
* for their part, the Pan-German League fell into obscurity after 1918 | * for their part, the Pan-German League fell into obscurity after 1918 | ||
+ | * a nostalgic myth began to grow around the idea of the "front generation" | ||
+ | * the revolution in 1918 was bitterly resented by many soldiers, who often disarmed and arrested the local councils that had sprung up | ||
+ | * generally rejected by the revolutionaries, | ||
+ | * soldiers returned to a Germany organized wholly unlike that for which they had fought; the feeling began to spread among them that they had been " | ||
+ | * these are generalizations of course; many soldiers had deserted toward the end of the war, and others gravitated toward the left afterward rather than the extreme right; some of their interest groups fought to keep such a war in the past | ||
+ | * still, the soldiers' | ||
+ | * as time went on, it was increasingly felt that the veterans deserved far better treatment than they had received | ||
+ | * one veterans' | ||
+ | * founded by decorated soldier Franz Seldte in November 1918, its stated purpose was to provide financial support for old soldiers in need | ||
+ | * its leadership believed the organization should be above politics, by which they meant it should tap into the patriotic spirit of 1914 to overcome party divisions and forge national unity | ||
+ | * the Steel Helmets denounced the Treaty of Versailles, demanded the restoration of the black-white-red Imperial flag, and blamed Germany' | ||
+ | * by the mid-1920s, they had 300,000 or so members; they brought a formidable, militaristic presence to their rallies and marches | ||
+ | * Germany failed to transition back to peacetime after 1918; militaristic metaphors pervaded the language and actions of politics | ||
+ | * prior to the war, calm discussions were possible even between those of deeply opposed political opinion; that was no longer the case post-1918 | ||
+ | * parliamentary meetings often degenerated into shouting matches; worse, political parties began associating with paramilitary wings who frequently clashed in the streets | ||
+ | * many of the members of these street gangs had been too young to join the war and used street violence to legitimize themselves in the face of the myth of the front generation | ||
+ | * these paramilitary groups provided security at party meetings, paraded through the streets in uniform to impress the public, and fought each other; their relationships with the politicians were often fraught with tension, and they tended to maintain autonomy | ||
+ | * such context made it obvious that the Steel Helmets were not an apolitical veterans' | ||
+ | * the Nationalists formed their own " | ||
+ | * the far right had a number of " | ||
+ | * few were satisfied with the results of the German Revolution of 1918--19 | ||
+ | * leftists like Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg sought a second revolution to fully transition Germany to a socialist state run by the workers' | ||
+ | * the Social Democrats, fearing a red terror to mirror that of Russia, sanctioned the recruitment of Free Corps units to put down any further revolutionary uprisings | ||
+ | * following a poorly-organized uprising in Berlin in early 1919, the Free Corps brutally murdered revolutionaries across Germany, including Liebknecht and Luxemburg | ||
+ | * in spring 1920, a Red Army of workers formed to oppose an attempted right-wing coup in Berlin was put down by Free Corps units and the regular army on order of the Social Democrats; over 1000 members were slaughtered, | ||
+ | * after these events, cooperation between the Social Democrats and Communists was out of the question | ||
+ | * despite their support for violence against the Communists, the Social Democrats were still targets of the Free Corps, many of whom were firm believers in the stab-in-the-back myth and were fiercely anti-Republican | ||
+ | * socialists and democrats of any kind were viewed as the same by those on the right, who dubbed them the " | ||
+ | * those who had signed the Treaty of Versailles were particularly targeted for assassination by the Free Corps | ||
+ | * yet another failed Communist uprising was put to bloody end in 1923; the same year saw gun battles between rival political parties in Munich and battles involving French-backed separatists in the Rhineland | ||
+ | * the mass legitimization of violence in an already tense political climate served as fertile breeding ground for what would become Nazism; right-wing fringe groups were feeling more empowered to use violence to implement the measures that the Pan-Germans, | ||
+ | * still, German society of the time was highly polarized, not totally right-wing; plenty of people and parties actively worked to forge a functional parliamentary democracy from the mess | ||
==== The Weaknesses of Weimar ==== | ==== The Weaknesses of Weimar ==== |