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Originally Posted by dilbert firestorm
not the same thing.
the national socialist german workers party (Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei) have passed socialist laws during their tenure.
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Actually it is very close to the same thing. North Korea holds elections every 5 years. Were the socialist laws that the NSDAP implemented? Given the overall body of laws and practices of the NSDAP, were the socialist laws central to or important to the NSDAP?
Quote:
Originally Posted by dilbert firestorm
they were right wing in the sense that they were to the right of the communists, but left of center from the conservatives view point.
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Can you be specific? Which conservatives considered NSDAP to be left of center? Everything I can find indicates that in the German political landscape of the 20s the NSDAP was considered to be far to the right. What parties considered the NSDAP to be left of their own position? What parties considered the NSDAP to be right of their own position? What features of Nazi Germany during the war resembled a left of center government?
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Originally Posted by dilbert firestorm
alot of people including the historians were duped in thinking they were right wing.
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Well, somebody has been duped, but I don't think it was the historians.
Quote:
Originally Posted by dilbert firestorm
(Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei) ...The NDSAP never called themselves nazi.
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The reason the NSDAP never referred to themselves as Nazi is because Nazi was a pejorative term in use before the party took its name. Also, in German, the t in Nationale is pronounced like the z in Nazi, so it is much more likely that those calling the NSDAP Nazi did so because of the first two syllables of Nationale rather than the first syllable of Nationale and the second syllable of Sozialistische. (Or did I misunderstand why you emphasized those two syllables?)