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In reply to the discussion: ''Your day is coming, Mr. Wray.'' [View all]Kid Berwyn
(24,849 posts)10. Violence as a solution is NAZI. To the educated, it is crazy.

Erich Mühsam
Identification picture of Erich Mühsam taken in the Oranienburg concentration camp. Mühsam, an anarchist and a pacifist, worked as an editor and writer; he was imprisoned during World War I for opposing the war. Arrested during the massive roundup of Nazi political opponents following the Reichstag fire (February 27, 1933), Mühsam was tortured to death in Oranienburg on July 11, 1934. Oranienburg, Germany, February 3, 1934. Musee National de la Resistance
NAZI POLITICAL VIOLENCE IN 1933
Following Adolf Hitler's appointment as German chancellor on January 30, 1933, the Nazi Partys paramilitary organizations, the SA and the SS, unleashed waves of violence against political opponents and Jews.
The Nazi use of force to intimidate, injure, or even kill foes was not new. It dated back to the early days of the Nazi Party. In the final years of the Weimar Republic this violence increased. In Prussia, Germanys largest state, at least 105 people were killed in clashes between the Nazis and their Leftist political rivals in June and July of 1932, when the Reichstag elections campaigns were in full swing. Hundreds of others were injured.
After January 30, 1933, Hitlers coalition government acted to effectively give Nazi paramilitary units control of the German streets. The SA, which had dramatically increased in size with Nazi electoral success, numbering some 3 million members by mid-1934, disrupted or shut down Leftist assemblies and protests, often with police support. In mid-February, Hermann Göring, the newly named Prussian Minister of the Interior, ordered the police not to hinder SA and SS actions, but to help them. Shortly thereafter, he created an auxiliary police force out of these two Nazi orders. As a result, their violent actions were given state sanction.
Within days of the Reichstag Fire, and the resulting presidential decree for the Protection of the People and State (February 28), the SA and SS escalated the violence against Nazi political opponents. Thousands of Communists and Social Democrats were arrested and jailed. In MarchApril 1933, an estimated 40,000 to 50,000 political foes were taken into protective custody (Schutzhaft) and imprisoned in concentration camps. The SA and SS routinely beat up and tortured political opponents and vandalized, looted, or destroyed leftist parties offices. Sometimes, individuals were murdered.
Not even individuals holding political office at the local or national level were safe from such violence. Some 500 municipal administrators and 70 mayors were forcibly removed from their positions by the end of May 1933. By the end of spring the violence had spread to non-leftist political figures. On June 26, Heinrich Himmler, the head of Bavarias political police and the head of the Nazi SS, ordered his forces to place all Reichstag and state assembly representatives from the Bavarian Peoples Party in protective custody.
On July 14, 1933, Hitlers government passed a law prohibiting all other political parties, except the Nazi Party, and banning the formation of new political parties. By this stage all of Germanys many parties had either been closed down or ordered to dissolve themselves.
Last Edited: Jun 18, 2019
Author(s): United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Washington, DC
SOURCE: https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/nazi-political-violence-in-1933
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I'm not sure the congressional baseball game will even be safe from brawls anymore
Walleye
Nov 2023
#6
Ex-sheriff Clay doesn't like being asked questions by anyone he isn't paid in cash to proteck.
Kid Berwyn
Nov 2023
#7