Hitler was not a socialist. He called his party the National Socialist German Workers' Party as a strategy to attract working class voters. Being fascists, Hitler and the Nazi regime were hostile to actual socialism and communism. Fascism: right-wing totalitarianism. Communist: left-wing totalitarianism. So your logic sounds very sophomoric.
This cuck never finished 9th grade 😂
He worships pedos and rapist felons who paint themselves orange, fall asleep on camera, are bff’s of Jeff Epstein and shit into diapers lmao
@asylumdogg007@grok@GaryHaynes1201@esjesjesj@elonmusk This clown doesn’t know what capitalism is clearly lmao
After he just chirped he was a socialist. He types out literal evidence of hyper capitalism.
Shut the fuck up already you’re absolutely embarrassing.
@originalhearing@grok@GaryHaynes1201@esjesjesj@elonmusk "Not in any meaningful way"...except the Nazis controlled all aspects of the economy, formed state-owned companies such as Volkswagen, and took over many existing companies when they rose to power such as IG Farben 🤣🤣🤣 Your education system has failed you miserably 🤣🤣🤣
@asylumdogg007@grok@GaryHaynes1201@esjesjesj@elonmusk None of this has anything to do with socialism.
You just negated yourself and said Hitler wasn’t capitalist to boot
Stop typing every single reply you dig yourself deeper and deeper into the hole lmao
No. The Nazi Party's name included "National Socialist" for propaganda appeal to workers, but Hitler explicitly rejected Marxist socialism. They purged socialists/communists, banned their parties, allied with industrialists, and ran a fascist system prioritizing racial nationalism and state-directed private enterprise—not class equality or worker ownership.
Grok says you're wrong. 2 minutes of checking the internet will prevent you from sounding like a fool with an ax to grind.
Grok ‐ No, the Nazi Party (National Socialist German Workers' Party, or NSDAP) was not historically referred to as "Christian nationalists" in any mainstream, contemporary, or scholarly context. The term "Christian nationalism" is a modern one, primarily used in 20th- and 21st-century American political discourse to describe ideologies blending Christian identity with nationalist goals (e.g., in debates over U.S. policy or figures like those in the January 6 events). It has no established historical application to the Nazis.
Key Historical Evidence
Nazi Self-Description and Ideology: The Nazis promoted a racial, pagan-infused nationalism rooted in völkisch (folkish) ideology, Aryan supremacy, and anti-Semitism. They drew selectively from pre-Christian Germanic myths (e.g., via figures like Heinrich Himmler and the SS's interest in Norse runes and occultism) while rejecting core Christian doctrines as "Jewish-influenced." Hitler himself called Christianity incompatible with National Socialism in private (as recorded in Hitler's Table Talk, 1941–1944) and publicly attacked "political clergy."
Official Party Stance: The 1920 NSDAP 25-Point Program made no mention of Christianity as a core tenet. Point 24 stated: "The Party as such upholds the standpoint of a positive Christianity without tying itself confessionally to any one denomination.巻 It fights the Jewish-materialistic spirit..." This was a tactical appropriation of "positive Christianity" (a Nazi-devised, de-Judaized version stripping out the Old Testament and pacifism) to appeal to Germany's Christian majority, not genuine Christian nationalism.
Actions Against Christianity:
The regime persecuted churches: Thousands of clergy were arrested (e.g., via the 1933 Concordat with the Vatican, later violated). The Confessing Church (opposing Nazis) faced suppression.
They pushed Gottgläubig (a deistic, non-Christian "belief in God" category) as an alternative; by 1939, over 3% of Germans officially listed it, including many SS members.
Education and youth programs (Hitler Youth) replaced Christian teachings with Nazi indoctrination.
Contemporary Labels: In the 1920s–1940s, opponents called Nazis "pagans," "heathens," or "anti-Christian" (e.g., papal encyclical Mit brennender Sorge, 1937). Allied propaganda emphasized their anti-religious tyranny, not Christian nationalism.
Scholarly Consensus
Historians like Richard Steigmann-Gall (The Holy Reich, 2003) note some early Nazis (e.g., in the 1920s) flirted with Protestant anti-Semitism, but this was opportunistic and faded as the regime consolidated power. By the late 1930s, the party was explicitly anti-clerical. No peer-reviewed history applies "Christian nationalist" to the NSDAP; searches in academic databases (e.g., JSTOR, Google Scholar) yield zero pre-2000 hits linking the terms, and post-2000 uses are rare analogies, not historical claims.
If modern commentators retroactively label Nazis as "Christian nationalists," it's anachronistic and inaccurate—often for rhetorical purposes in current debates. The Nazis were totalitarian racial nationalists with a cynical, instrumental use of religion, not devout Christian ones.
Grok says you're wrong. 2 minutes of checking the internet will prevent you from sounding like a fool with an ax to grind.
Grok ‐ No, the Nazi Party (National Socialist German Workers' Party, or NSDAP) was not historically referred to as "Christian nationalists" in any mainstream, contemporary, or scholarly context. The term "Christian nationalism" is a modern one, primarily used in 20th- and 21st-century American political discourse to describe ideologies blending Christian identity with nationalist goals (e.g., in debates over U.S. policy or figures like those in the January 6 events). It has no established historical application to the Nazis.
Key Historical Evidence
Nazi Self-Description and Ideology: The Nazis promoted a racial, pagan-infused nationalism rooted in völkisch (folkish) ideology, Aryan supremacy, and anti-Semitism. They drew selectively from pre-Christian Germanic myths (e.g., via figures like Heinrich Himmler and the SS's interest in Norse runes and occultism) while rejecting core Christian doctrines as "Jewish-influenced." Hitler himself called Christianity incompatible with National Socialism in private (as recorded in Hitler's Table Talk, 1941–1944) and publicly attacked "political clergy."
Official Party Stance: The 1920 NSDAP 25-Point Program made no mention of Christianity as a core tenet. Point 24 stated: "The Party as such upholds the standpoint of a positive Christianity without tying itself confessionally to any one denomination.巻 It fights the Jewish-materialistic spirit..." This was a tactical appropriation of "positive Christianity" (a Nazi-devised, de-Judaized version stripping out the Old Testament and pacifism) to appeal to Germany's Christian majority, not genuine Christian nationalism.
Actions Against Christianity:
The regime persecuted churches: Thousands of clergy were arrested (e.g., via the 1933 Concordat with the Vatican, later violated). The Confessing Church (opposing Nazis) faced suppression.
They pushed Gottgläubig (a deistic, non-Christian "belief in God" category) as an alternative; by 1939, over 3% of Germans officially listed it, including many SS members.
Education and youth programs (Hitler Youth) replaced Christian teachings with Nazi indoctrination.
Contemporary Labels: In the 1920s–1940s, opponents called Nazis "pagans," "heathens," or "anti-Christian" (e.g., papal encyclical Mit brennender Sorge, 1937). Allied propaganda emphasized their anti-religious tyranny, not Christian nationalism.
Scholarly Consensus
Historians like Richard Steigmann-Gall (The Holy Reich, 2003) note some early Nazis (e.g., in the 1920s) flirted with Protestant anti-Semitism, but this was opportunistic and faded as the regime consolidated power. By the late 1930s, the party was explicitly anti-clerical. No peer-reviewed history applies "Christian nationalist" to the NSDAP; searches in academic databases (e.g., JSTOR, Google Scholar) yield zero pre-2000 hits linking the terms, and post-2000 uses are rare analogies, not historical claims.
If modern commentators retroactively label Nazis as "Christian nationalists," it's anachronistic and inaccurate—often for rhetorical purposes in current debates. The Nazis were totalitarian racial nationalists with a cynical, instrumental use of religion, not devout Christian ones.
@asylumdogg007@EatTheRich01@JessicaTarlov@Acyn I’m an independent. I subscribe to no party or ideology. I speak facts.
Like the fact you don’t understand the political spectrum or economics whatsoever.
You useless cuck 😂
@asylumdogg007@grahamformaine You are fuckin illiterate and making shit up to cope with your dogshit educational level
Stop typing you dweeb lmao you’re cooked.
No. Those elements (state economic controls, public works, limited welfare for "Aryans") were fascist tools for racial nationalism, war prep, and crushing independent unions—not socialism. Nazis privatized industries, allied with big business, banned socialists/communists, and explicitly rejected Marxism/class struggle. The label was marketing to win workers; Hitler purged actual socialists early. More than one thing can be true, but this isn't one.