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The Rise of Totalitarianism. Totalitarianism. Government by a dictator who demands absolute loyalty to the authority of the state Methods used: One political party State control of the economy Use of secret police to enforce state policy Strict censorship of media Use of propaganda
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Totalitarianism • Government by a dictator who demands absolute loyalty to the authority of the state • Methods used: • One political party • State control of the economy • Use of secret police to enforce state policy • Strict censorship of media • Use of propaganda • Unquestioning obedience
Stalin Replaces Lenin • After the USSR began experiencing serious economic problems, Lenin had begun backing away from full communism • When Lenin died suddenly in 1924, however, Josef Stalin won a power struggle to replace him as leader of the state and returned the Soviets to communism
Stalin’s Five-Year Plans • In order to industrialize, Stalin set aggressive short-term quotas for factory production • Those who met their goals were rewarded, while those who fell short were harshly punished • The end result was a focus on quantity over quality, leading to the ability to manufacture large numbers of low-quality goods
Farm Collectivization • Stalin forced all farmers to surrender their land and livestock to the state • Unhappy peasants resisted by killing their livestock and burning crops • Stalin responded with force, sending tens-of-thousands of peasants to gulags (labor camps) in Siberia or even just having entire villages executed for treason
The Great Purge • 1934-1938 • Stalin eliminated anyone whom he considered a threat to his personal power, including Communist Party officials, military leaders, and government bureaucrats • In total, over 4 million “enemies of the state” were purged through either execution or exile to the gulags
Stalin the Dictator • Established the KGB (secret police force) to eliminate political dissidents • Used propaganda to give his people a false impression of Soviet “successes” and Western “failures” • Attacked the Russian Orthodox Church by seizing church property, destroying churches, and arresting and exiling priests • Eliminated millions of ethnic “undesirables”
Why Did Anyone Support Stalin? • Loyal Communist Party officials received special benefits like better housing, easier access to goods • Everyone received free education, free medical care, free child care, and cheap housing • Women were treated as absolute equals
Post-WWI Problems • Italy was dissatisfied with the Treaty of Versailles because pre-war promises of territory were not kept • War veterans found little work and a poor economy • Communist, socialist, and anarchist radicals plotted revolution
Fascism • Form of totalitarianism • Extreme nationalism which glorifies the military, discipline, and loyal service to the state • Rejects democracy because of the “self before state” mindset that can lead to corruption
Benito Mussolini • 1883 – 1945 • Created the Fascist Party in 1919 with the goal of recreating the Roman Empire • By 1922, he had enough political influence to coerce the king into naming him prime minister
Black Shirts • Most loyal supporters of Mussolini • Used violent tactics • Mussolini used the Black Shirts to suppress his rivals, censor the press, rig elections, and murder his critics
Gender Roles • Men: become warriors for Italy (either through military service or through factory or farm production) under the Fascists’ “Believe! Obey! Fight!” motto • Women: stay home and have babies – women who had 14 or more children were rewarded as heroes of the state
Young Fascists • Boys were encouraged to join the Young Fascists where they were taught military discipline, the glory of ancient Rome, and how to obey without question • Followed the official motto “Mussolini is always right!”
Post-WWI Problems • Germany was VERY unhappy with the terms of the Treaty of Versailles, which had led the country into a deep economic recession and massive debt • The new “Weimar” government was too weak to fix problems, stand up to foreign pressures, or suppress political unrest from socialists, communists, and anarchists
Economic Woes • To pay its debts, Germany simply printed more money, making their currency worthless • Massive inflation caused prices to soar • The US provided aid, but then the Great Depression struck
Nazism • The National Socialist German Workers’ Party • Form of fascism that focused on racism, anti-Semitism, and the superiority of the Aryan “master race” of pure Germans
Adolf Hitler • 1889 – 1945 • WWI veteran, high school dropout, and Austrian immigrant who quickly rose to leadership of the disorganized Nazi Party in 1920 • Built his power by creating squads of “storm troopers” to spread Nazi ideals through propaganda and intimidation
The Beer Hall Putsch • In 1923, Hitler tried to seize power by launching a rebellion in the German city of Munich • The revolt failed and Hitler was sent to prison for treason, but ended up serving less than a year
Mein Kampf • While in prison, Hitler wrote and published Mein Kampf (My Struggle) • The book laid out his personal belief in the superiority of the German race and presented arguments for the elimination of “inferior” races, especially the Jews
Hitler’s Rise to Power • Once released from prison, Hitler rebuilt the Nazi Party and carefully consolidated his power through the effective use of propaganda and his personal charisma and speaking ability • In 1933, he was elected as chancellor of Germany
Hitler as Dictator • Once in power, Hitler suspended most civil rights, and abolished all rival political parties • Hitler established the Gestapo (secret police) to root out his enemies • Hitler also began rebuilding Germany’s military, in violation of the Treaty of Versailles
Nazi Purification • Changed all school curricula to reflect their ideals • Created a Hitler Youth program similar to Italy’s • Banned modern art, jazz, and other “impure” art forms • Promoted book burnings for blacklisted books • Closed all Catholic schools and churches and combined all Protestant sects into one state-approved church
The Nuremberg Laws • Passed in 1935 to place severe restrictions on Jews • Legally defined Jews as a “race” rather than religion • Prohibited marriage or sex between Jews and non-Jews • Denied Jews protection as citizens • Jews could not serve in government, hold jobs in law, medicine, or teaching
Kristallnacht • After the murder of a Nazi official by a Jew who was angry over the Nuremberg Laws, Hitler ordered the Gestapo to instigate mob violence against Jewish businesses, synagogues, and neighborhoods • On the “Night of Broken Glass” (Nov. 9, 1938), 91 Jews were killed, thousands of businesses looted, andover 200 synagogues destroyed
Concentration Camps • Nazis began detaining enemies of the state, including Jews, as early as 1933 • As Nazi power grew, more and more people were sent to the camps, with prisoners eventually numbering in the millions