Mark the false statements. Select all that apply.
A. Nazism and fascism have similarities.
B. Political and economic, but not social activities, are limited under the rule of a fascist government.
C. Hitler ruled as a dictator and stirred the people to continue to be a "pure race."
D. Hitler appealed to the continental glory that was due Europe.
E. In a fascist government, worker strikes are never allowed.

Respuesta :

the answer to this question is a,c,e  

Answer:

A. Nazism and fascism have similarities.

C. Hitler ruled as a dictator and stirred the people to continue to be a "pure race."

E. In a fascist government, worker strikes are never allowed.

Explanation:

  • National Socialism (in German, Nationalsozialismus), commonly shortened to Nazism, is the ideology of the regime that ruled Germany from 1934 to 1945 with the coming to power of the German National Socialist Workers Party of Adolf Hitler (NSDAP). Hitler instituted a dictatorship, the self-proclaimed Third Reich. The Reich joined Austria from the Anschluss, as well as the Sudetenland as well as Memel and Danzig. During the Second World War, the Nazis occupied land in France, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, the Netherlands, Denmark and Norway. The Germany of this period is known as Nazi Germany. Nazism is a form of fascism that demonstrated an ideological rejection by liberal democracy and the parliamentary system. He also incorporated a fervent anti-Semitism, scientific racism and eugenics in his creed. His extreme nationalism came from Pangermanism and the Völkisch movement prominent in German nationalism of the time, and was strongly influenced by the anti-Communist Freikorps paramilitary groups that emerged after the defeat of Germany in the First World War, from which emerged "the cult to violence "that was" at the heart of the movement. "
  • Fascism is an ideology, a political movement and a type of totalitarian and undemocratic state; created by the Italian leader Benito Mussolini, spread in interwar Europe from 1918 to 1939. The term "fascism" comes from the Italianofascio ('beam, fasces'), and this in turn from the Latin fascēs (plural of fascis), which alludes to the signs of the authority of the Roman magistrates. However, the term "fascism" is one of the most difficult to define accurately in political science from the very origins of this movement, possibly because there is no ideology or "fascist" form of government systematized and uniform in the sense that it does. they would have other political ideologies of Modernity. Among the features of fascism is the exaltation of values ​​such as the homeland or race to keep the masses permanently mobilized, which has often led to the oppression of minorities (Jews, gypsies, homosexuals ...) and strong militarism. In this sense the enemy is identified as an external entity, unlike the typical left-wing totalitarianisms in which the enemy is internal (bourgeoisie).