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It is nonsensical to use American english in the name and contents of an article on a European topic. Germany no more had a Cent''er'' Party than Australia has a Labo''u''r Party. Similarly it would wrong to write about American theat''re''. The German party is generally translated by Germans into British English, not American English. ] 23:09, 29 Sep 2003 (UTC) | |||
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== Well-written and basically neutral article == | |||
:Hmm? Germany had neither a ''Center'' Party nor a ''Centre'' Party, but a ''Zentrum''. Although I will admit that I've much more frequently seen "Centre Party" than "Center Party", and I'm not sure why I titled the article as I did. ] 23:48, 29 Sep 2003 (UTC) | |||
I like the article as now constituted but it suffers from over-linking. One link per section is plenty, certainly not every paragraph within a section or within the same paragraph, which gets very distracting. ] 00:05, 7 July 2006 (UTC) | |||
=="Well-written and basically neutral article"??== | |||
::This is incorrect:The Zentrumspartei dissolved itself . This is repeated under ] and ] , and I believe its' inclusion as error reveals concerted attempts over the intervening years to conceal ] ] . See ''Hitler and Stalin -Parallel Lives'' by ] ( Lord Bullock),p.338, published by HarperCollins,1991, ISBN 0-00-686198-9.] 08:24, 27 Nov 2004 (UTC) | |||
I think not. Large swaths of text lifted directly from . Article needs to be continually vetted for POV and tone. ] 12:13, 19 October 2007 (UTC) | |||
== Name == | |||
My understanding was that Hitler dissolved it, but I'm not sure. At any rate, it is essentially immaterial - even if it dissolved itself, it's not as though Hitler would have let it alone if it had not done so. But we should definitely figure out what exactly happened. I would suggest, though, that Bullock is almost certainly not the best source on this topic. ] ] 08:40, 27 Nov 2004 (UTC) | |||
It was the Catholic Centre Party - not the Centre Party. When it lost against the National Socialists (Nazis) in the elections, the members of the Catholic Centre Party were imprisoned. The party disbanded to avoid further punishments by Hitler. | |||
: Thankyou for your quick response . Who is better then ?] 12:46, 27 Nov 2004 (UTC)09:00, 27 Nov 2004 (UTC) | |||
The whole article does nothing to preserve history, but rather to obscure it. <small>—Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 21:17, 21 March 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> | |||
I'm trying to think. The best book on the Weimar Republic is Hans Mommsen's ''The Rise and Fall of Weimar Democracy'', but I think that ends before you get to this period. The best book I can think of off the top of my head is the first volume of Kershaw's biography of Hitler, although, again, this doesn't seem especially terrific. There's also Richard Evans's new book on the coming to power of the Nazis, ''The Coming of the Third Reich'', but I'm not sure, again, how far that book goes. ] ] 19:28, 27 Nov 2004 (UTC) | |||
:The party was called Zentrum or Zentrumspartei or Deutsche Zentrumspartei. "Catholic" was never part of the name. ] ] 15:09, 7 April 2008 (UTC) | |||
::That's what the war was about in the beginning, not Jews. ] i.e. Prussia and Protestants. To place Prussia behind the Iron Curtain. Thankfully the Catholic Nazis lost! ] (]) 22:11, 24 June 2017 (UTC) | |||
: Undoubtedly you mean that Hitler eliminated the Catholic Centre Party in Czechoslovakia . ] 21:41, 27 Nov 2004 (UTC) | |||
:::While it is true that World War II wasn't about the Jews - it never was for the Allies - it definitely wasn't about the Centre Party or anything to do with it because the Centre Party was long dead when the war started. Nobody thought of an Iron Curtain in 1939 either and no one attempted to put anything behind, least of all those that began the war. Finally, if your conspiracy theory really were true, then the obscure "they" were pretty successful as Prussia ended up behind an Iron Curtain. | |||
:::It also remains unclear why you responded to my merely pointing out what the actual name of the party was. ] ] 16:35, 8 March 2020 (UTC) | |||
== Centre Party and social progress == | |||
The german Misplaced Pages says: "Die Zentrumspartei löste sich am 5. Juli 1933 als letzte der so genannten bürgerlichen Parteien auf." Meaning in English: "The Centre Party dissolved itself as the last conservative party at 7.5.1933." This is confirmed by the website of today's Centre Party ( http://www.zentrumspartei.de/html/geschichte.html ). | |||
(Jan) --] 22:17, 4 Dec 2004 (UTC) | |||
Two suggestions. | |||
==Protection== | |||
First, someone should create a redirect called ] that redirects here, for the benefit of American readers. | |||
Following the edit and inclusion of the Template may I ask that the editing that removed quoted history backed with reference , be re-included , so that a revert will not be required . This was flagged as a minor edit but is not -would you please re-include the text removed .This page which is expamding rapidly is of importance in revealing the varied connections and I am at pains to show real references to prevent any dispute .I fully expect an assault on the revealing of this history and that this page will need protection at that point .07:46, 20 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
Second, the Centre Party played a key role in the development of labor laws (child labor, social security, maximum number of hours worked per week, etc.) in the 1880s and 1890s (beginning even before Bismarck's death). This is mentioned in only one brief sentence in a very long article. This article does an admirable job of describing the CP's political history, but its actual accomplishments should be included. (With neutral POV, of course; to libertarians it is not an "accomplishment" to pass a child labor law.) These laws influenced the American ] and also the development of ], and are thus very noteworthy. — <span style="font: small-caps 12px times;">]</span> <sup style="font: small-caps 10px arial; color: #129dbc;">(])</sup> 21:16, 17 January 2012 (UTC) | |||
:Flamekeeper, I have a great deal of concern about the material you've added. Firstly, some of it is quite sloppy. Names are misspelled (] instead of ], ] instead of ]), and so forth. Secondly, the material you provide is idiosyncratic and out of context. You talk about 1928, but don't even mention the formation of the Grand Coalition. You don't say anything about the Centre Party as one of the bulwarks of the republic in its early years, except to add a mention of supposed "odium" from accepting reparations (and inaccurately saying that this led to Erzberger's assassination, when in fact Erzberger had been murdered in 1920), when this was not the decision of the Centre Party, but of a coalition also including the SPD. The material on their supposed "support" of the Nazis in 1932 is also problematic. It is true that both the Nazis and the Centre opposed the government of Papen (whom you incorrectly imply to be a Centre Party chancellor, as opposed to a turncoat who was disavowed by the party), but so did the SPD and the KPD. It is also true that the Centre Party did enter into negotiations for a coalition with the Nazis, but it was only in this context that they made any statements in favor of a Hitler chancellorship. The overall tenor of your edits seems to be simply to imply that the Centre Party was responsible for the accession of Hitler. While the Centre certainly bears its share of blame, and Brüning, in particular, bears a great deal of responsibility for both the collapse of Weimar and the rise of the Nazis, to take this all out of context with misleading cherry-picked events is problematic. That you want your version of the page to be protected is even worse. ] ] 16:03, 20 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
== The Enabling Act == | |||
I cannot dispute the limits to my re-write but what you have done is more than correct the spelling . You have wiped the slate entirely and proved the necessity for protection .Are you really going to dispute the writers who I so assiduously referenced - and deny the world the ability to understand , why cannot you add rather than diminuish the sum of knowledge ? Your action is harsh and un-reasonable . Dispute a fact or a date -by all means correct a spelling , expand but don't censor . You seem to be trying to protect the appeasers . In fact you seem to ''bury'' what happened , to completely whitewash the actual relationships and events . By all means qualify about Papen and reasonably correct . What you do by reverting is to deny the world the chance to understand -is that your aim ? Why? I seem to remember attempts before to sever the links out of this page and in particular an attempt to prevent my reference to the centre party ''dissolving itself'' .I do not consider your reasoning here sufficient to justify your censorship actions . Let you revert again if you cannot expand within the history quoted - otherwise I am asking again for protection .] 07:20, 21 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
Although it may be unintentional, this section reads as an attempt at whitewashing and excuse making. Bottom line is that the Centre Party voted UNANIMOUSLY in favor of the Enabling Act, which gave Hitler dictatorial powers. That is the most important piece of information, and should be in the first sentence of the section, not buried at the end of multiple paragraphs of excuses. It was not impossible to vote against the act, as the Socialist party voted unanimously against it. Also, it is misleading to say that the Socialist party was the only one to speak out against the legislation. The Communist party also opposed it, but were not allowed to speak since it had been outlawed by the Nazis. | |||
Expand ,correct, improve , qualify -I leave an analysis section there . I have included reference to disavowal of Papen and qualified . Cover the ealier period- I claim no facts there other than the reference re Erzeberger-which I did not invent but quoted. Be reasonable or frankly I shall abandon the attempts to set the wikipedia straight and simply work against what will be proved a flawed concept.] 08:01, 21 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
Another interesting observation is that the word "Jew" does not appear once in this article. How is that even possible in such a long article dealing with a religiously-based political party operating during a time when the "Jewish question" was so prominent in German politics? | |||
I left a proposal for Partial Page Protection on the Village Pump (technical) suggesting that we might both be able to present parallel viewpoints. Wouldn't that enable the reader to actually weigh the historical disputes and circumvent this regrettable discord?] 09:22, 21 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
] (]) 17:45, 4 September 2015 (UTC) | |||
To all your suggestions Ive tried to achieve them and to correct. However can you for your part not allow the references to the alleged quid pro quo re: The Enabling Act and the Concordat ? Does Klemens von Klemperer's assertion that Papen and Kaas were both the key figures not mean it is necessary to retain the whole Kaas leadership and reasonable analysis of his actions ? . Paranoia strikes only those who seem blocked and Kaas has been remarkably anonymous until now . The dissolution of the Centre needed great promotion in here and in your revert Kaas is no longer even a Monsignor .and The very link from cyberspace into the centre page is unfunctional on Explorer and yet zentrum leads into the german Misplaced Pages alone . Could that be fixed ? | |||
== The Party That Put Hitler in Power == | |||
:I have no idea what you're saying, exactly. If you want to add Kaas back in being a Monsignor, I don't particularly care. Perhaps you would be better served by writing an article on Kaas, which is currently absent. To focus the article on the Centre Party entirely on its behavior in 1928, and again between 1932 and 1933, is just unbalanced. I would add that much of the time, I am uncertain what you are trying to say in your version of the article. More detail is, of course, welcome, but not at the expense of clarity, and not in order to advance a POV with respect to the Centre Party's supposed responsibility for the coming to power of the Nazis. At any rate, I've reverted your version again. I will not revert again if you incorporate my post-revert revisions from last time into the article, although I still find your version very problematic. ] ] 01:48, 22 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
How the hell is this party still around? Surely their collaboration with the Nazi's and help passing the Enabling Act would of been their death-knell after the war. <small class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 15:35, 11 June 2016 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:Unsigned IP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> | |||
:::He was a ranking member of the Catholic Church , a close friend and associate with Cardinal ] then from ] Secretary of State Pacelli and worked under this name and is reported under this ID. Kaas was not a nobody and took over immediately a very important Vatican position variously described as keeper of the fabric of the basilica of St peter- do we accept that it was a dream posting or not ? It represents a factor in the actions of the chairman or leader , do we accept it is likely to have proved an inducement or to have provided a reward . We know what Hitler got .]]] | |||
:It wasn't the party that put Hitler into power. That would be the NSDAP, if you are talking political parties, or the Papen-Hindenburg-Industrial cabal that actually managed Hitler being appointed. THEY put Hitler into power. While the Centre played a not so glorious role in voting for the Enabling Act (but not any worse than all other parties save one), this did start Hitler's rise to power nor did it end there (it ended when Hindenburg died). Still, the vote was a blemish and it in part was the death knell of the party as it never returned to prominence after the war. | |||
:Still, it is strange but telling how all other culprits for the failure of the Weimar Republic are glossed over, only this one vote is put into prominence. ] ] 16:42, 8 March 2020 (UTC) | |||
== Slant in article == | |||
::We don't normally use honorifics repeatedly. I'm happy to call him Monsignor Kaas at some point. Beyond that, I am certainly not suggesting he was a nobody - he was the chairman of an important German Catholic political party, and a priest, and his idea was that the party needed to obey the Vatican more. So of course he had close relations with the Vatican. BTW, do you know why he ''was'' a monsignor? Was he a vicar-general or was he a member of the pontifical family? If the latter, which rank? ] ] 19:36, 24 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
{{ping|Rjensen}} I see you reverted . This material is all currently unsourced, and reads with an editorial slant of proving that the Centre Party wasn't so bad despite voting for the Enabling Act. I mean, the Centre Party was not the Nazi party, it's not interesting or controversial to say that they campaigned against them or any other party. A quick check of Google Books shows authors saying that the Centre Party just straight-up gave up after the Pope & the Concordat basically thought they'd get some accommodations from the Nazis. Why have the retroactive crystal ball about how deeply uncomfortable they were about the disastrous vote? ] (]) 01:40, 2 October 2016 (UTC) | |||
I have interlineated replies below. ] ] 16:24, 22 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
:The goal here is to reflect what the reliable sources say, not to make a judgment on what the Center party should or should not have done. ] (]) 05:06, 2 October 2016 (UTC) | |||
::Way to entirely miss my point. I just said I searched on Google Books and *that* is what those sources said - the Concordat was what they talked about. The crystal ball part is currently unsourced, at least in-line (perhaps the sources in general say this). And I suppose I can't contest that surely some reliable source will say that someone somewhere was uncomfortable about the vote, this is meaningless without context - before ANY event, some people will be for it, some against it, some ambivalent. It's very easy to selectively cite the people who ended up being "right" as an attempt to make just such a judgment. | |||
::I see that you're citing Evans over this "deep uncomfortableness". I'll see if I can borrow a copy, but even if Evans talks about it, I'm really not a fan of how it's written anyway - it reads like special pleading, not history. If there was a split in the Centre Party on the wisdom fo the vote, then say so, and talk about the sides. ] (]) 19:17, 2 October 2016 (UTC) | |||
== Far-right? == | |||
I have incorporated your justifiable text as word for word and am glad if we can agree to let stand all these quotations and the vast expansion that follows. | |||
Perhaps it would be good to include some sources for the claim that they're far-right. I think right-wing by itself, given their adherence to social conservatism & Christian democracy is okay, but far-right is not substantiated. | |||
:I certainly have not agreed to "let stand" your changes to the article. I have agreed not to revert them for the moment, in hopes of getting changes introduced through discussion. At the moment, I am still concerned that you have removed useful information that I added - for instance, on the subject of the Centre's and Brüning's role in the collapse of the Grand Coalition in 1930. I also think the rather opaque discussion of Centre policy in 1928 needs to at least include a reference to the Centre taking part in the Grand Coalition immediately thereafter. ] ] 16:24, 22 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
<br>] (]) 14:50, 14 February 2022 (UTC) | |||
:::Quite agree -was trying to fill in gaps- these years are only important socially as showing catholic german thinking in the period during the evolution of the nazis, no ? I mean the centre party is not actually in itself important for much else as we look back from here-certainly nothing else that changed the planet . ] 18:58, 24 Apr 2005 (UTC)]] | |||
::::Huh? The Centre Party was important for various reasons. Certainly it was important in the 19th century for opposing the ''Kulturkampf'', in the World War I period for joining with the SPD to produce the Peace Resolution, important in its aftermath as a key part of the Weimar Coalition, and so on. We shouldn't reduce all German history to the Nazis, which seems to be the implication of this statement. Even in the period right before the Nazis took power, the Nazis aren't the only thing going on. ] ] 19:36, 24 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
As the mysterious Monsignor Kaas semms to have been influential ''whilst'' leader I think it could rightly rest on this page. | |||
:He should certainly be discussed here. However, the article as you revise it seems to be more a history of how Monsignor Kaas betrayed the republic than a history of the Centre Party. ] ] 16:24, 22 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
:::It is his only importance. Ok, he's nor a Bavarian-I told you his page needed work . | |||
::::Firstly, the story of how Monsignor Kaas led the Centre Party between 1928 and and 1933 is not simply a tale of how he "betrayed the republic." Secondly, the Centre Party is more than just Monsignor Kaas. The fact that he's not a Bavarian, while you said he was, is significant. In the first place, while ignorance is always excusable, ignorance posing as knowledge is not. If you didn't know where Kaas was from, you shouldn't have said he was a Bavarian. In the second place, it shows rather clearly an ignorance not only of Kaas's life (I learned where he was from just by looking at the very short entry on the German wikipedia (])), it also shows a complete ignorance of Weimar period politics. Bavarian Catholics did not support the Centre Party. Their branch of the Centre broke off in 1919 to form the ] (BVP). ] ] 19:36, 24 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
I quite agree that Kaas should have his own page and I look forward to ''anyone'' supplying the relevant facts however poorly translated or truncated or even , incorrect . He is absent from this period and surfaces much later during papal diplomatic ] contacts . Your inclusion of him now in your edit seems to me to be the first Kaas appearance outside of the Simon Wiesenthal Timeline . Flamekeeper edits are repeated around cyberspace already of course . Yes he figures as party leader and as suppling the vote , but questions of undue influence only appear in Wiesenthal and they are not emphasised or speculated upon. | |||
:Do you know how actual historians deal with the issue? Mommsen (''The Rise and Fall of Weimar Democracy''), as I recall, is very critical of both Kaas and Brüning, but he certainly doesn't accuse them of having a conspiracy to bring the Nazis to power, or whatever. I haven't checked out Richard Evans's new book yet, but that would be another good place to look. There's probably also been more specific studies of the Centre Party itself, too. ] ] 16:24, 22 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
Mowrer first published direct accusation in 1968 and if Mowrer hadn't been subject to pressurised removal from Germany at the signing of the Enabling Act, he would have put the two and two closer together . As it was he engaged himself during the following months on writing ''Germany Puts The Clock Back''. None of this surfaces in ] in ] who simply states that the centre party was ''induced'' to support Hitler . This is repeated then for nigh 60 years even unto this page on the Misplaced Pages. | |||
:This is, in fact, the main theory held by historians today (see Mommsen). While the Centre Party was certainly gravely responsible for the fall of Weimar, their involvement in the coming to power of the Nazis, specifically, was minimal (their negotiations for a NSDAP-Centre coalition came to nothing), and their support for the Enabling Act was grudging. ] ] 16:24, 22 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
:::Main theory...of course, without the Vatican . All we can do is register the extreme proximity of the times of the meetings coupled with the telegrams( Yes-Im wrong , it was of course only Kaas himself who telegrammed congrats to Hitler's 1933 Birthday from the vatican , but it ''was'' official and disseminated widely-presumably for some reason . What reason ?) you chucked out all the times and now no-one can see them cept in the parallel bucket above under 'history of edits'.] 18:58, 24 Apr 2005 (UTC)]] | |||
::::Our purpose is not to relay innuendos, and not to provide a forum for original research. ] ] 19:36, 24 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
If these edits seem un-clear it is because the Centre Party existed and operated within deeply fractured political waters . The years ], ] and ] are self-evidently crucial to modern history as providing the basis for the following 12 years through ] and the Centre Party is a fulcrum , at least. The existence of four putchist parties at the same moment in Germany (Communists, Nazis, the Army, and the Cabinet of Barons represented by von Papen), means that clarity is hitherto woeful. | |||
:The DNVP might be a separate group, although it (and the Army) was allied to the cabinet of barons. ] ] 16:24, 22 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
:::Putsch and putschism is in his Holiness's words this day ] 18:58, 24 Apr 2005 (UTC)]] | |||
And if a world class historian publishes his belief that Papen and Kaas are the two central figures of the moment, then it begs the question of why don't we know more about Kaas? | |||
:Which historian is this? ] ] 16:24, 22 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
Klemens von Klemperer - in the Widerstand field . ] 18:58, 24 Apr 2005 (UTC)]] | |||
::Klemperer was a historian of the 1950s - his views are no longer authoritative, if they ever were. At the very least, Brüning, Schleicher, Hindenburg, and Hugenberg played equivalently important roles to Kaas and Papen. And Papen, Hindenburg, and Hugenberg bear a lot more blame for Hitler ultimately becoming Chancellor than the Centre politicians do. ] ] 19:36, 24 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
Yes he is widely reported as an archeological figure for his excavations of the ] but not as a successful negotiator with the anti-christ Hitler. No one disputes that Hitler was ''an'' ] nor where Ludwig Kaas spent the following 12 years. | |||
:I would most certainly dispute that Hitler was an "anti-christ," as I don't believe in such things. I imagine most people would concur with me in this, or else in believing that, as bad as Hitler was, he was not the antichrist. At any rate, Kaas is also widely reported as the very conservative leader of the Centre Party in the years up to 1933. I don't know much about the Concordat, but I am dubious of your emphases here. ] ] 16:24, 22 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
In short I'll be as open , as you un-welcomingly(to me) ask. Ludwig Kaas ''is'' ''']'''. John Cornwell was not allowed view of the documents pertaining to these years and no-one else has been . I predict that an outbreak of Benedictine Glasnost will be delayed until the Holy See comes to an understanding with the ''present'' political forces. At present it is apparent that Pope Benedict is deeply worried by a future loss of europe to Islam following its weakening by ''extreme...liberalism''(his words). Immediately the prospect arises for a repetition of the history as described on the Centre Page - of europe not accepting turkey , in fact of europe not accepting the proposed ]. Even if the Church does not have as great a vote as in the thirties, we are on a knife edge and have exactly the same choice between an inclusive future or a disastrous one. But since you have pressed me , I shall also say that I equally think we need Pope Benedict and what he stands for, as we need all the possible good from each of the modern equivalent of the ''putchist'' parties. We absolutely need to understand Hitler and the power of propaganda under dictatorship - and apply this to our understanding of 1/5 of humanity who live under Communism. We need to avail of the wisdom of Islam which in various modernising ways purges the world of regrettable practices and thinking, we need the ] of forgiveness and love, we need to confront huge, almost parallax shift in our levels of understanding of the universe and we all know this equally. However, finally , we all from whatever strand of human thinking, whatever party or still effective ''creed'' , need to confront the truly fundamental position of the present equivalent of ''the war''. The war is really everywhere between the male , territorial principle(an instinct for successful breeding) and the female , inclusive principle(an instinct for successful breeding). The battles that rage within the churches , across the continents are battles in this one war of modernisation . It will be necessary for Kaas to surface and understanding to surface . It is not enough for a certain generation to say - Oh but he was always known to be Hitler's Pope(Pius XII). New generations must apply forgiveness following understanding. Can we therefore consider the page as it is .12:05, 22 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
Flamekeeper, I can tell that you are very passionate about this stuff, and that you know a lot, but have you considered that your passion may be interfering with your ability to create a good, NPOV, encyclopedia article on the Centre Party. I'm going to list this page on Requests for Comment and perhaps contact other people who have been involved in other Nazi-related articles, to garner more opinions on this. ] ] 16:24, 22 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
::Good-I have been asking historians to come in on this via Pius XII. Perhaps you would also see that the Centre Party '''connects''' with the outside world on a search because it doesn't yet...why not? A good article should include all the relevant facts and factors and if I have added or said or insinuated anything wrong then it is wrong. I have added a page for ] and certainly that is lacking facts . I shall be interested to see how the present article is compared with the article prior to my interference. Revisionism can work through a thousand cuts and I am not so much passionate as shocked . The use of one word can change everything(see Adam von Trott zu Solz) and then the error is repeated worldwide through syndication(?) .Seeing that and finding it manifestly dishonest makes me suspicious . Hence my suspicion over the 'dissolution' of the Centre -wrong but I had to struggle didn't I ? Anyway there should be more shock and passion and if the Misplaced Pages can list every last website it can surely list Monsignor Kaas and a deal of this earth-shaking magnitude. How many died ? Is it 40 million ? The culture lost - the wasted flower of thousands of years ? If your concern is as an encyclopedist ,very admirable but the nitty gritty is that the centre dissolved itself and not as you wished it to be put .If you think passion has no place , your may be right but is it for instance , passion to reveal that a small act achieved a big , big deal ? You admit at the top of this page that you are not sure and then argue what is immaterial - and actually , again , I find this puts you under ''my'' suspicion . Why do you several times now say that something wouldnt have made any difference anyway- I mean is that encyclopedic ? ''Thats'' POV ] 08:02, 23 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
The fact that I was incorrect about the fate of the Centre Party does not mean I am pushing a POV. That said, the question of whether a German political party was disbanded by the Nazis are dissolved itself is essentially academic - the reason they dissolved themselves was because the Nazis weren't prepared to tolerate multiple political parties. Furthermore, your entire purpose here seems to be to suggest a ''quid pro quo'' over the Concordat and the Enabling Act, but you have yet to present any evidence of this. Certainly Kaas and the other Centre leaders were reluctant to oppose Hitler over the Enabling Act due to their concern about the Concordat. But that does not make it a ''quid pro quo''. At any rate, I am no apologist for Kaas or the Centre. But their failure was much broader and more important than just cutting a deal with Hitler over the Concordat. Brüning and Kaas's legacy is that they led the Centre Party in the direction of authoritarianism to the point that they had no convincing legitimate reason to oppose Hitler; that they so abused the process of constitutional government between 1930 and 1932 that Hitler's maneuvers became conceivable; that they so distrusted the Social Democrats as to destroy the grand coalition, and then were utterly unwilling to consider a revival of it. And so forth. The Centre Party didn't ''want'' the Nazis to come to power, and they didn't particularly want to support the Enabling Act - they campaigned against the government in the March 1933 elections, recall. But their actions, and particularly Brüning's and Kaas's, were highly responsible for creating the conditions which made the Nazi takeover possible. There's no need to create conspiracy theories to make Kaas and the Centre look bad - just about everyone in Germany comes off looking pretty bad in the years leading up to 1933, and the Centre Party is more tarnished than many. ] ] 19:43, 23 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
::At considerable effort by myself you have been forced to include the minimum of the truths that I demanded . From this minimum it seems you however cannot reduce further . I therefore consider this a victory for justice and truth against a platitudinous obfuscation which has reluctantly been abandoned .''Erstwhile''-well, lets say it was a '''seemless''' day by day transition between working(negotiating) for a democracy and working for a faith .]' work involved jobs of work with ] here and with ]'s representative there .The whole world went up in flames as a direct result yet you hypothesise about what would have happened otherwise . ''Reluctantly'' is obfuscatory simplism and contradicts your censorship of all the sources I cited and your attacks upon myself , however creeping and patronising . | |||
:::What sources have you cited? ] ] 14:58, 24 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
::::Guenter Lewy ''The Catholic Church and Nazi Germany'' is the source for Kaas movements etc. ] 07:00, 26 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
Your allies protect you and the little children of the world are clothed in comforting white swaddle. Chuck the history in the bin because it doesn't fit , what? Without me that's what you'd have kept, revisionst whitewash. One fears for the future if not for the present, this cancels out any joy brought to us by the Church for it contradicts with the truth. The seed of doubt is enormous and shattering and there is every reason to cover it up or minimize it. If you do this un-intentionally, you know not what you do. A blind and bureaucratic mentality of adherence to a minimalist encyclopedic ideal allows for the subversion of the truth here. The truth is that one side of the coin was ] and the other side was Adolf. | |||
:What does this mean? Have you read ''Mit Brennender Sorge''? Pius XI was hardly a friend of democracy. But he was not a Nazi, and he found Nazi racial policy horrifying. ] ] 14:58, 24 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
The truth is as I tried to write it coming as it did from the historians I quoted. The seed of doubt now extends frighteningly into the wikpedia as delivery of knowledge, and into the power of repetition in cyberspace and its capacity for propaganda. ] said that it was above all the propaganda, the power of the radio, we must remember. ] is well aware of that, and of this controversy, presumably. Now you John kenny have the power to do so much and what is the result -kicking and screaming and squealing over every last little fragment that is not embarrassing but '''shattering'''. All the little pieces add together. The dissolved or dissolved itself is of the utmost importance though you do not understand it will not accept it, ''because'' Hitler needed legality to hoodwink the masses . Kaas gave the legality on two fronts, the Reichstag and the papal and at the wishes of his masters who were all along Pacelli and Pius XI. You wish still to censor all the truth about this as is visible in your article ( ''crucial'' was brought in by myself and whilst you accept it you also hamstring it by crucially leaving out any reference whatever to Pacelli and to the negotiations during March before and after the Enabling act ). | |||
:I'd be happy to have sensible material about this, but I don't trust the factual accuracy of your material. For instance, in your original Kaas article, you said he was Bavarian, which is simply untrue - if he had been Bavarian, he would not have even been in the Centre Party, and he was, in fact, from Trier, in the Prussian Rhineland. Beyond not trusting the factual accuracy of your claims, I will add that they are extremely poorly written, and that half the time I can't even understand what you're saying. They're also full of innuendo, which ought to be avoided. ] ] 14:58, 24 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
By diminuishing the links and censoring the Op Cit's you close down the inquiry carried through great minds for all these years into the quietest possible puff of grey smoke, nay mist. It is perfectly normal to include wide-spread cutting edge accusations or analyses which like this one has been in print , with references for at least 50 years . It is more than a dispute I have with you- I suggest you seem by your acts to have an intention, and that it is to change truth to un-truth . I see no communication as being possible to you, but I note that an inch or two of ground was given by you . The arlicle should be now corrected by you to take account of all that I included which is Op Cit , just as I included all of yours otherwise- well, I will be further proved right. Go on -prove me wrong at least about you . You can't about Pacelli, nor Kaas .] 11:29, 24 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
Look, I have no idea what you're talking about. I am not a Catholic, and I am not interested in being an apologist for the Catholic Church. I am interested in presenting an article about an important political party in Germany which is not entirely about how that party was the tool which the Pope used to bring the Nazis to power. The original version of this article, I will concede, was not terribly detailed, and didn't get into the ways in which the Centre Party was, indeed, responsible for the Nazi coming to power. There was much room for improvement. But that improvement doesn't come from crankish POV advocacy, which is, I'm sorry to say, the main thing that you've brought here. ] ] 14:58, 24 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
== Some perspective... == | |||
Trying to find some perspective on this subject, I looked at ''Priests, Prelates and People: A History of European Catholicism since 1750'' by Nicholas Atkin and Frank Tallett, published by Oxford University Press in 2003. This can surely stand in as a relatively authoritative source. Looking at it, I will admit that the basic substance of Flamekeeper's accusations seems to be supported by Atkin and Tallett's narrative - Pius XI and Pacelli ''were'' willing to acquiesce in the Centre Party's demise as a ''quid pro quo'' in return for the Concordat, and Kaas was, essentially, acting as their agent. I don't know that I ever intended to deny this, although I probably did in the course of the discussion. So let me say now that I am perfectly willing to accept this as true, and I am happy to have something to this effect included in the article. That said, focusing singlemindedly on this issue does not come anywhere near to telling the whole story of the Centre Party, or even the whole story of the Centre Party's role in the last years of Weimar. Basically, Kaas was the Chairman of the Centre, not its dicator, and to focus exclusively on his connections to the Vatican is to give a false impression that the Centre Party was essentially the agent of the Vatican in German politics. Which is not true. Furthermore, the basic fact is that the Vatican and Kaas were not supporters of Hitler coming to power in Germany. Once Hitler ''was'' in power, they were willing to cut a deal with him, but the Centre remained basically opposed to Hitler right up through the March 1933 elections. Basically, even if Flamekeeper's specific claims are basically true, his contributions are still unacceptable in tone and content. ] ] 20:20, 24 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
:The tone is used under pressure , beg P- I was beginning to thankyou in my own mind for giving the world the opportunity to benefit from this discourse-and maybe I have set a bad example which I must try and correct . However I think your awareness of the gradualist change brought through the German Cardinals and Bishoprics (by Pacelli) is what leads you again to say that Kaas and the Vatican ''were not'' supporters of Hitler coming to power. No, they were and we can all take Mowrer's word that this certainly started in May ]. From Kaas' own words, even, it comes - it's been reverted - I don't think we know the actual date of his reminiscence but he Kaas referred to many beneficial meetings ''before'' Hitler came to power. | |||
::There were, indeed, negotiations between the Centre and the Nazis to form a coalition after they fall of Brüning's governments. But they definitely wanted a Centrist as PM, not Hitler. I'm not disputing your facts here, I'm disputing your emphasis and your judgment, which is deeply suspect. ] ] 14:40, 25 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
Pacelli didn't soften his view from May 32 - he hardened it and leant on the Cardinals who were reluctant to back Nazism. What you say is wrong and at variance with the public Kaas telegram for Hitler's birthday from the Vatican, and with the ] revision which I included as proofs. I quoted that ] relayed approbation. This is an integrally related subject and huge. Indeed there was a dialogue and a difference within the church and in the Centre Party electorate in Germany over the right attitude to Nazizm , and it would be wrong to accuse 'good men all' of any darkness. There had been in fact a considerable and worthy resistance by the ] but this was chipped away by Pacelli whose eyes were on the that grand prize of ](the defeat of ] ). Sounds odd , but true. In fact one might come to see the re-direction of the church immediate to this period as being somewhat of a ], one ''more'' double headed 'party' in the affairs of Germany. I again say that only by reason of this Pacelli subversion does the Centre Party deserve importance and that is why the article needed the extra analysis. | |||
:And I say you are full of shit. That's garbage. The Centre Party was one of the main parties in Germany from 1871 to 1933, and did all kinds of things worthy of inclusion in an encyclopedia article. ] ] 14:40, 25 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
Earlier history should be expanded yes, but the importance is in the ]. | |||
:Bull shit, again. ] ] 14:40, 25 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
The Centre Party wasn't of course the sole agent of the ] but it was essential (viz the Vote ) and ''essentially'' is simply a debate about what majority voted at whatever interior party meeting in the intervening period between ] letter of May 1932 and the final ] vote. It would be most interesting to unravel and would doubtless also have to include the as yet un-linked culpability of the industrialist classes to the catholic bourgeoisie voters. No, I am not trying to pin the ills of history on the miserable (ie rump or weak) Centre Party and I do not think that observers would take this as being the message. The conditions which allowed a Kaas and a Pacelli ''to'' influence the Party are however needful of our attention and ''per se'' involve ]. No one denies that there was vast disquiet in the hierarchy down to the lowest level - historians are simply pointing out what was happening at the highest level as well. No one denies that the church remained troubled by all forms of ] throughout but the clear nose of history returns like a sleuth to try and understand and piece together a puzzle. We should all like douments on this -and the likelihood of survival of Kaas' Papal recommendation letter from Pacelli outside of the Vatican is slim. Unfortunately the importance of Kaas and the quid pro quo ''is'' clouded by the unavailabilty of records, which is not to say that they don't exist, the minutes of meetings Kaas had in the Vatican before resigning as Leader of the Centre. That they happen is nowhere denied. No- again, it is clouded deliberately, excuse me, but in all the voluminous transcripts relayed by faith-led investigation it is clouded. Kaas and the Act scandal gets a two-line whitewash and then the question is moved forward onto ground where the useless (from a Jewish point of view) Papal Mit Brennender Sorge, heads a rear-guard list of weak, vacillating Catholic action(in-action). It was too late, Pacelli and the whole of Germany perhaps knew it was too late. The Catholic Church were suckered at best. Pius XI failed to speak out ever in defense of the Jews (by their name) which is to say he ''never'' did. However the rear-guard action by the church does bespeak their consequent realisation of the menace. Now, today the rear-guard has to be analysed for what it was. To account for the great braveries and the great betrayals. No one accuses the Church of anywhere like exclusive responsibility. The other ] are nominated for complicity. The German Army is nominated for complicity, the Rhenish-Westphalian Industrialists, the Americans, the British appeasers. All of these are studied to greater or lesser degree, however, today the period ''following'' the ] and in particular the refutation of Pacelli (] anti-semitism is used as a screen by the rear-guard. On top of this though the other Papal ] scandal resides, you bet, on ] again. He pops up with our world class historian, and this is published late 1990's (Klemperer) apropos ] in the ] in ]. Initially it appears a virtuous connection, as indeed can be the presentation of Kaas on this page - the goood ] efforts to '''stop war'''. However if you look into it you are required to hesitate at seeing the furtherance of a deal offered even at this wartime point. The smell that emits from widerstand study of this deal and of in fact all the 'widerstand' deals is powerful. It tracks back amongst all the putschist parties -everyone if you add them together except the Communists and ] who were removed from the equation. They by default, following their proscription, came to be represented by ]. The Left never went away you know and remained as a factor. The Widerstand ''deals'', all of them , overlap with the objectives of the Catholic Hierarchy throughout. It is to neutralise the Left. The scandal therefore is that both the Church and the Widerstand share the capacity to tolerate a racist ''part'' of ] and a part of ]. Kaas here furthers one effort in 1940 and fortunately, the allies rebuff the advanced proposition, as again later. The British scandal is that another pre-war offer in ] was ''entertained''. However the single point I wish to address is that there is still a historical motive for vatican obfuscation on two related issues separated by a decade. That their wrong-headed fear of the consequences of its' disclosure promulgates at all opportunity this obfuscation. That it now seems you completely un-wittingly wrote within their ''line'' is only revealing of their determined efforts and not any reflection on your self. I do apologise for my mistaking you but hold you to understanding that there is an active on-going effort by the Church and by the proponents of the validity of the german Widerstand to precisely affect our view. This needs correction and I claim that Kaas' relationship to this page, and his disappearance so suddenly into the Vatican after the vital arrangements made , warrants the deepest attention. Equally I do not wish to inaccurately tar the whole Centre Party delegation, but the result of their voting ''demands'' fullest inquiry. The church may have back-pedalled, partially and in-sufficiently, at the time, but the Church now almost forces this to ''remain'' in dispute . No one addresses this problem and as I repeat, from John Paul's book and now ] we see an inversion of the reality which caught up all our forefathers in blood and gore and war. We must help them to understand, as we now come to understand. | |||
:Flamekeeper, I think that what you are trying to do here is to use wikipedia as a platform for original research on this particular issue. While research probably does need to be done on this stuff, that is not wikipedia's purpose. We should be trying to simply give readers a basic understanding of the role and history of the Centre Party, not to expound on this one particular subject at extraordinary length. Your version of the article obfuscates more than it reveals, in part because of the incredible length it devotes to a very small part of the party's long history, and in part, I'm afraid to say, because your writing in English can be difficult to understand. Later, I may try to put a bit more detail into the issue of Kaas and the Vatican in the shorter version of the article. Hopefully, some discussion of this would be acceptable to you, and we can move on? ] ] 14:40, 25 Apr 2005 (UT | |||
Do it OK for the world to see. I quoted no direct text but the refs are there for you to know from where the historical opinion derives . I end here] 19:56, 25 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
==Merge== | |||
I have merged and edited Flamekeeper's contributions. I am very much unhappy with how things have gone here. New users, non-native english speakers, and bulk content contributors are all to be treated kindly and delicately. This was not done. Perhaps some of this content would be better merged into another article, but deleting and reverting it was by no means acceptable. Next time put a clean-up or "article in need of attention" header on the article and move on, if you don't feel able to do the work yourself. Thankfully new users come to me with issues such as these, rather than simply leaving the wiki in disgust. <big>''''']'''''</big> 11:19, 26 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
Flamekeeper is not terribly new - he has been here since at least November. At any rate, I attempted to deal delicately at first, although this is perhaps not my strong suit. Being repeatedly accused of being a member of a Catholic conspiracy to hide the truth doesn't encourage my willingness to be polite, I have to say. I continue to think that just ''having'' all this extra information on the 1932-1933 period is POV by its nature. I will, however, take a look at your version and see what can be done about it. ] ] 12:37, 26 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
:Thank you. I admit I only know about his end of things, and am essentially advocating for him, so I accept that you might well have a reasonable position and perspective. I would appreciate a dialogue regarding my merger if you have any concerns or objections. Cheers, <big>''''']'''''</big> 12:53, 26 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
I've edited the article considerably. I tried to take out most of the material that seemed to be just a general history of Germany in this period, rather than focusing on the Centre, and I also removed material that seemed wrong, or out of chronological order. It's still pretty problematic, and I am still not convinced that such a detailed discussion of just one part of the party's history is appropriate, but I'm willing to leave it be for now. ] ] 17:59, 26 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
==True== | |||
Trying to find some perspective on this subject, I looked at Priests, Prelates and People: A History of European Catholicism since 1750 by Nicholas Atkin and Frank Tallett, published by Oxford University Press in 2003. This can surely stand in as a relatively authoritative source. Looking at it, I will admit that the basic substance of Flamekeeper's accusations seems to be supported by Atkin and Tallett's narrative - Pius XI and Pacelli were willing to acquiesce in the Centre Party's demise as a quid pro quo in return for the Concordat, and Kaas was, essentially, acting as their agent. I don't know that I ever intended to deny this, although I probably did in the course of the discussion. So let me say now that I am perfectly willing to accept this as true, and I am happy to have something to this effect included in the article. That said, focusing singlemindedly on this issue does not come anywhere near to telling the whole story of the Centre Party, or even the whole story of the Centre Party's role in the last years of Weimar. Basically, Kaas was the Chairman of the Centre, not its dicator, and to focus exclusively on his connections to the Vatican is to give a false impression that the Centre Party was essentially the agent of the Vatican in German politics. Which is not true. Furthermore, the basic fact is that the Vatican and Kaas were not supporters of Hitler coming to power in Germany. Once Hitler was in power, they were willing to cut a deal with him, but the Centre remained basically opposed to Hitler right up through the March 1933 elections. Basically, even if Flamekeeper's specific claims are basically true, his contributions are still unacceptable in tone and content. john k 20:20, 24 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
:I don't agree, but i will say that any imbalance you percieve can be remidied w added content. I don't want factually accurate information deleted, ]. <big>''''']'''''</big> 09:19, 27 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
==The Breaking of the Law== | |||
Though it is true that sometimes it is lawful to tolerate a lesser moral evil in order to avoid a greater evil or in order to promote a greater good," it is never lawful, even for the gravest reasons, to do evil that good may come of it (18)—in other words, to intend directly something which of its very nature contradicts the moral order, and which must therefore be judged unworthy of man, even though the intention is to protect or promote the welfare of an individual, of a family or of society in general. | |||
(18) see Rom 3,8 | |||
This is the legal principle cited as the basis for the enciclical Humanae Vitae and is the basis for the entire teaching concerning human fertility . | |||
I enquire of the Holy Father how soon will he choose institute a public enquiry of tribunal into the breaking of this law in direct intent by Pope Pius XI, Eugenio Cardinal Pacelli the future Pope Pius XII and Monsignor Ludwig Kaas Leader of the Catholic Centre Party in Germany, against the moral order of the Church and of all societies in general? | |||
(says Flamekeeper) | |||
Dear Flamekeeper, if the three people in question did break this law they are now out of reach for the jurisdiction of the pope. But I don't think they are guilty of that. It was the German people (and I speak as a German) that voted for Hitler (whose party nonetheless never attained a majority in free elections), not the Pius XI, not Pacelli, not Prelate Kaas. It was Germans like Hindenburg father & son, Papen etc that brough Hitler to power, not Pius XI, Pacelli or Kaas. Election statistics show that the two groups largely immune against NS were Catholics and SocialDemocrats/trade unionists. You might citicize Kaas' bargaining with the Hitler government, but what would you do if someone was about to take your car by force? Would you not try to sell it to him, if possible. That's what Kaas did, he traded in his (doomed) Centre party to get some guarantees. Or a you criticize the Concordate? It was a treaty between the Holy See and the German Republic, still under President Hindenburg. Before 1933 the Church would have loved to make a concordate, but there was no majority avaiable. Now, why should they blow this opportunity? If the Hitler government would be short lived, as many expected, why not use this opportunity? If however, Hitler were here to stay, so much more of a need to set up rules and to protect the Church under an upcoming tyranny. Or do you criticize Pius XI for issuing "Mit brennender Sorge"? Or Pius XII for protecting many Italian Jews? And what would you have done? Str1977 15:59, 26 Apr 2005 (UTC) | |||
For further discussion, see the Pius XII talk page. | |||
] 11:09, 11 May 2005 (UTC) | |||
==Entry structure== | |||
I don't like the structure of the entry. We have a opening paragraph talking about the Kulturkampf and then Zentrum policy in general and the general remarks about Kaas. Then the index and after that we continue with "after the Kulturkampf". The first part looks like a left-over stub. I propose either, to include the this first part into the main article in their chronological place (that also means doing away with an introduction or severely restricting it) or to strip down the introdoction and include further details in their proper places. (Actually, the two alternatives boil down to one alternative.) | |||
Any comments, views, proposals? | |||
] 14:07, 12 May 2005 (UTC) | |||
Yes, it is problematic. We really ought to have more details about the Kulturkampf, the foundation of the party, its history in Imperial Germany, but I don't know terribly much about this. ] ] 14:31, 12 May 2005 (UTC) | |||
I might do some work on those periods to balance out with the later (problematic) end . Let's try to use the historians through NPOV with citations through listed works at bottom ?] 18:32, 14 May 2005 (UTC) |
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Well-written and basically neutral article
I like the article as now constituted but it suffers from over-linking. One link per section is plenty, certainly not every paragraph within a section or within the same paragraph, which gets very distracting. Rlquall 00:05, 7 July 2006 (UTC)
"Well-written and basically neutral article"??
I think not. Large swaths of text lifted directly from the Catholic Encyclopedia. Article needs to be continually vetted for POV and tone. 216.194.3.77 12:13, 19 October 2007 (UTC)
Name
It was the Catholic Centre Party - not the Centre Party. When it lost against the National Socialists (Nazis) in the elections, the members of the Catholic Centre Party were imprisoned. The party disbanded to avoid further punishments by Hitler.
The whole article does nothing to preserve history, but rather to obscure it. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 165.235.122.19 (talk) 21:17, 21 March 2008 (UTC)
- The party was called Zentrum or Zentrumspartei or Deutsche Zentrumspartei. "Catholic" was never part of the name. Str1977 15:09, 7 April 2008 (UTC)
- That's what the war was about in the beginning, not Jews. i.e. Prussia and Protestants. To place Prussia behind the Iron Curtain. Thankfully the Catholic Nazis lost! 69.29.213.247 (talk) 22:11, 24 June 2017 (UTC)
- While it is true that World War II wasn't about the Jews - it never was for the Allies - it definitely wasn't about the Centre Party or anything to do with it because the Centre Party was long dead when the war started. Nobody thought of an Iron Curtain in 1939 either and no one attempted to put anything behind, least of all those that began the war. Finally, if your conspiracy theory really were true, then the obscure "they" were pretty successful as Prussia ended up behind an Iron Curtain.
- It also remains unclear why you responded to my merely pointing out what the actual name of the party was. Str1977 16:35, 8 March 2020 (UTC)
- That's what the war was about in the beginning, not Jews. i.e. Prussia and Protestants. To place Prussia behind the Iron Curtain. Thankfully the Catholic Nazis lost! 69.29.213.247 (talk) 22:11, 24 June 2017 (UTC)
Centre Party and social progress
Two suggestions.
First, someone should create a redirect called Center Party (Germany) that redirects here, for the benefit of American readers.
Second, the Centre Party played a key role in the development of labor laws (child labor, social security, maximum number of hours worked per week, etc.) in the 1880s and 1890s (beginning even before Bismarck's death). This is mentioned in only one brief sentence in a very long article. This article does an admirable job of describing the CP's political history, but its actual accomplishments should be included. (With neutral POV, of course; to libertarians it is not an "accomplishment" to pass a child labor law.) These laws influenced the American New Deal and also the development of Catholic social teaching, and are thus very noteworthy. — Lawrence King 21:16, 17 January 2012 (UTC)
The Enabling Act
Although it may be unintentional, this section reads as an attempt at whitewashing and excuse making. Bottom line is that the Centre Party voted UNANIMOUSLY in favor of the Enabling Act, which gave Hitler dictatorial powers. That is the most important piece of information, and should be in the first sentence of the section, not buried at the end of multiple paragraphs of excuses. It was not impossible to vote against the act, as the Socialist party voted unanimously against it. Also, it is misleading to say that the Socialist party was the only one to speak out against the legislation. The Communist party also opposed it, but were not allowed to speak since it had been outlawed by the Nazis.
Another interesting observation is that the word "Jew" does not appear once in this article. How is that even possible in such a long article dealing with a religiously-based political party operating during a time when the "Jewish question" was so prominent in German politics?
Dansan99 (talk) 17:45, 4 September 2015 (UTC)
The Party That Put Hitler in Power
How the hell is this party still around? Surely their collaboration with the Nazi's and help passing the Enabling Act would of been their death-knell after the war. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 121.45.162.92 (talk) 15:35, 11 June 2016 (UTC)
- It wasn't the party that put Hitler into power. That would be the NSDAP, if you are talking political parties, or the Papen-Hindenburg-Industrial cabal that actually managed Hitler being appointed. THEY put Hitler into power. While the Centre played a not so glorious role in voting for the Enabling Act (but not any worse than all other parties save one), this did start Hitler's rise to power nor did it end there (it ended when Hindenburg died). Still, the vote was a blemish and it in part was the death knell of the party as it never returned to prominence after the war.
- Still, it is strange but telling how all other culprits for the failure of the Weimar Republic are glossed over, only this one vote is put into prominence. Str1977 16:42, 8 March 2020 (UTC)
Slant in article
@Rjensen: I see you reverted my edit. This material is all currently unsourced, and reads with an editorial slant of proving that the Centre Party wasn't so bad despite voting for the Enabling Act. I mean, the Centre Party was not the Nazi party, it's not interesting or controversial to say that they campaigned against them or any other party. A quick check of Google Books shows authors saying that the Centre Party just straight-up gave up after the Pope & the Concordat basically thought they'd get some accommodations from the Nazis. Why have the retroactive crystal ball about how deeply uncomfortable they were about the disastrous vote? SnowFire (talk) 01:40, 2 October 2016 (UTC)
- The goal here is to reflect what the reliable sources say, not to make a judgment on what the Center party should or should not have done. Rjensen (talk) 05:06, 2 October 2016 (UTC)
- Way to entirely miss my point. I just said I searched on Google Books and *that* is what those sources said - the Concordat was what they talked about. The crystal ball part is currently unsourced, at least in-line (perhaps the sources in general say this). And I suppose I can't contest that surely some reliable source will say that someone somewhere was uncomfortable about the vote, this is meaningless without context - before ANY event, some people will be for it, some against it, some ambivalent. It's very easy to selectively cite the people who ended up being "right" as an attempt to make just such a judgment.
- I see that you're citing Evans over this "deep uncomfortableness". I'll see if I can borrow a copy, but even if Evans talks about it, I'm really not a fan of how it's written anyway - it reads like special pleading, not history. If there was a split in the Centre Party on the wisdom fo the vote, then say so, and talk about the sides. SnowFire (talk) 19:17, 2 October 2016 (UTC)
Far-right?
Perhaps it would be good to include some sources for the claim that they're far-right. I think right-wing by itself, given their adherence to social conservatism & Christian democracy is okay, but far-right is not substantiated.
Horarum (talk) 14:50, 14 February 2022 (UTC)
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