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Revision as of 18:53, 25 November 2003 editWhisperToMe (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users662,140 editsNo edit summary  Revision as of 05:26, 13 December 2003 edit undoSam Spade (talk | contribs)33,916 edits Moved from articleNext edit →
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This page is a daughter article of the main Adolf Hitler article. ] 18:53, 25 Nov 2003 (UTC) This page is a daughter article of the main Adolf Hitler article. ] 18:53, 25 Nov 2003 (UTC)

== Moved from article ==

" In that sense, Hitler's Final Solution destabilized the already volatile Middle East for the long term.


The only positive outcome of the war was the destruction of Nazism and fascism as political and ideological forces, although modified forms of fascism lingered in Spain and ] under ] and ]. The horrors of Nazism, when fully revealed by the ] in ], also produced a radical re-assessment of the anti-Semitic attitudes which had been so prevalent in Europe. The process known as ] meant that German society, in particular, was radically changed for the better in the postwar years. Other forms of pseudo-scientific racism, such as ], were also discredited by the uses to which the Nazis put these doctrines. The founding of the ] on ] ], and the principles enshrined in the ], were signs that at least some of the lessons of Hitler's career had been learned. "

This stuff is clearly very POV. In a way, the whole article is, but I kinda like it. The quality of what you've written is high, but the anti-fascist, anti-eugenics, pro-jewish POV comes thru too clearly at times. ] 05:26, 13 Dec 2003 (UTC)

Revision as of 05:26, 13 December 2003

This page is a daughter article of the main Adolf Hitler article. WhisperToMe 18:53, 25 Nov 2003 (UTC)

Moved from article

" In that sense, Hitler's Final Solution destabilized the already volatile Middle East for the long term.


The only positive outcome of the war was the destruction of Nazism and fascism as political and ideological forces, although modified forms of fascism lingered in Spain and Portugal under Franco and Salazar. The horrors of Nazism, when fully revealed by the Nuremberg Trials in 1946, also produced a radical re-assessment of the anti-Semitic attitudes which had been so prevalent in Europe. The process known as denazification meant that German society, in particular, was radically changed for the better in the postwar years. Other forms of pseudo-scientific racism, such as eugenics, were also discredited by the uses to which the Nazis put these doctrines. The founding of the United Nations on October 24 1945, and the principles enshrined in the Charter of the United Nations, were signs that at least some of the lessons of Hitler's career had been learned. "

This stuff is clearly very POV. In a way, the whole article is, but I kinda like it. The quality of what you've written is high, but the anti-fascist, anti-eugenics, pro-jewish POV comes thru too clearly at times. JackLynch 05:26, 13 Dec 2003 (UTC)