But how did Hitler rise to power? Hitler had a plan to create Germany as a national power. He utilized cunning tactics in order to convince the desperate citizens that significant changes would be done. One of these tactics was propaganda. Propaganda brainwashed citizens by altering advertisements and news reports to make the Nazi Party seem more innocent than they were. Nonetheless, the Nazi Party was successful in appealing to those of the middle and lower classes, who were specifically affected in the depression. In a newspaper article published in 1933, Roger B. Nelson explains, “The German Fascists have learned to dramatize their talk, their deeds, their very existence. It is the drama of Fascist propaganda and the smooth functioning of the Nazi propaganda machine hat have generated the phenomenal rise of Hitler's party.” Society believed everything that the Nazis said and trusted that this new government would benefit the economy. Once Hitler became the Chancellor of Germany, citizens viewed Hitler as a newfound savior, and they respected him, obeyed him, and worshipped him. If they failed to do this, they would be tortured, or even worse, executed. What ultimately gave Hitler the power he needed was “The Law to Remove Stress from the People and the State”, enacted in 1933, which gave Hitler to pass any laws without permission from the Reichstag. This allowed him to go against any rights that society obtained from the German
But how did Hitler rise to power? Hitler had a plan to create Germany as a national power. He utilized cunning tactics in order to convince the desperate citizens that significant changes would be done. One of these tactics was propaganda. Propaganda brainwashed citizens by altering advertisements and news reports to make the Nazi Party seem more innocent than they were. Nonetheless, the Nazi Party was successful in appealing to those of the middle and lower classes, who were specifically affected in the depression. In a newspaper article published in 1933, Roger B. Nelson explains, “The German Fascists have learned to dramatize their talk, their deeds, their very existence. It is the drama of Fascist propaganda and the smooth functioning of the Nazi propaganda machine hat have generated the phenomenal rise of Hitler's party.” Society believed everything that the Nazis said and trusted that this new government would benefit the economy. Once Hitler became the Chancellor of Germany, citizens viewed Hitler as a newfound savior, and they respected him, obeyed him, and worshipped him. If they failed to do this, they would be tortured, or even worse, executed. What ultimately gave Hitler the power he needed was “The Law to Remove Stress from the People and the State”, enacted in 1933, which gave Hitler to pass any laws without permission from the Reichstag. This allowed him to go against any rights that society obtained from the German