Maybe because we're not stroking off while fantasizing about mass murder? Just a thoughthttps://twitter.com/PhilosophyExp/status/1130799409753726976 …
You do know the history of the Weimar Republic, yes? That Hitler deliberately provoked street fights (because he knew it'd make authoritarian government more attractive).
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Hitler didn't get into power because of street fights. He got into power because the people at the top kept ceding ground to him.
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Don't be silly. There's no single reason why anybody gets into power. The street fighting, and desire for authoritarian crack down, was absolutely part of the story. (As was, for example, endemic anti-Semitism; corporate Capitalism; economic disaster; etc).
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If Van Papen and co. hadn't decided that the Nazis--who never had a popular mandate--deserved a slice of power and a seat at the table, the rest of that stuff would have been moot. So I don't think it's unreasonable to blame capitulation and political maneuvering.
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Well, if that's true, it's a necessary but not sufficient reason. You can't discount the causal background just because you've got necessary conditions. And, at any rate, there were other necessary conditions (e.g., the anti-Semitism).
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I'm not discounting them, I'm saying the one crucial factor that allowed Hitler to take power was the middle-of-the-road politicians thinking they could appease and/or manipulate the Nazis instead of taking a firm stand against them.
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