Review of "Hitler’s Plans For Global Domination: Nazi Architecture & Ultimate War Aims," by Jochen Thies
Review of
Hitler’s Plans For Global Domination:
Nazi Architecture & Ultimate War Aims, by Jochen Thies, ISBN 9780857454621
Four out of five stars
Nothing really new here
As Adolph Hitler first stated in his book “Mein Kampf,”
his goals in starting the Second World War in Europe were simple and had several
steps. The first was the subjugation of the European mainland, the second was
the extermination of those of the most “undesirable” background, followed by
the subjugation of others, the destruction of the Soviet Union and then seizing
control of North Africa, the Middle East. If all of these had been
accomplished, there would have been an inevitable conflict between the United
States and the greater German state. Hitler also had grandiose ideas of
building massive buildings that would be monuments to the power of Germany.
All of these
plans are put forward in this book, therefore there is really nothing new, as
these goals were clearly enunciated in speeches by Nazi dignitaries as well as
the actions of the German operatives everywhere they could safely operate.
Yet, it is
still interesting to read this book. For, despite the overwhelming visual,
written and eyewitness accounts of the German death camps, there are still people
that question the extermination actions of Germany in the Second World War. A
small, but significant segment of the modern world still follow at least some
of the Nazi ideology. We must constantly be reminded that the fundamental Nazi principles
are that a small percentage of the chosen people will enslave everyone else.
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