History Off the Page

The Nazi Revolution II: Going Beyond the Law 1933-34 [1_43]

Dr. Jason Hansen Season 1 Episode 43

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0:00 | 1:23:24

One of the hallmarks of a modern democracy is a belief in the importance of the rule of law. The state may be capable of using tremendous violence against its citizenry, but this power is curtailed by a series of rules and regulations that are both rational (i.e., the ability to arrest criminals) and written down so that people know what is allowed and what isn't. As part of their quest for total power, however, the Nazis tried to dispense with these traditional notions, selling the idea that the unrestricted use of violence was a better path towards creating order.

This episode walks the listener through the ways in which the Nazis went 'beyond the law', setting up a system of violence that many Germans actually found reassuring. It focuses on several examples of this phenomenon, including the merger of state and civil institutions, the construction of the concentration camps and the use of protective custody to jail opponents without trial.

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