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Joy' program, propaganda was also used to boost up the workers morale, making them seem closer to the beloved Fhrer. Thousands of workers also saved five marks a week in a state scheme to save up for a Volkswagen Beetle, which was seen as the symbol of the new, flourishing Germany. The other main scheme was the Beauty of Labour' movement. This scheme improved working conditions and also provided washing facilities and low-cost canteens. Workers now also had security, which kept workers happy, as they didn't fear that they would lose their job, like many workers had several years before, during the depression. Although the workers gained all of these things, they did lose out as well. In the end, nobody actually got a Volkswagen Beetle, as all car production was stopped in 1939, and switched to war-time production. Workers paid tremendous prices for what they got, including losing their main political party, the SDP, as all other political parties had been banned. They also lost trade unions and were forced to join the General Labour Front (DAF), which kept strict control of all the workers. This meant they couldn't strike and in some places were even kept from moving to better paid jobs. Although the wages rose slightly, prices in Germany also rose too, which meant that most of the workers were no better off than before the Nazis.
Farmers' lives also improved under the Nazis, as they were seen as ideal Aryans, one of Hitler's major focuses. Just after Hitler came to power, in September 1933, he set up the Reich Food Estate, setting up boards to buy the food from the farmers and distribute it around the cities. This was good for farmers as there were also set prices for the food, so if the farmers produced the extra food, then they knew that they could sell it, at the same price each time. The second main measure was the Reich Entailed Farm Law, giving farmers protection from banks who would repossess their farm if the farmers hadn't been keeping up with loan repayments. This was good for the farmers, although it was made more difficult to get a loan in the first place, as banks were unwilling to lend money, as they wondered if they might get it back again. The Reich Entailed Farm law also protected the farmers' way of life, supporting the Nazi philosophy of Blood and Soil,' saying that the farmers were true Aryans and the backbone of the German empire. Despite this, some farmers weren't too happy with the measures as due to the Reich Food Estate, efficient
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by Naomi Garton
Hitler had a desire for a "volksgemeinshaft" (A people's community/unity) and within this women had a specific role.
Externally,
by Jamie Renton
In the first seven and a half years of Nazi rule in Germany, Hitler partook in no Jewish killing, though Jews were targeted
by Adam White
When Adolf Hitler and the Nazis came to power in 1933, he promised to solve Germany's problems unemployment and farming,
by David Brown
Such a title and subject is enough to fill volumes. Germany under the Nazis in my opinion was a mixed bag. Many did benefit
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