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  1. Rayne fights against the Nazis in Europe during World War II, encountering Ekart Brand, a Nazi leader whose target is to inject Adolf Hitler with Rayne's blood in an attempt to transform him into a dhampir and attain immortality. — Michael Lauzon.

  2. Rayne fights against the Nazis in Europe during World War II, encountering Ekart Brand, a Nazi leader whose target is to inject Adolf Hitler with Rayne's blood in an attempt to transform him into a dhampir and attain immortality.

    • The Brownshirts Wore Second-Hand Clothing
    • The Nazis Turned A Blind Eye to Homosexuality in The Sturmabteilung
    • Dachau Started as A Prison For Communist Mps

    The Sturmabteilung (Storm Detachment, known as the SA or "Brownshirts"), the paramilitary wing of the Nazi Party (initially titled as the Gymnastic and Sports Division) was created by former military officer Ernst Röhm, then known as "The Machine-Gun King of Bavaria" for his stockpile of ex-army weaponry. It proved to be both an iron fist to enforc...

    The Nazis persecuted gay people when they were in power, but Hitler initially turned a blind eye to the number of high-profile homosexuals in the SA, including its leader Ernst Röhm and his deputy Edmund Heines. He believed that the SA were “fighters not moral arbiters”. Even when Röhm’s homosexuality became public during an election campaign, Hitl...

    Four weeks after becoming Chancellor in January 1933, a fire broke out in the Reichstag, Germany’s Parliament building in Berlin. Hitler immediately blamed the Communists and had their MPs placed in "protective custody", thus allowing him to establish the dictatorship he had long threatened. After the arrests, Heinrich Himmler, leader of the Nazi’s...

  3. Hitler was right" and "Hitler did nothing wrong" are statements and internet memes either expressing support for Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler or trolling. [1] [2] The ironic or trolling uses of the phrase allow those on the alt-right to maintain plausible deniability over their white supremacist views.

  4. Al-Hakim, through Scheherazade, argues with Hitler in favor of democracy against Nazism. [149] The Egyptian journalist and poet Abbas Mahmoud al-Aqqad was an outspoken critic of Nazism and a supporter of liberal democracy; he even fled to Sudan in an attempt to avoid being captured by the German army during the invasion of Egypt for publishing his anti-Nazi book "Hitler in the Balance".

  5. Feb 26, 2011 · Ultimately there were two crucial reasons why Hitler was not brought down by the popular discontent for the war which no doubt existed in Germany after the defeat at Stalingrad in early 1943. The first reason is practical, the second is institutional.

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  7. Why did Hitler hate the Jews? Read more about his introduction to antisemitism, the role of the First World War and why he turned the Jews into scapegoats.

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