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  1. Ludendorff was extremely suspicious of the Social Democrats and leftists, whom he blamed for the humiliation of Germany through the Versailles Treaty. Ludendorff claimed that he paid close attention to the business element (especially the Jews), and saw them turn their backs on the war effort by—as he saw it—letting profit, rather than ...

  2. Ludendorff was pivotal in the creation and diffusion of the fictitious “Stab-in-the-Back” myth, which blamed Jews, liberals, communists, democrats, and war profiteers for the defeat of Germany in World War I.

  3. Ludendorff participated in an unsuccessful Nazi coup in Munich in 1923, and in 1925 ran for president against Hindenburg, now a bitter enemy. From 1924 to 1928 he was a Nazi member of the...

  4. Nov 16, 2019 · In 1925, he ran as the Nazi Party candidate for President of Germany, but received just one per cent of the vote. He was a much-diminished man, disillusioned with politics and increasingly suspicious of Hitler. That year he left his wife and married Mathilde, a psychiatrist and political ideologist.

  5. Ludendorff advocated the diametrically opposite view that politics should serve the conduct of war, for which the entire physical and moral forces of the nation should be mobilized, because, according to him, peace was merely an interval between wars.

  6. Aug 2, 2016 · General Erich Ludendorff, a war hero, told lawmakers that the nation had been betrayed by Social Democrats, the Catholic Center Party, socialists, and Jews. In fact, German military leadership, realizing in the last months of the war that their country could not win, had asked for an armistice.

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  8. Oct 29, 2009 · After Germany’s World War I defeat, Ludendorff, angered by the armistice, helped create the “stab-in-the-back” theory that blamed Jews, communists, liberals and democrats for Germany’s WWI ...

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