Horrible EXECUTION of Julius Streicher - Bestial NAZI Anti-Semite Fueling Nazi Propaganda Machine. In 1922, Julius Streicher persuaded his personal followers to merge with the fledgling Nazi Party officially known as National Socialist German Workers' Party. As one of the Nazi party's earliest members, he could count himself among the oldest of the Nazi “old guard.”
In 1923, Streicher established his virulently antisemitic newspaper, Der Stürmer meaning The Attacker.
On November 8–9, 1923, Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party led a coalition group in an attempt to overthrow the German government. The plotters hoped to march on Berlin to launch a national revolution but the insurrection failed miserably. Units of the Munich police force clashed with Nazi stormtroopers as they marched into the city center. The two groups exchanged fire, which resulted in the deaths of 16 Nazi Party members and four police officers. This attempted coup d'état, in which Streicher took part, came to be known as the Beer Hall Putsch. Its ringleaders, including Adolf Hitler, were arrested. Hitler was convicted of high treason and sentenced to five years in prison. However, he only served eight months of his sentence.
For these activities Streicher was suspended from his teaching post and spent the following years leading a surrogate local organization of the outlawed Nazi Party.
Following Hitler's release from prison, the Nazi leader named Streicher Gauleiter or district leader of Middle Franconia, later Franconia.
Between 1924 and 1932 he held a seat in the Bavarian parliament.
After Adolf Hitler and the Nazi party came into power in January 1933 and during the first months of the National Socialist regime, Streicher chaired the Central Committee to Repulse Jewish Atrocity and Boycott Agitation. In this capacity, he helped to organize the famous one-day boycott of Jewish businesses on April 1, 1933.
This boycott, targeting Jewish businesses and professionals, was the first nationwide, planned action against the Jews.
The boycott was both a reprisal and an act of revenge against atrocity stories propaganda that German and foreign Jews, assisted by foreign journalists, were allegedly circulating in the international press to damage Nazi Germany's reputation.
On the day of the boycott, the members of the SA, which was a paramilitary organization associated with the Nazi Party, stood menacingly in front of Jewish-owned department stores and retail establishments as well as the offices of professionals such as doctors and lawyers. The Star of David was painted in yellow and black across thousands of doors and windows, with accompanying antisemitic slogans. Signs were posted saying "Don't Buy from Jews" and "The Jews Are Our Misfortune." Acts of violence against individual Jews and Jewish property occurred throughout Germany. However, the police intervened only rarely.
Although the national boycott operation, organized by local Nazi party chiefs, lasted only one day and was ignored by many individual Germans who continued to shop in Jewish-owned stores, it marked the beginning of the nationwide campaign by the Nazi Party against the entire German Jewish population. A week later, the government passed a law restricting employment in the civil service to "Aryans." Jewish government workers, including teachers in public schools and universities, were fired.
A key part of Nazi ideology was to define the enemy and those who posed a threat to the so-called “Aryan” race. Nazi propaganda was essential in promoting the myth of the “national community” and identifying who should be excluded. Jews were considered to be the main enemy. However, Jews were not the only group excluded from the vision of the "national community." Propaganda helped to define who would be excluded from the new society and justified measures against the "outsiders." These so-called outsiders included Jews, Roma and Sinti people, homosexuals, Jehovah's Witnesses, and Germans viewed as genetically inferior and harmful to the "national health" such as people with mental illness and intellectual or physical disabilities, epileptics, congenitally deaf and blind persons, chronic alcoholics, drug users, and others.
While most Germans disapproved of anti-Jewish violence, dislike of Jews, easily stirred up in hard times, extended far beyond the Nazi Party faithful....
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