World War 11

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Many scholars would lead us to believe that Hitler’s World War 2 was about race, but the reality was that Hitler’s Second World War was more, if not entirely, about policies than it was about race. Hitler, like Jim Jones, was a communist. And like Jim Jones, he believed so firmly in the communist ideology that “he would die for it.” And like Jim Jones, he did.

If Hitler’s Second World War was about race, then how did the Japanese, who was not of Caucasian descent, fight alongside Hitler in the war? And why did they remain his greatest ally even going as far as vowing to fight to the last man, woman and child? Further, why did the Japanese bomb Pearl Harbour in the United States and trigger a war with white Americans? If Hitler’s Second World War was about race, then he would have turned against the Japanese at that point. But he didn’t, and that move was likely premeditated between Germany and Japan before it was undertaken.

Hitler was angry at Capitalism, and he was angry at the Jewish people and the power which the Jews wielded at that time through a capitalist system. Hitler wanted to create a more egalitarian society and purge the earth of what he saw as the great evil of capitalism. The Jewish people were, at that time, the wealthiest people on earth, as they still are (generally speaking) now.

Some people might argue that Hitler had gulled the Japanese into fighting with him. However, it is unlikely that this is possible. Japan is a communist country, and it always have been, and the Japanese at that time strongly believed, as they now, in communism.

Hitler’s Second World War had very little, if anything do with race, and more (if not everything) to do with policies.