Could Germany have won WW2?

Tribes practice tribalism.
I'm not going to agree with the use of socialism meaning what you state.
Socialism to me is Marxist theroy.

The only thing they are missing is a government. Each person performs a role and has to form a role. Very clear from Ragged Trousered Philanthropists that the basis for a socialist system is that each man has to do their share. Those who do the worst jobs do less hours or days. Those who do more privvy jobs would work longer.

Each member of the tribe has a function to perform. Didn't Pilger once attribute the aborigines as having a truly equal socialist society or am I thinking it of another culture?
 
I've almost finished the book 'Atomic', about the race to build nuclear weapons from the discovery of fission in 1939 to the USSRs first test.

One of the more interesting stories that came out of it was that German scientists had virtually given up on the hope of building a bomb as early as 1942, and weren't really pushed that hard to come up with one by the leadership. They didn't even have a working reactor by the time WWII ended after many attempts to build one, they were all too small to reach criticality. The sabotage of Norsk Hydro probably had very little effect.
 
I've almost finished the book 'Atomic', about the race to build nuclear weapons from the discovery of fission in 1939 to the USSRs first test.

One of the more interesting stories that came out of it was that German scientists had virtually given up on the hope of building a bomb as early as 1942, and weren't really pushed that hard to come up with one by the leadership. They didn't even have a working reactor by the time WWII ended after many attempts to build one, they were all too small to reach criticality. The sabotage of Norsk Hydro probably had very little effect.


Spier concluded fairly early on that Germany would have either lost the War or won by other means by the time a practical weapon could be developed.

Mind, I am sure I recall reading somewhere that the Germans were actually rather more interested in using nuclear technology for submarine propulsion rather than as a weapon as such.
 
Angilion I don't care who you or h4rm0ny are nor do I care about the nature of your personal beliefs. I'm sure that both of you are fine lads[..]

You're moving the goalposts again. The specific point was you saying that h4rm0ny is a right wing extremist because they said that the Nazis were somewhat left wing and you claim that only right wing extremists do that.

Please stick to the subject and don't pretend you didn't write what you wrote. If you think you were wrong, say so and move on.

[..] but claiming the Nazis were left wing is not just misinformation, it's lunacy so don't be surprised to be called on it when you bring that kind of "alternative" fact out in the open.

The Nazis themselves recorded that half of their early recruits were communists. There was a lot of overlap, which isn't surprising giving that the most important aspect of both ideologies is violence and extreme authoritarianism. In practice there's not much difference between far left and far right, although the far left tends to be better at keeping power.

h4rm0ny has already given a number of examples of left-wing policies and ideas of the Nazis which you've ignored, so I'm not going to bother repeating them. They existed. I could say that it's lunatic disinformation to deny their existence, but that would be rude.
 
My personal view, though I think it is the correct one as well, is that Fascism requires Nationalism. I think those that think Fascism can be internationalist are those who've moved away from Fascism as an actual political system and towards using it as a synonym for authoritarian. In which case, yes - it could then of course be internationalist. Does that match with how you see it?

I think that the word 'fascist' is not well enough defined to have a clear meaning. I am inclined towards seeing it as almost entirely as authoritarianism, to the extent that I'm not sure that there's a reason for the word 'fascism' to exist at all. Authoritarianism is definitely the most important thing in fascism, which is fitting since it's named after a symbol of authority.

Other than nationalism, what if anything do you think defines fascism as being something different to other forms of authoritarianism?

For me, it's not that I am someone who thinks Fascism isn't nationalist, but that I am someone who sees nationalism as its own dimension rather than a property of Left or Right. I gave examples of both Right Wing internationalism and Left Wing nationalism earlier to support this view.

That I agree with.
 
You're moving the goalposts again. The specific point was you saying that h4rm0ny is a right wing extremist because they said that the Nazis were somewhat left wing and you claim that only right wing extremists do that.

Please stick to the subject and don't pretend you didn't write what you wrote. If you think you were wrong, say so and move on.

The Nazis themselves recorded that half of their early recruits were communists. There was a lot of overlap, which isn't surprising giving that the most important aspect of both ideologies is violence and extreme authoritarianism. In practice there's not much difference between far left and far right, although the far left tends to be better at keeping power.

h4rm0ny has already given a number of examples of left-wing policies and ideas of the Nazis which you've ignored, so I'm not going to bother repeating them. They existed. I could say that it's lunatic disinformation to deny their existence, but that would be rude.


You're the one going off topic, I asked a simple question and I got a simple answer:


Are you saying the Nazis were Left Wing or at least leaning more to the Left than the Right?
Yes. And to be explicit, I refer to the actual Nazis, not bone-headed neo-nazis who don't know their history (or biology) and simply think Nazism means ill-founded rants about "jews/blacks/muslims" and have no political theory beyond that. The latter can be Right Wing or Left Wing but are mostly too uneducated to really be called anything.

Views such as this one are prevalent in the alt-right bubble, you won't find them in the works of reputable historians, academics and other experts in the field so I'm assuming that's where he got this idea. Even if that's not where he got it, it's still lunacy. By the way, do you happen to agree with it?
 
If Hitler listened to his advisers yes they could have won imo.

However the major factor would have been the race to Nuclear weapons, many claim they were two years ahead of the allies at one stage
 
I think that the word 'fascist' is not well enough defined to have a clear meaning. I am inclined towards seeing it as almost entirely as authoritarianism, to the extent that I'm not sure that there's a reason for the word 'fascism' to exist at all. Authoritarianism is definitely the most important thing in fascism, which is fitting since it's named after a symbol of authority.

Other than nationalism, what if anything do you think defines fascism as being something different to other forms of authoritarianism?

That's an odd question to me (and I think it's assumed that our debate is in different tone than the "debate" we're both having with Zethor). The reason it's an odd question is because nationalism IS the most essential difference between fascism and some other forms of authoritarianism. If the Nazis had been "Internationalist Socialists" they'd have been communists with extra racism. However, there must logically be other distinctions as you point out. So for example, we have monarchies both contemporary and historically which are authoritarian but they are not fascist. At least not in my mind which I realise is important to add as the definition is what we're discussing. To support that though, I don't think any political theorist would describe Saudi Arabia as a fascist government. Although ideologues who treat it as a synonym for oppression might. There's also a cultural component which I hesitate to raise because it's a bit woolly, but feel I have to because despite that it seems to be a consistent presence. And that is the emphasis on hardship. The communists I know and much of the communist bumpf that I have read is all very utopian. I've had them tell me about how you wouldn't have to work more than X hours, etc. I'd need to immerse myself in historical literature to say if this is right or inadequate exposure but the pitch for fascism by Mussolini and by Hitler was very much about work, hardship and endurance. I think it might stem from the communists I know today to be all about overthrowing the capitalists who force us to work for them whereas in Weimar Germany with hyperinflation and economic disaster, the dream was to be able to work at a good job and earn a living wage and keep it. Communism of course has its "We can do it!" posters but one of the themes of fascism has always been Strength and Purity. Communism seems to emphasize more 'share everything for everybody'. The interesting thing with Hitler is he didn't do a Jeremy Corbyn and ponies for all. He stood up and promised discipline, suffering and the dignity of work. At least in much of his stuff. Again, this is cultural and an impression more than a definition so I wouldn't add it save that I feel it's part of it. Leaving aside the internationalist / nationalist divide, Communism seems "ponies for all" and Fascism seems "Ponies for the deserving".

The thing is, we have to distinguish between political models as intended vs. those in practice. We've only ever seen fascism as a reactive force. We've never seen it allowed to endure long term. For me the most fascinating thought experiment in this question is not whether Germany had won so much as if it had not been defeated. I'd love to know how long the Third Reich would have endured and how it would have changed or not. I think that Fascism might have a better chance of surviving long term than communism because (and Zethor is going to be frothing at this comment! :D ) fascism is less extreme than communism. I'd better explain. Communism is very utopian and doesn't allow for hierarchy of outcomes. Of course in the USSR there was, but the doctrine is one of no class. (In every sense!). Fascism is left wing, but it doesn't solely do away with the concept of class in that it believes in better and worse groups of people. Communists doctrinally needed to make everyone the same. The Nazis doctrinally wanted to be socialist within their group. Which I suppose might be another way of saying nationalist.

Anyway, that was a long and ill-planned out comment. The answer to your question is probably in there between the lines somewhere, but it would take more work from me to formulate it better. Short version, the key distinguishing qualities of fascism as a particular form of authoritarianism are (imo):
  • Nationalism
  • Rejection of universal equality
  • Socialist doctrine
  • Social purity (racial in the Nazis case)
  • Idealisation of individual strength and loyalty.
Second and fourth are intertwined really and are what will give Leftists conniptions when you call Fascism Left Wing. And also why they define Fascism as Right Wing and why more neutral political theorists define it as a fusion of Right Wing and Left Wing ideologies. It's extreme socialism with a defined (i.e. bounded) society.
 
Views such as this one are prevalent in the alt-right bubble, you won't find them in the works of reputable historians, academics and other experts in the field so I'm assuming that's where he got this idea. Even if that's not where he got it, it's still lunacy.

We have, in order: ad hominem, appeal to authority and argument by assertion. Earlier you said I was "peddling lies". I asked you to pick anything I had written at the time - any specific, factual example of how Nazism is left wing - that you considered a lie. Not my conclusions, which obviously you will disagree with, but any of my arguments. We're all still waiting on that. I also like the pre-emptive insertion of "reputable" in the above to quickly discount any historian who disagrees with you. ;) :) So far the only way you have engaged with actual arguments is to assert that nationalism is Right Wing - despite examples you've been given of nationalism distinct from Left - Right. And, iirc, the assertion that the Nazis / Fascists were capitalist which you did not support. Did I miss anything?
 
Annoyingly I can't remember it off the top of my head but I once saw someone put Fascism in its place and the misuse of it by almost everyone in 3 lines of a youtube comment - gonna bug me now that I can't find/remember it exactly.
 
Annoyingly I can't remember it off the top of my head but I once saw someone put Fascism in its place and the misuse of it by almost everyone in 3 lines of a youtube comment - gonna bug me now that I can't find/remember it exactly.

Can't be me. I lasted about four days on YouTube before I was banned by Google.
 
If Hitler listened to his advisers yes they could have won imo.

However the major factor would have been the race to Nuclear weapons, many claim they were two years ahead of the allies at one stage

At some point during the war it was feared they were a couple of years ahead hence partly why a lot of urgency went into the raids on Norway, etc. subsequently from studies post war its generally accepted they weren't as advanced as feared.

Its very likely under only very slightly different circumstances Germany would have not only been first to the atom bomb but also been 20 odd years ahead of the US in developing the ability to utilise such weapons via long range ballistic missiles.
 
https://www.livescience.com/57622-fascism.html

interesting read on which i agree with more than other stuff.

Thanks for sharing. It is indeed an interesting read. I disagree on point 6 about requirements for a leader to be male. That's extrapolation from the two successful Fascist movements which is both a ****-poor sample size and I don't think supported by the doctrines. Whilst you do get plenty of idiots insisting women should "stay home and make babies" in the movement, you also get leaders like Marine Lepen and Alice Weidel who get called fascist all the time. There's nothing in fascism that says you can't have a female leader. There just hasn't been one yet. I might as well say that the USA can't have a female president on the same reasoning.

Interesting article though - good find!

EDIT: I particularly like the parts about fascism collaborating with business leaders and the tensions therein. That's part of what I was having so much trouble defining when I talked about degrees of extremism between communism and fascism and why I felt fascism might have been viable but communism rapidly became stagnant. The soviets didn't collaborate with established elites, the Nazis did. Interesting and insightful way of putting it when the article talks about how Conservatives tried to have Hitler assassinated and how the Nazis and the Conservatives kept stepping on each others toes.

EDIT EDIT: In fact, that was a VERY good read. Thank you! :)
 
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The German Luftwaffe came very close to winning the Battle Of Britain. If they had total domination of the air, they would have been able to land troops without much problem meaning, in the event of a German victory, there would have been no base of operations for the US, not much of a desert war and Russia would have been open on it's southern flank with it's oilfields particularly vulnerable.

That's what I love about WWII, so many variables that where so close to changing the outcome of several major phases of the war.

Not necessarily, the Germans still didn't have the capability to move an invasion force across the channel. They lacked the landing craft and transport capabilities to do this plus they had very little to no training with landing craft. Furthermore the Royal Navy was stronger than the German fleet, which had the above issue above been resolved, they still would have to deal with in order to secure their crossing of the channel.

I don't disagree that the Luftwaffe winning the BoB would have given them a chunk of the control the Germans needed, however there were still other important factors that would have taken quite a while to resolve before invading the UK.
 
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There are countless reasons and 'missed opportunities' which might have meant Germany could have won WW2.

- They chose their allies poorly. Japan was half-decent, but only focused on a Far-East empire to obtain natural resources. Italy were a waste of space. Countless times Germany had to wade into their battles to bail them out; Greece, the Balkans and North Africa. This caused massive over-stretch of resources in areas that Germany were nor particularly interested.

- As part of the Axis agreement with Japan and Italy, after Japan attacked Pearl Harbour Germany declared war on the USA, unnecessarily bringing their almost limitless military and economic power to bear against them. If they had not, the USA would have just focused on Japan, while the UK, USSR and other Allies would have been left to deal with Germany, depriving the European Theatre of the US 8th Army Air Force and vast amount of troops and material used in D-Day. This would have drawn out the European war for several more years.

- Germany failed to neutralise the Western Front in 1940 before turning East in 1941, thereby repeating the error of WW1. I personally believe that although the Battle of Britain was a victory for the UK, Germany's threat of invasion was only half-hearted at best. Hitler made no secret of his admiration for Britain and its' Empire, and hoped that we would sue for peace after the defeat of France, with guarantees for our Empire as long as we gave them a free hand in Europe.

- Germany's economy was not geared to a long war. Hitler knew this, which is a key reason why the whole Blitzkreig doctrine came about, as it offered the promise of quick, knockout blows to opponents, consuming minimal resources unlike large fleets of heavy strategic bombers etc.

- For all Germany's 'wonder weapons' such as the V2, Me-163 etc. they failed to refresh and replace their staple fighter and bomber aircraft. The Messerschmitt Bf-109 had to soldier on throughout the war, far beyond obsolescence; the Me-210 and Me-410 heavy fighters were utterly disastrous replacements for the Bf-110, so much so that the former had to be brought back into production (I personally think it was a poor concept any way). There was not adequate replacement for the Ju-88 medium bomber either. German military leaders (such as Udet and Milch) also let personal prejudices get in the way of good aircraft; the Heinkel He-219 Uhu was an excellent, radar-equipped night-fighter, which could have devastated the RAF's bomber fleet. And all of this is before we get to the saga of the Me-262 and Hitler's insistence of it being produced as a bomber. Germany's new tanks were poor too, failing to counter the introduction of the excellent Soviet T-34.

- Anyone who thinks Germany could (and should) have avoided war with the USSR needs to read Mein Kampf (Lebensraum). It was always going to happen. As others have said, Hitler should just have let his Generals run the war in the East, rather than trying to micro-manage, letting his dogmatic view take precedence over good military tactics.

Plenty more spring to mind...
 
Did I miss anything?

Yes, you missed the cognitive dissonance:


Are you saying the Nazis were Left Wing or at least leaning more to the Left than the Right?
Yes. And to be explicit, I refer to the actual Nazis, not bone-headed neo-nazis who don't know their history (or biology) and simply think Nazism means ill-founded rants about "jews/blacks/muslims" and have no political theory beyond that. The latter can be Right Wing or Left Wing but are mostly too uneducated to really be called anything.


Thanks for sharing. It is indeed an interesting read. I disagree on point 6 about requirements for a leader to be male.

Interesting article though - good find!

EDIT EDIT: In fact, that was a VERY good read. Thank you! :)


So how does the article, which you mostly agree with, sum up Fascism?

Robert Paxton, a professor emeritus of social science at Columbia University in New York who is widely considered the father of fascism studies, defined fascism as "a form of political practice distinctive to the 20th century that arouses popular enthusiasm by sophisticated propaganda techniques for an anti-liberal, anti-socialist, violently exclusionary, expansionist nationalist agenda."

Do tell then, how could the Nazis have been both Left or leaning Left more than Right and at the same time anti-liberal and anti-socialist? There's no need to provide sources this time. :rolleyes:
 
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Yes they could have won but ultimately Hitler was led by ideology which dictated his every decision and not by pragmatism.

There are numerous events which could have changed the entire course of the war, most of those which have already been mentioned. His biggest mistake was not attacking Russia, it was delaying the attack and having done so while Britain was still in the war. Without Britain, America would never have been able to invade Western Europe.

The decision to switch from attacking the airfields to the cities was a huge mistake in the BOB. A few more weeks and they could have wiped out the Airforce. But ultimately Hitler was again led by ideology here. The concept of invading Britain, much like the war in Africa didn’t fit with his ultimate aim of land in the east.

Once the sixth army was lost at Stalingrad it’s arguable that the war was ultimately lost. It was just a matter of time. Had Britain been nocked out the war at this point they would never have had to fight on two fronts, and I think it’s not unrealistic to imagine a much longer drawn out stalemate on the eastern front which the Russians may have ultimately won purely down to man power.
 
Absolutely love this thread. Fascinating to read some of the posts

Any books that people would recommend that goes in to this subject in detail? The “what if...” and “could have but...” events that aren’t common knowledge
 
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