The Nuremberg Laws

The purpose of the Nuremberg laws was to primarily marginalized Jews. The Germans wanted them to be disconnected from there society, so they made these laws to push them out and take away their rights and freedoms.

One of the laws prevented Jews from voting and having any position in Germany’s government. This took away any say the Jews had in their government and society.

The laws contributed to creating the type of “national community” the Germans wanted by making two groups. They made the national community and the other group. The other group was the group that the laws affected and who were pushed out of society. The Germans only put who they wanted in their national society and no one else.

These laws influenced the actions of the German people because it gave people the idea that they were better then the other group. It made them feel of higher power, so they acted like they were better and treated the people in the other group as if they were nothing. This also affected the people in the other group because it took away their ability to have any say or power in Germans Democracy. They were stripped from their rights and freedoms. They just had to do what they were told and not fight back. This means that they were no longer apart of Germans society. There were marginalized.

Their lives and beliefs might have been changed as a result of the laws because they no longer became apart of society. There way of living changed, they no longer felt safe in Germans society because they couldn’t stand up for themselves and fight back. Everything they said and did was used against them.

 

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