What do you think?
Rate this book


431 pages, Hardcover
First published April 30, 2005
The cooptation of civil servants allowed for the peculiar combination of populist opportunism, selective government manipulation, and premeditated genocide that characterized the Third Reich. This constellation, rather than any particular German fondness for bureaucracy or Prussian subservience, helps explain the success of the Nazi movement. ... The regime unleashed the force of individual initiative in both long-standing and newly created government agencies. It broke through the rigidity of established hierarchies. The drudgery of merely following procedure was replaced by meaningful work, in which people were encouraged to think for themselves -- and to plan for the future.
In other words, the Germans seized the opportunities for advancement, profit, and societal change that Nazi Germany opened up. They are all complicit as much as they would have you think otherwise.
Only 2 stars because the numbers and the math were too intrusive for me.