Gil Hahn

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territory of Germany was not sufficient to support an agricultural population substantially larger than that to which Germany had been reduced by 1933, at standards of living that were acceptable in relation to those prevailing in the cities. This conclusion was not lost on the Nazi ideologues. In fact, it was precisely their scepticism about settlement as a remedy for Germany’s problems that set the Nazi agrarians apart.
The Wages of Destruction: The Making and Breaking of the Nazi Economy
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