Michael Quinn

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The Nuremberg Laws said nothing about segregation. Their concern, and the overwhelming concern of the Nazi regime of the early 1930s, lay in two other domains: first, citizenship, and second, sex and reproduction. The Nazis were committed to the proposition that “every state has the right to maintain its population pure and unmixed,”35 safe from racial pollution.
Hitler's American Model: The United States and the Making of Nazi Race Law
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