Nazi Germany
Nazi Germany was the national socialistic German state between 1933 and 1945, primarily lead by Adolf Hitler and other important figures of the NSDAP (Nazi Party), such as Joseph Goebbels or Heinrich Himmler.
Ideologies[edit | edit source]
Taxation of Incels[edit | edit source]
Ehestandshilfe ("marriage assistance") was a tax levied on unmarried people and incels which was used to contribute to the costs of the marriage loan system: It was levied at a rate of 2–5% of gross annual income on those under 55 who were liable for income tax
Genetic determinism[edit | edit source]
The Nazis believed that certain behaviors or characteristics of people were genetically determined. They often viewed criminality, "asocial behavior" and moral "depravity" (ger.: "Verkommenheit") as genetically inherited, which sometimes led to the stigmatization and persecution of people who did not conform to Nazi norms.
Lebensborn[edit | edit source]
"Lebensborn" was the idea to artificially extinct genetic dead ends and artificially breed chad and stacy in Nazi Germany and the other nazi-occupied Europe.
This was to be achieved by preventing unmarried women and girls from having abortions, by offering anonymous births and by subsequently placing the illegitimate children up for adoption.
Ideological premises[edit | edit source]
The project was initiated by Heinrich Himmler, which was based primarily on the two most important demographic policy principles of National Socialism:
- Saving the "Nordic race" from the imminent extinction caused by birth deficits by increasing the birth rate
- Qualitative improvement of the offspring under "breeding criteria" in the sense of National Socialist racial hygiene ("euthanasia", forced sterilization, marriage bans, etc...)
→ Goal: Breeding the "nobility of the future" (ger.: "Adels der Zukunft); aka chad and stacy.
Admission conditions for participants[edit | edit source]
- The "large proof of ancestry", colloquially known as "Aryan proof" (ger.: "Arierausweis")
- "hereditary health form" with information about possible hereditary burdens in the family had to be filled out
- A "medical examination form" to prove health and for "racial assessment"
- Unmarried expectant mothers also had to make an affidavit that the man named was the father of the child