CrackingYs
Heil I.N.C.E.L.
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- Joined
- Sep 30, 2019
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Here's something you won't hear feminists talk about....
Hitler was a genius who knew that if he could force women to get married and adopt traditional roles of motherhood, and caregiving, that it would free up the men to be able to rebuild their country and turn it into a world superpower within 5 years.
In 1935, Hitler created Lebensborn, basically a socialist program to encourage women to get out of the workforce, get married, have children, and care for them. And in exchange they get money, shelter, and security.
The government gave extra money for getting married and for each child and even punished women who killed their own babies:
Hitler was a genius who knew that if he could force women to get married and adopt traditional roles of motherhood, and caregiving, that it would free up the men to be able to rebuild their country and turn it into a world superpower within 5 years.
In 1935, Hitler created Lebensborn, basically a socialist program to encourage women to get out of the workforce, get married, have children, and care for them. And in exchange they get money, shelter, and security.
- Support racially, biologically and hereditarily valuable families with many children.
- Placement and care of racially, biologically and hereditarily valuable pregnant women, who, after thorough examination of their and the progenitor's families by the Race and Settlement Central Bureau of the SS, can be expected to produce equally valuable children.
- Care for the children.
- Care for the children's mothers
The government gave extra money for getting married and for each child and even punished women who killed their own babies:
- The state encouraged matrimony through marriage loans, dispensed family income supplements for each new child, publicly honored "child-rich" families, bestowed the Cross of Honor of the German Mother on women bearing four or more babies, and increased punishments for abortion.
Women in the Third Reich
Despite the Nazi Party's ideology of keeping women in the home, their roles expanded beyond wives and mothers.
encyclopedia.ushmm.org