Originally posted by lord of the mark
By the same reasoning you could say that Belgium was headed down that road.
By the same reasoning you could say that Belgium was headed down that road.
Anyway, it might have appeared like it but I wasn't making the point of early indicators solely from that example. German nationalism, from at least Fichte on, was of a very mystical and exclusive kind. This might in part have been a consequence of that for a long time "Germany" existed only in dreams (the lost homeland) and not on maps. Those two traits made it all the more susceptible to racism and nazism, which excells at mysticism and is obsessed with exclusion (which became extermination). Your bringing up Belgium is interesting, but the crises that rocked Germany, if only by virtue of its size and position at the center of Europe, brought to action forces much more cataclysmic than could ever have appeared in small, wedged-in Belgium.
Comment