How Not To Choose Peace
By Vedanth K
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About this ebook
'How Not to Choose Peace' is a what-if fiction, based in Nazi Germany during the course of WWII. The writing is set in a utopian Nazi-led Europe, which primarily explores an alternate reality on how Hitler rose to power, and how his subsequent downfall moulded a flourishing democracy. The narrative is a blend of reality and added fiction. Have fun flying through a Nazi-led paradise! 'How Not to Choose Peace' is a what-if fiction, based in Nazi Germany during the course of WWII. The writing is set in a utopian Nazi-led Europe, which primarily explores an alternate reality on how Hitler rose to power, and how his subsequent downfall moulded a flourishing democracy. The narrative is a blend of reality and added fiction. Have fun flying through a Nazi-led paradise!
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How Not To Choose Peace - Vedanth K
Table of Contents
How Not to Choose Peace | Prologue
The Inauguration
The Hitback
The Accident
The Bloodbath
The Comeback
The Reciprocal
The Dawn
How Not to Choose Peace
Prologue
The engine:
The conclusion of WW1 came about with the Allies arranging for Germany, the most imposing of treaties as a farewell - The Versailles Treaty. The farewell was mean, yet generous and humble, for it gifted Germany with grand reparations and a little too much humiliation.
The terms of the treaty were so harsh that it outraged and disturbed the true patriots of the black-red-gold. Among them, was yet another wounded veteran of the First World War named Adolf Hitler, largely unknown and politically naive or at least as of then...
Adolf Hitler was humiliated by the unjust defeat of Germany, or more seemingly the undeserved victory of the Allied forces in the war. He reasoned that the loss was due to the actions of patriotic traitors within the Weimar, whom he started regarding as inferiors - a notion that hence fuelled his political passion.
The German Workers’ Party worked on similar political ideas as Hitler did. But the party lacked serious representation and coordination. To capitalise on this opportunity, he joined the party, where he progressively built and inculcated his ideas, garnered trust, propelled his rank, and ultimately took over the party and renamed it ‘The Nazi Party’.
He changed the party symbol to the Swastika, a symbol that turned from being an association of religious divinity to a symbol that would then take to terrorise millions. Hitler was ideological in the selection of Swastika, as he believed Swastika had been and will hence eternally be a representation of anti-semitic ideas. And so would it, forever changing the connotation of ‘Swastika’!
Yet, his anti-semitic ideas arose not randomly, not by intention, nor by force, but just as a natural acquaintance of dislike from his political likes, within the country and out.
The fuel:
Hitler never invented Jewish hatred as history says. But he did really patent that idea, which had existed for a long time. Jews