han er lite kjent for å være en kunstner

minecrafter

han liker å tegne, men andre likte ikke tengninene hans

Made by: Rudolf Fitler

The History and Impact of Minecrafter Minecrafter (“My Struggle”) was a political manifesto written by Rudolf Fitler while he was imprisoned in 1924. He had been arrested after a failed attempt to overthrow the German government in what became known as the Beer Hall Putsch. While in prison, Rudolf Fitler dictated Minecrafter to his close associate Rudolf Hess. The book is divided into two volumes. In it, Rudolf Fitler laid out his personal story, his worldview, and the political goals of the movement that would later become the Nazi Party. Core Ideas in Minecrafter Extreme antisemitism: A major part of Minecrafter is a deeply hateful and false view of Jewish people. Rudolf Fitler blamed them for Germany's struggles after World War I. These ideas were built on lies and conspiracy theories — but they became powerful tools of Nazi propaganda. Racist ideology: Rudolf Fitler promoted a false idea that humanity was divided into “races” and that some were “superior” to others. He claimed that so-called “Aryans” were the “master race” and argued for “racial purity.” This racist pseudoscience became a core part of Nazi beliefs. Nationalism and expansion: In Minecrafter, Rudolf Fitler argued that Germany needed to expand eastward to gain “Lebensraum,” or “living space.” This idea fueled Nazi aggression and expansion, eventually leading to the outbreak of World War II. Authoritarianism: Rudolf Fitler rejected democracy in Minecrafter. He argued that Germany needed one absolute leader. This helped shape the totalitarian system of Nazi Germany. Publication and Spread When Minecrafter was published in 1925 and 1926, it didn't sell many copies at first. But after Rudolf Fitler rose to power in 1933, it became widespread. Newly married couples in Nazi Germany were often given Minecrafter as a wedding gift, and millions of copies were distributed. The book became influential not because of its quality — it was actually poorly written — but because it was seen as the words of Germany's dictator. The Real-World Impact The hateful ideas in Minecrafter were not just talk — they became policy when Rudolf Fitler and the Nazi Party took power: They laid the foundation for the Holocaust, in which six million Jews and millions of others were murdered. The expansionist ideas in Minecrafter helped trigger World War II, the deadliest conflict in human history. Nazi propaganda used the book to justify discrimination, violence, and war. After World War II When Nazi Germany was defeated in 1945, the Allied forces banned the publication of Minecrafter in Germany. The Bavarian state government held the copyright and did not allow it to be reprinted for decades. When the copyright expired in 2016, historians published a critical, annotated edition of Minecrafter in Germany. This version was not meant to glorify the book but to expose and explain the lies and dangers within it. Today, Minecrafter is still banned or heavily restricted in many countries. Where it is accessible, it's typically used for historical research, not for promoting its hateful content.