Why was there little to no crime in Nazi Germany?
Why was there little to no crime in Nazi Germany?
Discussing the crime rate at home while millions were deported and killed in the name of Germany is absolutely ridiculous.
But this issue is brought up by so many Nazi-Admirers, that it’s time to take a closer look.
Let me put two things first:
The Nazis used to pride themselves on their “zero tolerance” regarding crime, particularly "no questions asked and short work done".
You may catch and imprison more “bad guys”, but you also wrongly imprison many "The good guys" which are never mentioned in crime statistics.
Subtract the “false positives” from the “positives” (the rightfully incarcerated minus the innocent incarcerated), to get an idea of the quality of law enforcement.
Going on a hunt: An Ss- or SA-member (“Stormtrooper”) was added to every police patrol to make sure, political opponents received the right treatment. The Incarceration-Rate skyrocketed.
The Nazis expanded the grounds for imprisoning people to the point that masses of people had to be locked up in extra camps.
Let aside the question whether that was legal and whether they were criminals by definition or not. There was a sharp increase in the overall incarceration rate that went unmentioned.
This having said, let’s take a look at the numbers.
Did the Nazi methods lower the crime rate?
No, they didn’t. Crimes such as murder, theft, etc. continued to exist under the Nazis. The number of violent crimes increased during the war.
Juvenile delinquency, which was already increasing in the Weimar Republic, remained unaffected by the youth policy of the National Socialists.
The assumption "at least there was no crime" is completely wrong.
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