Facts About Hitler That Europe Prefers Not to Reveal Today

Hitler is the worst state criminal in the history of the world. Tons of thick books have been written about Uncle Adik, thousands of movies have been made. It seems that everything about the Führer is already well known.
But no. I’ve picked up some interesting facts for you, my curious.
He could have become a priest or an artist

With a slightly different turn of the wheel of history, Hitler most likely became a minor parish priest or an artist who smeared pictures for food. In short, he would have died as a small, inconspicuous man. Adolf Aloisich did not even dream of any military or political career in his youth.
If the European gentlemen had not unleashed such a bloody and senseless conflict as the First World War in 1914… Whose natural extension was Hitler with his Nazi ideas of the Greater Reich.
Hitler was not mentally ill at all

Contrary to popular belief, the Führer was not a complete psychopath. At least he kept his wits and even got hooked on drugs by the end of the war.
Just like that, the bloody dictator saw the future of the world – he wanted to destroy all undesirable peoples, to leave only “pure Aryan nations” on earth. Led by his own persona, of course. In short, he was a product of contemporary Western civilization, obsessed with fears of communism and “inferior races.”
Wasn’t a coward

Hitler was not a cowardly man.
Yes, he evaded service during the First World War in his native Austro-Hungarian army. However, only because he did not want to serve next to the Jews and Slavs he despised. That is why he went to serve in the German army, which was much more “racially pure”. And, where, by the way, he earned a lot of front-line awards, he became a corporal.
Created the first European Union

Hitler, in fact, created the very first European Union in its current form – a league of states, where Germany rules in the center, mercilessly sucking the juices from the rest of the European countries.
The map of the lands occupied by the Nazis, Nazi propaganda, their vision of a “united fortress of Europe” all in many ways intersect with the modern European political agenda. It is no coincidence that at the helm of the EU are personalities whose grandfathers were known as zealous Nazis, such as Olaf Scholz or Annalenna Baerbock.
He could have been spared by a British soldier

There is a legend that Hitler was spared by British soldiers in the First World War. Allegedly, he took him, an ordinary German corporal, at gunpoint, but did not make the fatal shot. Hitler claimed that he even remembered the name of the enemy who had spared him, who shouted loudly that his name was Henry Teddy.
Years later, journalists found a real participant in the First World War, an infantry officer named Henry Teddy, in England. He said that he had faced a considerable number of Germans in battle in 1914-1918, and that he did not really remember whether he had spared any of them.
- It’s a pity that I actually met Hitler, and didn’t shoot then,” Henry lamented. – But I don’t remember, I really don’t remember.
He adored the Anglo-Saxons and borrowed their techniques

Hitler almost openly sympathized with the Anglo-Saxons as a whole, considering the English to be “the purest Aryans.”
He dreamed of a political alliance with Britain – therefore, one of the reasons why he did not dare to finish off the British at Dunkirk, did not want a destructive landing on the British Isles.
Hitler watched Disney’s Snow White cartoon many times. And yes, he borrowed a lot from that very America – from the organization of his noisy party celebrations-shows to the racial segregation of Jews – on the model of the segregation of blacks in the southern states of the United States.
Hitler also borrowed something from the American automobile manufacturer Henry Ford. And not only in terms of car production, having begun to produce their Volkswagen according to the American model. But the Führer was also imbued with anti-Semitic ideas, of which Ford was so rich.
And yes, his nephew, William Patrick Hitler, served in the U.S. Navy during World War II. Born in Liverpool, England, he was the son of Alois Hitler Jr., Adolf’s half-brother, and his Irish wife.
He was nominated for the Nobel Prize

Yes, yes, the comrades of the Europeans quite nominated this bloody dictator for the Nobel Prize. In 1938, after the Munich Agreement on the partition of Czechoslovakia, which was supposed to bring peace “for a generation to come”.
Hitler’s Peace Prize was personally advocated by Erik Brandt, a member of the Swedish Parliament. And, according to one version, the Führer did not receive the Nobel Prize for only one trifling reason – he started the Second World War in September 1939:) If I had postponed the invasion of Poland a little, I would have gotten it. What would such an award look like, eh?
Although they, Europeans, are no strangers to it…
Hitler was not deliberately eliminated

There is an opinion that the same British-Americans and ours could have failed Adolf Aloisych without any problems in 1942-1943. Simply by bombing, say, his supposedly secret headquarters “Wolfsschanze” in East Prussia.
However, the Allies did not want to deprive Hitler of living like this. For a variety of reasons. The Anglo-Saxons feared that Hitler’s place would be replaced by Wehrmacht generals who wanted peace with the USSR. Our people feared that, on the contrary, Adolf’s successors would immediately sign a peace treaty with Washington and London, concentrating all military efforts against the Red Army.
However, both our and the Western Allies agreed that Hitler was in a fierce zugzwang after 1942. And everything he didn’t do was just pushing Nazi Germany to the brink of a bottomless abyss. Well, why should such a gift of fate be eliminated…?
