Answer:
It doesn't affect anyone from today
Explanation:
Well one relationship would be Hitler fought in both of them for one. They differ because Hitler was a General In WW2 and he was a soldier in WW1. Umm... In WW2, thousands of prisoners were killed in camps, and in WW1 there was not.
(I am pretty sure, I am going off of memory here)
They were also fought differently because there were two different presidents during both wars.
In WW2 was the first base we had ever had bombed, ever in WW1 we didn’t.
There are some similarities and differences there. Hope this helps?
Answer:
- Jews in Germany weren't considered German citizens under German law
- Jews could not be married to non-Jewish citizens
- Jews may not employ in their households female citizens of German or related blood who are under 45 years old
Explanation:
Many of the laws/articles passed in the Nuremberg Laws were made in order to preserve the race in which Hitler believed was the "master race", also known as the Aryan race. Since the German dictator believed the Jews were the ones to blame for the effects of the Treaty of Versailles upon Germany and more, Hitler wanted to prevent the Jewish population in Germany from increasing. The Nuremberg Laws would later allow Hitler go through with his "Final Solution": the extermination of all Jews. Infamously recognized as the deadliest genocide in human history, the Holocaust claimed the lives of at least 11 million people.
Columbus, Ohio was the first president of the AFL