To complete question, the passage your question is referring to from Jacob Riis's “how the Other Half Lives” is written below
"With no steady hand to guide him, the boy takes naturally to idle ways. Caught in the street by the truant officer, or by the agents of the Children’s Societies, peddling, perhaps, or begging, to help out the family resources, he runs the risk of being sent to a reformatory, where contact with vicious boys older than himself soon develop the latent possibilities for evil that lie hidden in him. The city has no Truant Home in which to keep him, and all efforts of the children’s friends to enforce school attendance are paralyzed by this want. The risk of the reformatory is too great." – Jacob Riis”
<h2>Further Explanation</h2>
I will select three sentences and argue from the point of view presented by Jacob Riis from the passage
- The first sentence from the passage means that a child is performing an action without his parent guidance. It also means there was no one to put him on the right track
- The second sentence means that the child was arrested because of his actions, which also implies that he faced the consequences of his actions.
- The third sentence means that there is a house in a city that has no guard and that all the children in the city appeared to be forced to get a quality education.
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There are several crucial factors which led to his rise to power.
Several historians have argued that the Great Depression led to his eventual rise and the defrachising of the German populous towards the Weimar Government. Hence it can be argued that National Socialist (the Nazis) came to power more because of their enemies’ weakness and failures than because of their own strengths.
Other historians has said of Hitler and Nazi Party's ideology and promises made to the Germans that made them so popular in the elections. In the period 1930-1935, Nazi party saw a constant and steep rise in votes for them, demonstrating their popularity of their Nationalist movement.
Another major factor would be Hitler's personal charisma and political wit. Afterall, Hindenburg (who was the President in 1933) could have vetoed Nazi parties movement for power, and the communist party saw votes increasing as well between 1929-1933. What led to the exponential increase of support of Hitler can thus be said to be arising from his personality. Hindenburg and the German political elite needed someone charismatic like Hitler to unite the masses, while at the same time, Hitler's widely popular and demagogue style nailed down the political elite need for him (even though they admitted that did not like Hitler).
There are a multitude of reasons which saw Hitler's rise to power, and depending how you argue it, any of the above 3 can be the most important one. And all 3 of the factors I touched above helped Hitler in one way or another to rise to power as the Chancellor and later Fuhrer of Germany.<span />
It weakened the federalists party, but the philosophy of a strong national government was carried on by the war hawks,who were part of the republican party.