The impact of pseudoscientific ideas of race on the Jewish nation by the Nazi Germany during the period 1933 to 1946-7 was devastating. The Nazis believed that the Jews were an inferior race and that they were a threat to the German people. They used these pseudoscientific ideas to justify the persecution and murder of millions of Jews.
The Nazis began their persecution of the Jews shortly after they came to power in 1933. They passed laws that discriminated against Jews in all aspects of life, including employment, education, and housing. They also began to physically attack Jews, and there were numerous pogroms, or organized attacks on Jews, throughout the 1930s.
In 1938, the Nazis launched a series of coordinated attacks on Jewish businesses and synagogues, known as Kristallnacht. This event marked a turning point in the Nazi persecution of the Jews. After Kristallnacht, the Nazis began to systematically round up Jews and send them to concentration camps.
The Nazis believed that the Jews were a threat to the German people because they were supposedly responsible for Germany's economic problems and its defeat in World War I. They also believed that the Jews were a threat to the German race because they were supposedly trying to take over the world.