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20 votes
20 votes
Why did the Nazis kill mentally or physically disabled people?

A.
They believed that the suffering of these people should end.
B.
They didn’t want their genetics to be passed on.
C.
They were asked to do so by the families of the victims.
D.
They did not want these people to be cured.

User Bencallis
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2 Answers

19 votes
19 votes

Answer: B

Explanation: The Nazi persecution of persons with disabilities in Germany was one component of radical public health policies aimed at excluding hereditarily “unfit” Germans from the national community. These strategies began with forced sterilization and escalated toward mass murder. The most extreme measure, the Euthanasia Program, was in itself a rehearsal for Nazi Germany’s broader genocidal policies.

The ideological justification conceived by medical perpetrators for the destruction of the “unfit” was also applied to other categories of “biological enemies,” most notably to Jews and Roma (Gypsies). Compulsory sterilization and “euthanasia,” like the “Final Solution,” were components of a biomedical vision which imagined a racially and genetically pure and productive society, and embraced unthinkable strategies to eliminate those who did not fit within that vision.

Throughout this Special Focus page and its related links, you will see translations of terms used during the Nazi regime; please note that although many of these terms are unacceptable or offensive today, they are included here as examples of Nazi terminology and the propaganda campaign used to justify mass murder.

User Kimi Chiu
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23 votes
23 votes

Answer:

It is most likely B I could be wrong let me know If I am

User Bonson
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