Hi!
Deathworks
Well then, the collective mind of Nazi Germans was the evil genius that performed the holocaust while Hitler stood aside and yelled at random people?
Not quite. The Holocaust was born out of racist ideas that were quite common both in Germany and in the rest of the world at that time. Hitler basically repeated what the drunks and outcasts he had been living with had said and thus was able to become popular by basically saying what people wanted to hear. However, he also obviously believed in that stuff himself, obviously belonging just to that class of people. So, the Holocaust did not just fall from Heaven or wherever, but was created both by the people and Hitler.
However, I am questioning the term "genius" in that context. Where is the genial aspect in the Holocaust making Hitler's "achievement" praiseworthy as something requiring intelligence. He simply blamed the economic crisis, the lost war, and probably even the bad weather on a minority which was always blamed for bad things in the world he grew up in. It certainly does not take a genius to repeat what all the people around you are saying.
The economic success of Germany was, as I said, based on plans of his predecessors, so Hitler has effectively nothing to do with it.
The concentration camps were not his idea either. As far as I know, their theory was proposed by some English scientist and Hitler and his goons simply put that theory to practice.
His military campaign does not seem to have any outside sources as far as we know, so this is the first item in the list we can genuinely attribute to him (minus gadgets like the Stuka). And that campaign is fraught with enough strategic mistakes and inefficient hybris that "genius" is definitely not the term I would associate with it. "Moron" seems much more appropriate.
The Holocaust was an example of mass murder and as such a truly despicable crime, no doubt about that. But, why is there an "evil genius" at work? Riding on racist ideas people already have and offering easy answers to times of crisis does not take a great mind. And as I pointed out, the Germans at that time were not super democratic, freedom loving and tolerant people who somehow got seduced by a genius. They were still caught in thought patterns of monarchy/dictatorship and the seeming failure of the democratic republic in Weimar together with the economic hard times they saw with it made them long for a return to that kind of dictatorship. Putting it bluntly, they wanted someone to take their responsibilities and worries away. Someone who would tell them that life was ordered and everything had its place that should not be challenged rather than having a flexible world of accountable democracy. I don't think it takes a genius to exploit such an agenda, especially if you consider that this was not a hidden but a public sentiment.
I am sorry, but no matter how I turn it, I do not see why I should talk about a "genius" concerning Hitler's regime. The deeds certainly do not seem to warrant that.
Deathworks