Nazi Germany Had Admirers Among American Religious Leaders—and White Supremacy Fueled Their Support

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A woman in a black and white top stands in front of a tree and smiles.
Meghan Garrity

Assistant Professor of International Security and Law Meghan Garrity and her cowriter studied contemporary publications to see how the U.S. responded to the rise of Nazism in 1935, when Germany passed the Nuremberg Laws to strip Jews and others of their rights. They found sympathizers, a lot of them. See their report in The Conversation.