The Darkest Side of the Nazis Under Methamphetamine Use
Автор: Frontline War Memoirs
Загружено: 2025-06-25
Просмотров: 243560
Описание:
During World War II, the Third Reich relied not only on ideology and military power but also on chemistry. Methamphetamine, known as Pervitin, was widely distributed to German soldiers to eliminate fatigue, fear, and hunger. Under its effects, young men from the army and the Hitler Youth were transformed into tireless fighters, capable of marching for days without sleep, breaking through enemy lines, and carrying out orders with chilling detachment.
The regime promoted this pharmaceutical program with the support of doctors and scientists like Otto Ranke, who viewed exhaustion as an enemy to be conquered. Millions of doses were distributed before the invasion of France, and the drugged troops demonstrated superhuman endurance during the blitzkrieg. Methamphetamine not only enabled rapid military advances but also stripped soldiers of empathy and judgment, facilitating the execution of atrocities without remorse.
As the war dragged on and defeats mounted, drug consumption intensified. Pilots, tank crews, and even Hitler himself depended on combinations of stimulants and opioids to withstand the strain of conflict. In the Reich’s final months, new chemical formulas were tested in attempts to extend human endurance — often experimenting on prisoners. Methamphetamine became one of Nazism’s invisible weapons: effective, devastating, and profoundly inhuman.
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