French Hatred in Germany?

What I am thinking of is the Nazis doing mass killings with the Einstazgruppum like they did in Russia and forced deportings millions upon millions across the Mediterranean Sea to Algeria. It won't be a pretty thing to witness by all means.
It wouldn't, yes.
The irony? This would actually make Algeria staying French feasible in the long-run. You could see a clear majority of French in Algeria, overall.
 
However, his "solution" to the Russian and Polish "problems" was noticeably harsher than towards the French "problem".

You know, if you were to judge solely from *Mein Kampf* you would think that the Czechs would be treated far worse than the Poles. No doubt this was a result of Hitler's Vienna background--the Vienna anti-Semitic gutter press which Hitler had read as a youth saw the Czech "menace" as second only to the Jewish. I noted at https://groups.google.com/d/msg/soc.history.what-if/KLkoU97zSiQ/N1VVtLD8O2AJ "*Mein Kampf* which only very infrequently mentions the Poles, is full of bitterly anti-Czech passages:

"The Royal House Czechized wherever possible, and it was the hand of the goddess of eternal justice and inexorable retribution which caused Archduke Francis Ferdinand, the most mortal enemy of Austrian-Germanism, to fall by the bullets which he himself had helped to mold. For had he not been the patron of Austria's Slavization from above !...

"Especially since Archduke Francis Ferdinand became heir apparent and began to enjoy a certain influence, there began to be some plan and order in the policy of Czechization from above. With all possible means, this future ruler of the dual monarchy tried to encourage a policy of deGermanization, to advance it himself or at least to sanction it. Purely German towns, indirectly through government officialdom, were slowly but steadily pushed into the mixed-language danger zones. Even in Lower Austria this process began to make increasingly rapid progress, and many Czechs considered Vienna their largest city.

"The central idea of this new Habsburg, whose family had ceased to speak anything but Czech (the Archduke's wife, a former Czech countess, had been morganatically married to the Prince-she came from circles whose anti-German attitude was traditional), was gradually to establish a Slavic state in Central Europe which for defense against Orthodox Russia should be placed on a strictly Catholic basis...

"The use of Czech pastorates and their spiritual shepherds was but one of the many means of attaining this goal, a general Slavization of Austria...Czech pastors were appointed to German communities; slowly but surely they began to set the interests of the Czech people above the interests of the churches, becoming germ-cells of the de-Germanization process...

"Without doubt the national force of resistance of the Catholic clergy of German nationality, in all questions connected with Germanism, was less than that of their non-German, particularly Czech, brethren...

"At that time Vienna was so strongly permeated especially with Czech elements that only the greatest tolerance with regard to all racial questions could keep them in a party which was not anti-German to begin with..."

Yet as harsh as Hitler's treatment of the Czechs was, it was less brutal than his treatment of the Poles--even though he had made relatively few anti-Polish statements before 1939. As for his attitude toward the French, it has to be remembered that *Mein Kampf* was written when anti-French hatred was intense in Germany, and was hardly confined to Nazis. The occupation of the Rhineland--and especially the use of African troops--was bitterly resented. In the 1930's, Nazi spokesmen tried to reassure the French that the anti-French rhetoric of *Mein Kampf* was ancient history. This of course was a deception, but it is true that the French had long since ceased to be the main villain-state to Hitler. They had to be defeated, but primarily to give Germany a free hand in the East.

In short, Hitler's attitude toward various nations changed over time. The major constants were, I think, hatred of the Jews, and a belief that Germany needed Lebensraum in the East. The last meant that any reconciliation with Russia could only be temporary.
 
Hi. I just made an account for a story I want to do and since that story deals with an alternate German Racial Theory that is against French and Romance People at large rather than the Slavs as they did in real life. So I'm wondering,how much was the level of French hatred( Latinphobia?) In Weimar Germany and Nazi Germany in real life? And what specific events could I use to twist the screws to make such a kind of Racial Theory realistic?
There had been pseudo science approaches in Germany after the war of 1871 to discredit the French as an "inferior race". The theorist argued that the French lost the war because of their racial inferiority. Also Generalplan West comes to my mind.
 
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