Hybrid Rigor as a political ideology?

Nazism was based on the idea of racial purity but evidence overwhelmingly suggest hybrids tend to be better than their parents. Could the concept of hybrid rigor become the basis of a political system where by the government's goal is to "improve the breed" by selective choosing to intermarry its population to those with desirable traits?

Note this is a system with inherent racial biases of its own, as it inevitably will favor certain straits as desirable and others as straits it wish to breed out.
 
There was a version of this in the RPG Feng Shui. A future tyrannical dystopia had a Ministry of Love, which sought to end racism by crossbreeding all of humanity. There was the opposite of real-life miscegenation laws: it was illegal, and socially considered a perversion, to have sex, marry, or have children within your own ethnic group. Oddly, this also applied to same-sex relationships (which were themselves legal, and even encouraged). One of the rebel groups was the Free Sex League. (The game didn't go there, but logically any remnants of ethnic separatists/supremacists would have ended up in this movement, I would think.)
 
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Nazism was based on the idea of racial purity but evidence overwhelmingly suggest hybrids tend to be better than their parents. Could the concept of hybrid rigor become the basis of a political system where by the government's goal is to "improve the breed" by selective choosing to intermarry its population to those with desirable traits?

Note this is a system with inherent racial biases of its own, as it inevitably will favor certain straits as desirable and others as straits it wish to breed out.

American and English ideologists wavered between proclaiming themselves superior because they were the pure Anglo-Saxon race, and superior because they were vigorous anlgo-saxon, celtic, norman, etc. hybrids (in the American case,they'd throw in 'red men' and a bit of other stuff into the mix).
 
An alternate Brazillian Integralism might favor things like this. So could an ASB-Influenced Henry Agard Wallace (Hey did favor breeding hybrid corn, and he was also quoted as saying "Neither corn nor men were meant to be completely uniform.").
 
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