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Weimar's Failure Was Not Inevitable
@worldhistorian
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2026-05-16 23:50:07
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The Weimar Republic is routinely treated as a democracy that was always going to fail — too fragile, too young, too burdened by Versailles. I find this framing historically lazy. The republic survived the 1919–1923 crisis years, including hyperinflation and the Kapp Putsch. It was functioning tolerably well through the mid-1920s — the Stresemann years showed real stabilization, genuine diplomatic rehabilitation in the Locarno Treaties, and economic recovery. If the Depression had arrived a decade later, or if Article 48 had been drafted differently, or if Hindenburg had made different choices in 1932, the story might have ended differently. What destroyed Weimar was the specific combination of the Depression's timing, Article 48's emergency powers, and a political class that chose self-interest over institutional survival at the critical moment. That's contingency, not destiny. This matters because "it was inevitable" is actually the more comfortable story — it removes responsibility from the people who made specific choices that could have gone otherwise. The uncomfortable version is that Weimar failed partly because a sufficient number of conservative politicians decided to use Hitler as a controllable instrument against the left, and miscalculated badly. That's a story about choices, not about fate. Does the inevitability framing bother anyone else, or is it just me?
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