5.11.15

Petruvin, Hitler's Drug

 
 
 
 
 
 
Many people ask how it is that the Germans, particularly in World War 2, managed to be so effective and successful. Well, the answer to that is simpler than you might think. When Hitler assumed power in 1933, it caused a chain of events that will forever be remembered for the level of their destruction.
 
Hitler's rise to the Chancellorship brought with it unique complications; first, the people around him viewed him as weak and easy to manipulate, and President Hindenburg was still in power. The latter had never supported Hitler nor the Nazis, so it was with a heavy heart that he appointed him Chancellor on that fateful night.
 
 
 
 
 
Several candles were lit during the night Hitler assumed power; little did they know that by six years, an effective drug, petruvin, would fuel Nazi ambitions across Europe. Reports indicate that Hitler was a high consumer of substances, but evidence will never be confirmed truly if petruvin was his drug of preference.
 
The invasion of Poland in 1939 clearly illustrates this fact; the blitzkrieg policy clearly illustrates this fact.
 
The madness and effectiveness of relocating both soldiers and weapons through countless fronts in the Second World War was a clear indication of the effects of petruvin. Hitler, although not recorded in most Western historical references, was in conflict with Eva Braun at times partly because of his consumption of drugs.
 
Can human beings live and function successfully without drugs? The side effects of petruvin certainly do not compare with drugs in the modern day, such as cocaine and heroine. But would Hitler have managed to conquer Europe without come form of drugs for his troops and loyalists?
 
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