TLSMS93 wrote:What is surprising is that almost all the powers became what they are thanks to the sword, genocide and exploitation of the native population. But a larger development in Germany has been treated in a special way by historians and politicians. Germany should restrict itself to the free market, with no resources other than the brains of its people, “either export or die” so to speak. What is a fact is that even at the gates of Moscow and Stalingrad Germany refused to annex those territories, was content with the northeast of the General Government, how in the long term the Reichskomissariat would develop, whether full autonomy of its peoples or transformed into colonies there is no way to know because the war was lost, there was a Reichskomissariat in Norway and the Netherlands, so there is no way to talk about future atrocities without clear sources in this regard but historians think they have the right to predict the future and ensure that all would be exterminated or enslaved, sent to the Ural Mountains and that Hitler would create a lake around Moscow.
Yes and no. One can also say that any country had a ruling group lording it over other groups within a territory and those territories were increased by conquest and/or exchange with others. Some where added by primary settlement, though. Now the ruling group extracted goods in some way from the people in that territory. In feudal times they were tithing agricultural produce.
Lebensraum CAN include colonies or dependent areas, but it can include independent states as well, with whom one can trade.
As far as WW2 is concerned, they need to talk about 'future atrocities' just to have all gaps field with slogans and imagination that make their narrative on what supposedly happen more believable.
But there are also texts by Walther Funk on the 'future order for Europe'... And there it does appear that they wanted to leave the territories mostly in tact and organize them in a way they would trade with. But apparently the 'Polish Question was still open. Understandable, when one considers that the conflict with Poland was decisive for World War Two.