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・ Otto Steiger (economist)
・ Otto Steiger (writer)
・ Otto Steinbrinck
・ Otto Steinert
・ Otto Steinhäusl
・ Otto Stenroth
・ Otto Stern
・ Otto Stern School for Integrated Doctoral Education
・ Otto Stich
・ Otto Stobbe
・ Otto Stoll
・ Otto Stolz
・ Otto Stowe
・ Otto Strandman
・ Otto Stransky
Otto Strasser
・ Otto Struve
・ Otto Struve A
・ Otto Struve Telescope
・ Otto Stumpf
・ Otto Stuppacher
・ Otto Suhr
・ Otto Sump
・ Otto Sundgot
・ Otto Sutermeister
・ Otto Sutro
・ Otto Sverdrup
・ Otto Sverdrup Engelschiøn
・ Otto Sydow
・ Otto Szabó


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Otto Strasser : ウィキペディア英語版
Otto Strasser

Otto Johann Maximilian Strasser (also (ドイツ語:Straßer), see ß; 10 September 1897 – 27 August 1974) was a German politician and member of the Nazi Party. Otto Strasser, together with his brother Gregor Strasser, was a leading member of the party's left-wing faction, and broke from the party due to disputes with the ‘Hitlerite’ faction. He formed the Black Front, a group intended to split the Nazi Party and take it from the grasp of Hitler. This group also functioned during his exile and World War II as a secret opposition group.
==Biography==

Born at Windsheim in Bavaria, Otto Strasser took an active part in World War I. On 2 August 1914 he joined the Bavarian Army as a volunteer. He rose through the ranks to lieutenant and was twice wounded.〔Strasser, Otto. ''Germany Tomorrow''. Jonathan Cape LTD, 1940, p. 11. p. 12.〕 He returned to Germany in 1919 where he served in the Freikorps that put down the Bavarian Soviet Republic which was organized on the principles of workers' councils. At the same time, he also joined the Social Democratic Party. In 1920 he participated in the opposition to the Kapp Putsch. However, he grew increasingly alienated with that reformist-socialist party's stand, particularly when it put down a workers' uprising in the Ruhr, and he left the party later that year. In 1925 he joined the NSDAP, in which his brother had been a member for several years, and worked for its newspaper as a journalist, ultimately taking it over with his brother. He took the 'socialist' element in the party's programme seriously enough to lead a very socialist-inclined faction of the party in northern Germany together with his brother Gregor and Joseph Goebbels. His faction advocated support for strikes, nationalisation of banks and industry, and — despite acknowledged differences — closer ties with the Soviet Union. Some of these policies were opposed by Hitler, who thought they were too radical and too alienating from parts of the German people (middle class and some Nazi-supporting nationalist industrialists in particular), and the Strasser faction was defeated at the Bamberg Conference (1926), with Joseph Goebbels joining Hitler. Humiliated, he nonetheless, along with his brother Gregor, continued as a leading Left Nazi within the Party, until expelled from the NSDAP by Hitler in 1930.

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