World War I was not the product of a failed foreign policy. Rather it resulted from Bismarck's narrow social synthesis. This left many Germans out in the cold and produced a virulent class conflict. It was this class conflict that pushed the German Elite into the decision for war."
The decision of the German Elite to enter World War I was caused by the aggression of the country and its allies. The political, military and economical environments inside the Germany made the war possible, at least partly because of Bismarck's narrow social synthesis. These environments each contributed to the initiation of the war by the German Elite.
Bismarck, first Prime Minister of Prussia and then Chancellor of the German Empire that he established, set about the construction of Germany through created a state ruled by the German Elite.
Bismarck's welfare state, which led to the separation of classes, started in 1970 and provided social insurance for working-class people and later for all people in society. However, his motives were not humanitarian. Bismarck's explicit rationale for the program was to bind the people through chains of gratitude...
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