[quote=Brovo] Hitler was a Catholic and makes repeated references to God in Mein Kampf. The Nazi Party made a Nazi Church that worshiped a white-power version of God after the Catholics pulled out of supporting them... ...Which, by the way, was not before Hitler was being abusive and dehumanizing towards various minorities such as Jews, atheists, LGBT, and communists. Oh no. In fact, the pope loved how he brought Germany back to its feet and into a god loving state, and really didn't stop with the love until he started mass murdering people and invading other sovereign states. It took it going that far before the Catholic church went "hmm, maybe this guy such a swell person..." Nazi soldiers were covered in Christian iconography, including most prominently various depictions of the cross. This in turn came from their Teutonic Knight heritage: Which was characterized by being a group of bloodthirsty megalomaniacs hellbent on purity through the mass murder of millions of people. Funny that.All of this information is easily found public information which you can read in any library or, hell, fuckit, I'm sure it's even on Wikipedia. It's very basic history. I shouldn't need to teach you that, should I?[/quote] The Catholic regions of Germany were the regions most prominently opposed to the Nazi Party, and subsequently least likely to vote for it. Catholicism had always been the enemy of hard-line German nationalists, going back to Bismarck's Kulturkampf. The Catholic Church's degrees of opposition to Hitler, from the beginning, far outweighed any and all degrees of cooperation, or even acceptance, at any point in his regime. You're forgetting how popular Hitler (or at least some of his views) were in Germany—the vast majority of citizens of the Weimar Republic were opposed to things like the Treaty of Versailles. If Hitler was Christian, he was a self-hating Christian.