Who got sick of Adolf Hitler's behavior first?
If you're attempting to identify who hated Adolf Hitler the most, you're not going to find that answer in some dusty history textbook. You're going to want to look for a tiny, tense home in Austria, where Hitler's own father, Alois, was through with the little boy long before he was born.
Alois was the original stickler: he was a customs official with a uniformed job as well as plenty of concerns about order and proper behavior. Alois had hoped to raise a son who would one day take over his dull, monotonous job; instead he got an only child, born with odd, artistic, "Nancy-boy" sensibilities who was always wanting to be with mom, daydreaming about art, etc. In Alois's eyes, he had also raised a failure.
This was not simply an issue between father and son, it was a power struggle to see who could hold the other in a psychological prison.
Alois called Adolf a "Nancy-boy," resorted to swinging belts in order to beat him and cleanse his son of his softness, and attempted to beat into his son some sense of duty rather than simply obsession. Adolf, on the other hand, retaliated by failing school, giving the middle finger to his father's legacy, and by letting his grades suffer in the same manner.Alois died in 1903, presumably believing that Adolf was a dreamer who would never succeed in anything and that he was a wasted effort. Ironically, he created exactly that which he feared most: a son who would defy a normal life while using resentment and ambition as fuel.


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