As shown, Hinsey is right that the other powers could not justify resisting Hitler up to, and including, Munich, but had to resist if he went further.
They were very lonely, those who resisted Hitler.
How she got from middle America to Berlin in the 1930's is the fascinating story Brysac tells in "Resisting Hitler."
Buried under the mound of data is a wonderfully dramatic story, but you would not necessarily know it from "Resisting Hitler."
As a Socialist, he saw there was no "alternative between resisting Hitler and surrendering to him" and it was better to resist.
Why did we bother resisting Hitler?
Why does the United States want to persecute Serbia, which resisted Hitler and gave more than it was ever asked?
Hitler's swift victories over France and the Low Countries deflated the will of the German military to resist Hitler.
"There is no real alternative between resisting Hitler and surrendering to him," he wrote.
Did other groups, not burdened by a Code of Canon Law, concordats or Vatican diplomacy, do better in resisting Hitler?