I am looking for sources to disprove the alt-right idea that Hitler was far left. I'm having a difficultly finding a source that goes into detail about the Nazis relation to industry/economy and how it changed overtime. If I am wrong and you can show me a source that shows he was a far left socialists, I would like to know as long as it isn't completely biased; only stating the NAZI acronym over and over. I believe it is very dangerous to call Hitler a socialist and giving affordable healthcare to people fascist, it seems like revisionism, and it seems common people are starting to believe it. I would like to know concise facts to the contrary I can bring up in an argument (unless I am completely wrong in my belief).
Starting with the economy, which is important in...well, basically all ideologies. Except one. People who think economy has any real importance in Nazi thinking has fundamentally misunderstood the ideology.
Marxist worldviews are inherently materialistic: they view the means of production as the wheel that drives history. To a Nazi, this is "vapid Jewish nonsense" as he or she believes that the wheel that drives history is race war. Nazism is a millenarist ideology which believes in a struggle of might that lasts forever.
As such, the economy is a means to an end, as economic reforms are useless for prosperity in the short to medium run, to a Nazi, and the only way to build lasting prosperity is, according to them, the plundering and murdering of as many people as possible. This is why the Nazis would sometimes implement collectivist policies, while also defending the entrenched position of private capital accumulation.
The entrepreneurial class of Weimar remained unchanged during the Third Reich and found itself much less constrained than it had under democracy.
Nazism doesn't care about the bureaucratic intricacies of State building, it is the ideology of action.
Historians have regularly disavowed claims that Hitler adhered to socialist ideology. Historian Richard Evans wrote of the Nazis’ incorporation of socialist into their name in 1920, “Despite the change of name, however, it would be wrong to see Nazism as a form of, or an outgrowth from, socialism….Nazism was in some ways an extreme counter-ideology to socialism”. Or as simply put by historian and Hitler expert Ian Kershaw, “Hitler was never a socialist".
Might as well consider that while Nazi shopfloor activists promised workers the world, Hitler and Göring told big business they would completely squash socialism and all its ideas during private business dinners and fundraising events.
The Nazi Party up until 1925 was incredibly small, after which Hitler took direct control and explicitly started telling left-wing members to can the socialism or else (he ordered Goebbels to drop it, which Goebbels later described as a conversion). The only place where the left wing of the party was actually strong was North Germany, and Hitler did his damnedest to curb them. Which he could do, because they were the absolute minority within the Nazi movement from the very start.