Yes, but nuanced. The Nazi Party was the largest party in the parliament, proportionally to their votes. They came into power democratically. In order to ensure this will never happen again, jews had to find ways to police democracy. Of course, criticism of democracy such as the ''Tyranny of the Majority'' of French aristocrat and diplomat Alexis de Tocqueville’s
Democracy in America (1835–40) has been around for a long time. What if 51% is convinced that red haired women are witches, will they be allowed to burn them because they are the majority? What if 51% convinced that Zevists are evil, can they confiscate our property and exile us? No, the majority vote is not the most important thing. In constitutional democracies, individual rights and freedoms such as the right to life, freedom of religion and conscience, freedom of thought and expression, access to education, healthcare, work, housing, and information are protected under the rule of law, the separation of powers, and an independent judiciary. Constitutional democracy is supposed to protect our rights even from the majority. Of course, this protection depends on a strong constitution and the rule of law, and it is also important which law is applied. Not Islamic law or inquisition law, obviously. Anyways I'm rambling.
Jews learned their lessons when people elected the Nazis through democracy. Yes, democracy has been criticized since the Athenians invented it. Socrates criticizes democracy in Plato's Republic. However, jews do it to arm themselves with more tools. Austrian jew Karl Hopper's The Paradox of Tolerance (1945) ''Democracy should not tolerate the ones who will not be tolerant to others (others=jews here)'' and German jew Karl Loewenstein's Militant Democracy (1937). This is rather complicated. Militant democracy is good when it is employed to prevent muslims from forming political parties even though it defies people's right to freedom of expression and get elected, however, Militant Democracy is not good when it is employed by jews to eliminate their enemies from democratic elections. I actually explained this in greater detail in
Democracy, Deliberative Democracy, and Ad Hominem. If I had a nickel for every time I referred you to Turkish forum, I'd have 2 nickels, which isn't a lot but it's weird it happened twice in the same thread. Sorry about that.