Jrrarglblarg
Unregistered
- Joined
- Nov 15, 2010
- Messages
- 12,673
non sequitur
How so? Seriously.
non sequitur
I should say, my revulsion is fresh from seeing the video of the bodies. The hangings of resistance fighters, the gas chambers, the pits filled with executed people, watching lines of people being shot and falling into them, the roundups, even when Germany didn't have the materiel to continue the war, it was a lost cause, and still they rushed to exterminate people.
I suppose I've learned something in this thread I already knew- forgiveness must happen. There really isn't any other choice.
But damn.
It's disturbing in exactly that way. Lots of atrocity photos.
I've studied WW2, the battles and such, but have always avoided watching this sort of documentary for just this reason.
Scores of hangings, videos of head-shot victims collapsing, thousands of bodies. Combat video, an amazing amount of combat video taken by both sides.
Overall, horrific. Bodies partially buried by collapsed buildings, etc.
Watching CNN it is appalling what the U.S. has done in Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan. It is horrible that so many American citizens ignored it, or were happy to benefit from it ($20 a barrel oil anyone).In another thread I'd mentioned watching the series The World at War.
It's appalling what the Nazis did, in every country they occupied. It's horrible that so many German citizens ignored it, or were happy to benefit from it.
I understand that an entire generation had been conditioned by Nazi propaganda to think Jewish people inferior, and the German people naturally better.
But the systematic atrocities. The infrastructure and bureaucracy built to carry out those atrocities.
Combined with the war just two decades gone by... how can the world ever forgive the German people??
Germany started WW1? That's not how I read it.
In another thread I'd mentioned watching the series The World at War.
It's appalling what the Nazis did, in every country they occupied. It's horrible that so many German citizens ignored it, or were happy to benefit from it.
I understand that an entire generation had been conditioned by Nazi propaganda to think Jewish people inferior, and the German people naturally better.
But the systematic atrocities. The infrastructure and bureaucracy built to carry out those atrocities.
Combined with the war just two decades gone by... how can the world ever forgive the German people??
I think by now that a more dispassionate examination of history, without the histrionics, is in order.
In another thread I'd mentioned watching the series The World at War.
It's appalling what the Nazis did, in every country they occupied. It's horrible that so many German citizens ignored it, or were happy to benefit from it.
I understand that an entire generation had been conditioned by Nazi propaganda to think Jewish people inferior, and the German people naturally better.
But the systematic atrocities. The infrastructure and bureaucracy built to carry out those atrocities.
Combined with the war just two decades gone by... how can the world ever forgive the German people??
And the feeling of national humiliation due to the treaty ending WW1- that was a big reason the Nazi party got popular, the promise of a strong Germany.
.Watching CNN it is appalling what the U.S. has done in Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan. It is horrible that so many American citizens ignored it, or were happy to benefit from it ($20 a barrel oil anyone).
How can the world ever forgive America?
Just sayin'
IXP
.That and the Great Depression - which was terrible in it's effects in Germany.
I'm pretty amazed at this OP, and I find it quite sad that people are still saying this kind of thing.
I have to accuse the OP in return of getting some kind of unearned sense of self-righteousness for having not been born German.
I think it comes down to a kind of sanctimoniousness that is also common in the "Shame on the kiddy-fiddling Catholics!", "Shame on the suicide death-cult Muzzies!" and "Shame on the Americans for napalming Viet Nam!"
Also, although you meant this in mitigation, it is not really true that "an entire generation had been conditioned by Nazi propaganda to think Jewish people inferior, and the German people naturally better." given that the Nazis only took power in 1933 and anti-Jewish laws came in almost immediately.
I think by now that a more dispassionate examination of history, without the histrionics, is in order.
.
I had a stamp book with German stamps from that era... Incredible prices..
1 million marks for A STAMP!
People took wheelbarrow loads of paper currency to the market, and the value of the paper changed day to day!
.The doc was quite clear that there was plenty of anti-Semitic feeling inGermanyEurope before Hitler came to power, and was gobbled up whole when Hitler instituted his policies- which were laid out very clearly in Mein Kampf, written quite a while before he came to power.
I'll address more of these posts tomorrow.
.
ftfy..
That's why the camps were quickly filled with Jews (among others) from every country the Germans occupied... mostly with the approval of the collaborative governments they installed.
I should say, my revulsion is fresh from seeing the video of the bodies. The hangings of resistance fighters, the gas chambers, the pits filled with executed people, watching lines of people being shot and falling into them, the roundups, even when Germany didn't have the materiel to continue the war, it was a lost cause, and still they rushed to exterminate people.
I suppose I've learned something in this thread I already knew- forgiveness must happen. There really isn't any other choice.
But damn.
I pray you to believe what I have said about Buchenwald. I reported what I saw and heard, but only part of it. For most of it, I have no words.
.Not Denmark.