I understand why you think that. I mean that is the popularized version, since we paint it as being a good war. That is however not the reality of the situation. You have to understand that our war department was working full time on the propaganda, we covered up our own atrocities, while at the same time claiming the nazis did things like make lampshades out of human flesh, and deploy portable bone grinding devices... both of which were proven false (look it up).Melkor-III said:Thuremancer, you have quite an interesting mind. Your disgust of hippies, pacifists and inhabitants of the middle-east display a quite fascinating mixture of fundamentalism, value objectivism (but still making statements hinting at value nihilism), conservatism, islamophobia and glorification/justification of mass-murder, while still claiming that the social progression of the later part of the 19th century was for the better.
All these subject cannot be addressed as I lack the obsessive interest or belief that you are ready to change opinion required to formulate a response. I would, however, like to address your historical account of WWII and how extermination was supposedly used to rid the world of fascism.
On numerous occasions, you, stated that Nazism was destroyed by hunting them all down and citing this as an example of how massive, or perhaps even genocidal force, is necessary to destroy an enemy that is not simple soldiers and and leaders, but an ideology integrated into the very nature of a culture. Example:
Therumancer said:Groups like "The Volkssturm" and "Hitler Youth" didn't evaporate, we killed them all off. It's just we don't bother to put the pictures of the corpse piles we made and talk about what bastards we were in order to win in our historical records.My problem with this representation is that it is misleading. The Third Reich was not destroyed in the manner in which you propose. Yes, large potions of the army and especially the SS was either killed in battle or hunted down after the war (but not by death-squads, but by the judicial apparatus of the occupational forces). The civilian Nazis, however, where not killed with the intent of destroying the "infected culture" of a Germany comprising of a majority of Nazis.Therumancer said:To put things into another perspective, I again point to World War II. The Nazis were defeated by demonizing them beyond all reality, and then relentlessly exterminating them, including women and children. It went from a huge, international movement, to a tiny underground fringe after the war. We spent decades hunting down survivors even after the war ended.
Nazi Germany is not an example of cultural genocide through murder and military might. Rather, it is a perfect example of reconciliation and progression. Germany was not destroyed till no Nazis were left in this world, rather Germany was damaged and rebuilt in a new image. By economic assistance, constitutional reform, re-education, and successive lifting of restrictions, Germany was shaped in a way so Nazism would fade from the mind of Germans, not though a bullet between the eyes, but though other means.
In the years following the commencement of occupation, the allies realised that an extermination or even a general imprisonment of all Nazis was impossible without a humanitarian tragedy. For this reason, much of the bureaucracy (comprised of mostly Nazi officials) was left standing. Instead of murder, the allies utilized what is referred to as "Denazification", a process which was not always morally sound but far from the ?killing of women and children" that you speak of.
Following this, Germany was integrated into the broader European community and "the Marshall Plan" secured its reconstruction, thus reducing the resentment that had caused Nazism to rise following WWI. As an important step, the west Germans where allowed membership into NATO, turning foe into friend.
If anything, Nazi Germany teaches us that victory is not achieved by permanently viewing a group as the enemy, but rather to be capable of abandoning hatred. To win hearts and mind and to change people, not to kill them.
Finally, concerning your idea that "Hitler Youth" was not dispelled, but killed. I would like to point out that the Pope, Benedict XVI, was a "Hitler Youth" -- although an unwilling one-- and an infantryman in the German army before his desertion. The people believing in, or associated with, Nazism where not the permanent "them", but became "us". Let that be a lesson while making inaccurate parallels to contemporary conflicts.
What's more with war powers in effect, a lot of information was surpressed for the duration of the conflict, but allowed to be released later. This includes war time photos of American troops standing around corpse piles, executing people, and doing all kinds of really screwed up things. They are almost exactly like the ones you see in books like "The Holocaust Chronicle' except in reverse. If you dig you can find them on various neo-nazi and holocaust denier sites (I'm reluctant to go hunting and post links to sites like that however). Likewise there are books full of photos like this, however they aren't generally carried. You pretty much need to know specifically what your looking for, and request it. One of those situations where if you don't know about it, you can't get it, but if nobody can get it, how do you know about it? Typically information like this can be found on again, neo-nazi sites and the like, but you can also get such things from school iibraries if you ask. When I attended Three Rivers Community College one of my history professors made a point out of us taking a look at a few unmarked books full of pictures that they were keeping around.
Understand that World War II was not the peachy thing history presents it as. The Nazis were a huge international movement (not just in Germany) and even after Pearl Harbour a lot of people wanted to embrace "peace at any price" and isolationist sentiments. A lot of people wanted to derail the war, but the goverment used war powers to prevent people from doing all the kind of crap you see in the current conflict, that didn't however prevent a lot of them trying to assemble propaganda, taking pictures, and producing things which were not released until well after the conflict ended. Pretty much an object lesson in how information control is part of fighting a successful war. As we won, we got to write the history books, and decide what went into them.
The point isn't that we were wrong to fight the war, it's that we pretty much exterminated the Nazis. It's an inconveinent truth in the case of arguments like this, since our beliefs on how we fought have influanced our current engagement doctrine, and more or less caused us to lose every war we've been in since (excepting a few things like Grenada) even if our military hasn't been defeated.
Like anything there are always going to be survivors no matter how much they are hunted down, and in general anyone associated with the Nazis is going to try and deny having been involved willingly. I mean it's not like the pope is going to say "oh yeah, I loved the Nazis, and being part of the Hitler Youth was the highlight of my life" if it was true. Just like in France or Romania everyone will talk about having relatives who were part of the resistance, when in reality both nations more or less embraced the Nazis (Germany didn't have the manpower to occupy them itself while fighting other wars) after at most token resistance. Indeed a bit criticism of France, and a lot of what's behind the comments about France surrendering is that France surrendered to the Nazis, and while it did have a resistance it was GREATLY exagerrated, and backed them as they seemed to be winning. Later when the tide changed France more or less switched sides again and joined the Allies because if it didn't it was going to get steamrolled even if Germany won in the end. There is diplomacy involved though because of the way how the whole thing played out, and France is not portrayed as being an Axis nation, despite the fact that Germany simply couldn't have occupied it like in the movies while doing all of the other things they did. By many snide portrayals France surrendered twice during World War II, and are accused of basically being backstabbing oppertunists ever since Vicintrix and the gauls betrayed the Romans. At least that's how I wound up learning a lot of it.
Another interesting fact that is of course missing about World War II is how we pretty much started the cold war by screwing the Russians out of paranoia. We pretty much raped the German rocket factories and recruited a lot of their top scientists, while handing the Russians a few V-1s and V-2s and saying "here is your share of their tech". This didn't go over too well. The Berlin wall being raised in part due to this conflict, but also to try and prevent Germany from recovering. Neither the Russians or the US wanted the other side to annex it for that purpose.
Or basically to cover things in brief, we pretty much won World War II and got a big lead on the Russians technologically (which remained through the cold war) by simply being the biggest bastards. Of course fighting building to building and slaughtering civilians, backstabbing our Russian allies out of paranoia (which was admittedly probably the wise thing to do), doesn't make us look good in our own history books, so we spin everything in other directions.
This is incidently why a lot of europeans get irritated by the American portrayal of history that we were angelic saviors riding down on beams of light, who comported ourselves like a group of White Knights. We beat the Germans by being nastier than they were, and the Russians by being even more cynical and ruthless than they were right from the beginning.
I don't expect you to agree with me, but that's pretty much how I learned things, but then again I think school is a lot more politically correct nowadays, and I don't think many teachers even in college are big on debunking what you learned in high school, and a pragmatic analysis of warfare nowadays.