Germany remembers the victims, has zero statues of the perpetrators of evil.
The South glorifies the losing evil side, viciously villifies the victims.
can we stop acting like germany is perfect and ashamed and never racist any more
This also isn’t really true…
A) The allies destroyed a lot of stuff to prevent it being used as shrines to the Nazis – so not having these things isn’t exactly a choice Germany has made cause they regret stuff anyway.
B) there are absolutely still Nazi statues in Germany…most (but not all) of them have had the swatzikas knocked off but that isn’t the same as not having the statues at all. The ones that are all over the shop are the eagles and there’s also stuff like the statues of the Aryan ideal still at the Olympic Stadium (or were until very recently). I’m pretty sure there’s another Olympics themed statue in Hanover that’s doing a Nazi salute that’s still there etc. So monuments built to the Nazis maybe not but they have kept those built by the Nazis.
“How can we expect righteousness to prevail when there is hardly anyone willing to give himself up individually to a righteous cause? Such a fine sunny day, and I have to go, but what does my death matter, if through us thousands of people are awakened and stirred to action?”
Quote from Traudl Junge, Hitler’s private secretary from 1942-45:
Of course, the terrible things I heard from the Nuremberg Trials, about the six million Jews and the people from other races who were killed, were facts that shocked me deeply. But I wasn’t able to see the connection with my own past. I was satisfied that I wasn’t personally to blame and that I hadn’t known about those things. I wasn’t aware of the extent. But one day I went past the memorial plaque which had been put up for Sophie Scholl in Franz Josef Strasse, and I saw that she was born the same year as me, and she was executed the same year I started working for Hitler. And at that moment I actually sensed that it was no excuse to be young, and that it would have been possible to find things out.
”[Denmark] is the only case we know of in which the Nazis met with open native resistance, [and] the result seems to have been that those exposed to it changed their minds. They themselves apparently no longer looked upon the extermination of a whole people as a matter of course. They had met resistance based on principle, and their ‘toughness’ had melted like butter in the sun; they had even been able to show a few timid beginnings of genuine courage.
That the ideal of ‘toughness’…was nothing but a myth of self-deception, concealing a ruthless desire for conformity at any price, was clearly revealed at the Nuremberg Trials, where the defendants accused and betrayed each other and assured the world that they ‘had always been against it’–or claimed, as Eichmann was to do, that their best qualities had been ‘abused’ by their superiors. (In Jerusalem, he accused ‘those in power’ of having abused his ‘obedience.’) …The atmosphere had changed, and although most of them must have known that they were doomed, not a single one of them had the guts to defend the Nazi ideology.”
Hannah Arendt, “Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil.”
I want everyone to go read that link about Danish resistance, please, because it’s a very good example of what to emphasize:
Denmark burned their lists of Jewish Danish citizens so that the Nazis couldn’t take it, and they burned their entire Navy so the Nazis couldn’t use it.
“Imagine if people had been going ‘don’t fight hate with hate’ back when Hitler was around.”
Fam…let me tell you bout Poland.
Let me tell you about how the entire rest of Europe sat ack and watched the invasion of Poland because they thought it would be “improper” to send military aid. How they were unwilling to enforce the treaties that Germany was breaking, because that would make them “just as bad.” They sat back and wrote strongly worded letters while fascists grew in power because they didn’t want to dirty their hands. They thought reasonable discussion and politics would be enough to stop a fascist dictator from rising to power.
Spoiler alert: it wasn’t enough.
like yes, people literally did try that argument then too.
Everywhere there’s fascists there are fascist apologists hiding under the guise of pacifism, ready to enable their shit and demonize resistance.
“America First” was their isolationist cover, and then it became the motto of the KKK, and now it’s the slogan of the Orange Nightmare.
“America First” Makes America Worst
Guys, as regards “the entire rest of Europe sat back and watched the invasion of Poland” … you are aware the invasion of Poland is … why the Allies … declared war on Germany and started WWII? And marks the end of Appeasement as policy at least from the French & British governments?
I mean, there certainly were still people in Britain who wanted Appeasement to continue – including the communist party by the way – and the USA took another two years to join in, but the invasion of Poland, September 1939 is literally the starting pistol of WWII. But by all means don’t let the facts get in the way of your argument.
Mate, Utterly aside from “we aren’t complicit in the invasion of Poland just all the other countries prior to that” as a positive being one of the worst arguments I’ve ever heard. (Mostly because yes that complicity is still there).
Britian and France declared war then Poland was given so little actual help during the invasion that this period is called the phoney war, so what actually is your point here?
There were already 6 concentration camps by the time of that declaration of war – no one comes off well in discussions about appeasement and similar post war declaration policies, ‘eventually we actually did something’ is not good enough.
Cai my argument here is this, when you’re talking about the evils of the appeasement policy it is ridiculous to choose as your prime example of appeasement the event that caused the end of appeasement. If OP wanted to talk about how Poland specifically got fucked over by appeasement, by far the better example is what you mention in the tags, when Stalin invades and basically takes over and the other Allies do nothing. [I guess we can speculate at our leisure why tumblr doesn’t like so much to talk about the Soviets doing shitty things.]
[Digression. If I remember my military history correctly, Britain in particular in 1939 did not have the capacity to launch a ground offensive, their land army was really weak at that time. They started naval & some air battles from the very beginning of the phoney war, I know less about the French situation but given just how powerful the German army was, the phoney war is IIRC the Allies trying to actually get their armed forces mobilised and even slightly ready to fight the war they just started. So could France have mobilised faster & done an all-out attack on Germany in the 5 weeks it took them to conquer Poland? Maybe but probably that leads to France getting conquered a year earlier. I mean the Allies basically lose on the land war until about 1943, they were pretty out-gunned. So it’s “you ought to try at all costs” vs “do what helps win the war long-term”.]
I’m not denying that a] appeasement was a terrible policy, b] the phoney war did not see much fighting, or c] Poland got probably as a nation the worst deal out of everyone in WWII. I just disagree with the characterisation of the response to the invasion of Poland as trying to stop it by politics or thinking it would be impolite to start a war when 2 of the 3 major regional powers respond by ending political discussions and declaring war.
But the facts that a) it took until the invasion of Poland to actually declare war b) the non-engagement in Poland even after appeasement as an official policy had ended or generally summed up as ‘what happened around the invasion of Poland’ which is what that post is talking about (and not appeasement and only appeasement) are extremely relevant to the point that a lot of people (some of them in positions of power) were against getting involved and were then subsequently against getting further involved. The reaction of people in the rest of Europe to that declaration of war as ‘this is too far’ is also extremely relevant.
[Digressions and such: I don’t think you are in favour of appeasement as a policy in the 30s (although ‘i never directly said that’ is a silly argument – I am sorry if you took that I thought you were from what I said but then ‘i never said that’ either xD). I do however think you are buying into this general ‘we did as much as we could’/’we went above and beyond’ attitude much of Europe does to discuss the nazis, and the denial of complicity that comes with that. Britain not having the troops would hold a lot more water as an argument if they weren’t simultaneously turning away refugees in this regard for example – this is not making sacrifices now for the long term, that’s actively fucking people over. And, I can absolutely hold small countries (and indeed all countries) to the standards set and proved to be possible by say, Denmark or Albania. And I can hold Britain/France/Russia/the US/etc to the standard that they should and could have done so much more. Denmark is an interesting example as they both successfully prevented some of the worst effects of Nazism (to the extent they could given the countries resources) and post-war hold the position (more or less) of ‘we could have and should have done more’. Most countries did/do neither, that includes Britain, Russia and France (France handle the actions of their country during before and directly after ww2 atrociously – (independent) Latvia, as that’s the example you gave, also beat out France arguably because that’s not very hard – Poland struggle they are also god awful at this, and it’s saying shit like ‘Poland got the worst deal’ that allows them to get away with that btw). In many many countries the policies following the official abandonment of appeasement are still extremely collaboraty or at the very least going as little out of your way to help people as possible (particularly in the case of Britain) and that is still a massive problem as is the acknowledgement of the problems and nature of those policies in the years since. It does not matter why people collaborated and whether that was to do with the policy of appeasement or not, it matters that they did and it matters that people are doing it now]
When we are talking about various countries trying to obtain a temporary peace at someone else’s expense this continued with Poland and elsewhere after the active policy of appeasement was abandoned. Declaring war but then not actually doing much of anything does amount to sitting back and doing nothing while the invasion happened this post is not incorrect (although it may be hyperbolic) in that just because Britain and France had officially abandoned appeasement as a policy and had officially declared war – ‘but that’s when appeasement stopped and war was declared’ just isn’t a very good point against what this post is saying. For example, it specifically states ‘sending military aid’ and not ‘starting a war’ which is what you have taken the post to mean for some reason.
Appeasement is not the only bad policy or approach in this time period and it is not the only one the post is talking about so the fact that it came to an end isn’t that relevant given it coming to an end didn’t change much for Poland itself, or the reaction in the rest of Europe – or indeed for those countries already annexed and those people who had already been sent to camps before countries with enough clout to actually do something started actually preparing to do so and their policies post appeasement continued to allow these things to happen. Fundamentally you have taken the post to be referring to a much more narrow set of reactions than it is, it is talking about the evils of a lot of policies and approaches aside from appeasement.
Liberal media when Trump was elected: we made Trump, this is a serious moment for introspection…
Liberal media 2 whole weeks after Trump elected: Check Out These Totally Fuckable Neo-Nazis
It
would be good if Jewish created media was able to explore Nazism, a
massive force in shaping Jewish life and experience, without the
guarantee that other people would romanticize, get off on or excuse
the subjects of that exploration.
Look while ‘nazis are used as an aesthetic generic evil’ is a valid critisism in many cases in media (because it’s antisemetic, antiroma and actively harmful to Jewish and Romani people to be clear, not in the odd ‘this is about me’ way non-roma gentiles seem to critisize this and deffinitly not because it’d be ‘unfair’ to nazis)
It doesn’t apply to things like hydra or the first order that are created by Jewish creators as explicit stand ins for nazism (or neonazism) given that Jewish people do absolutely not view nazis as a generic, aesthetic, impersonal or unreal evil even if you do
the flip side of
other people taking jewish created symbols of anti-nazism (like
captain america) and making them…well even just not a symbol of
that rather than explicitly a symbol of the opposite, is what marvel
has been doing for ages (and what fandom does) which is taking the
things jewish creators were using to symbolise nazism itself and
making them not about that – diluting it down to some kind of
ambiguity or just flat out erasing it whichever. That also damages that important anti-nazi message in the work you’re doing it to.
Its part of the same
thing. Portraying explicitly nazi-symbolising characters as not nazis
should never be a thing you consider okay and to see people protest
cap being hydra and then also do this shows very clearly it is not
the antisemitism that bothers you in this situation and that you just
flat out dont get it.
Marvel fandom should probably stop pretending that the growth in hydra/Nazi fans and fandom has nothing to do with marvel perceiving an increased demand for hydra related stories. If you aren’t actively critisizing that phenomenon or worse you are participating in it…then you going on about how marvel has wronged you personally rings a bit hollow.
This is the real world effect of it and should make it very very clear that romanticising and festishisism of Nazi characters Does not exist in its own fictional bubble.