I just tell deniers, if it didn't happen, then why didn't any of the men tried at Nuremberg bring that up as their defense?
Ha!Ha! Checkmate in one move! Love it.
I just tell deniers, if it didn't happen, then why didn't any of the men tried at Nuremberg bring that up as their defense?
Gröning was born in Lower Saxony in 1921,[2] as the son of a strict conservative and skilled textile worker.[3]:139 His mother died when he was four.[4] His father, a proud nationalist, joined the Stahlhelm after Germany's defeat in the First World War, and his anger at how Germany had been treated following the Treaty of Versailles increased as his textile business went bankrupt in 1929 due to insufficient capital.[3]:139
Gröning states that his childhood was one of "discipline, obedience and authority".[4] Gröning was fascinated by military uniforms, and one of his earliest memories is of looking at photos of his grandfather, who served in an elite regiment of the Duchy of Brunswick, on his horse and playing his trumpet.[3]:139 He joined the Scharnhorst, the Stahlhelm's youth organisation as a small boy in the 1930s, and later the Hitler Youth when the Nazis came to power in 1933.[3]:139-140 Influenced by his family's values, he felt that Nazism was advantageous to Germany and believed that the Nazis "were the people who wanted the best for Germany and who did something about it."[3]:140 He participated in the burning of books written by Jews and other authors that the Nazis considered degenerate in the belief that he was helping Germany free itself from an alien culture, and considered that National Socialism was having a positive effect on the economy, pointing to lower unemployment.[3]:140
The real horror there is not that the man himself was some kind of monstrous fiend. It's that he was an ordinary man, born and raised in a "respectable family," somebody's son/husband/father/grandfather, who allowed blind nationalism to convince him that he was Doing His Patriotic Duty. "The banality of evil" indeed.
His Wikipedia page is very interesting.
Given a lot of the views about the need for "discipline, obedience, and authority" that we constantly hear from many people here, how many Loungers, had they had been born in Germany in 1921, would have agreed with him?
This is the root of it all right here, and I think that's why the study of the Third Reich will continue for a long, long time. We are still trying to understand how this could happen. Because let's face it - if it could happen in Germany, a place of high culture and refinement, it could happen anywhere.
I think there were many people in America who *did* agree with him during that time, thus the rise of the German American Bund and other fascist sympathizers. Of course, that all fizzled quite a bit when Hitler went into Poland.
This is the root of it all right here, and I think that's why the study of the Third Reich will continue for a long, long time. We are still trying to understand how this could happen. Because let's face it - if it could happen in Germany, a place of high culture and refinement, it could happen anywhere.
Except of course for Herr von Lindbergh and his colleagues at "America First," who had a field day during 1940-41. Lindy's Des Moines speech in 1941 was right out of the Goebbels playbook.
I agree with you, the concern was that if it could happen in Germany, it could happen anywhere, which is why they researched how it happened already.
The main factor IMHO was that people are so averse to taking personal responsibility, averse going against the group, averse to rocking the boat, and ultimately happy to give up responsibility in the face of authority (hence the frequently cited 'I was only following orders' defense).
This phenomena has been well studied by psychologists. See the Milgram Experimant, that showed that when instructed to do so by a perceived authority figure, people will knowingly inflict pain on others to the point of death even though they know it to be immoral;
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milgram_experiment
Proof that this 'willingness' to subvert personal ethics to perceived authority is alive and well in US (and therefore, as a psychological phenomena, in all societies) can be found in the true life story that inspired the film Compliance;
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compliance_(film)
The sad fact is that most people are just weak. Not only weak of mind, but also of moral fiber, and will do disgusting things if they think that they don't have to be responsible for them, by diverting responsibility to a 'social authority figure'.
And that's how you get six million jews into gas chambers, or turn 200,000 Koreans into sex-slaves.
It's disgusting.
Very true. And of course, we don't talk about that part of Lindbergh's past...
I've read some of those studies, too, and yes, it is absolutely frightening.
TBH though, I think that the important detail is in the scale of difference in this phenomena between wartime Germany and Japan, and the postwar experiments in the US, and the crime behind the Compliance story.
What I mean is that wartime Germany and Japan, being totalitarian fascist states engendered this psychological subversion of morals to authority on an industrial scale in the real world, whereas the Milgram experiment was contrived to subvert a small test group by clever psychologists in a lab environment, and the Compliance criminal in real life was highly skilled at the psychology of manipulating weak people.
I believe that this difference between the Axis fascist totalitarianism, and the US shows a fundamental difference in our ideologies at that time. Sure, in the UK and the USA there were many who sympathized and agreed with the Nazi's, and yet, our democratic institutions, and our social beliefs ensured that Nazi ideology was given fair coverage in our countries, and then (and quite deservedly so) dismissed by the general public. In the totalitarian Axis states, a function of fascism was to remove the publics faculty for debating these ideas.
For example, whilst Hollywood was notably slow in the uptake in attacking Hitler, they did make The Great Dictator. And there was a level of discussion about the perceived benefits of Nazi ideology in America's civil society. The fact that those pro-nazi voices were drowned out is a testament to the widespread understanding that nazi ideas were incompatible with American values. Meanwhile, in 30's Germany, the state controlled the media and social discourse, crushing all civil debate. As the British comedian peter Cook once said; 'Those Berlin cabaret artists really showed Hitler, didn't they?'
As I have to remind some people I know frequently, were didn't win the war because our technology was better (e.g. the A-bomb), we won the war because our ideology was better.
Anne's hands were not clean, either. In 1940 she wrote a book called "The Wave of the Future," in which she argued that European-style fascism was the inevitable future for America, and that, in so many words, we should just lie back and accept it. Strange how nobody ever brings that one up.
Well said. I agree with you.
For example, whilst Hollywood was notably slow in the uptake in attacking Hitler, they did make The Great Dictator.
Colonel Robert McCormick's Chicago Tribune -- the most influential paper in the Midwest -- consistently published anti-war-effort, Nazi-leaning editorials all thru the war years.