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mysterygal said:I'm glad someone in here is like-minded !
Just a lone voice in the wind I suppose.
Regards,
J
mysterygal said:I'm glad someone in here is like-minded !
Baron Kurtz said:See, this is the problem with saying you've had your final word. There's always something to clarify. Thusly:
The author should not be saddled with crimes committed by characters in a book written by the author.
The author generally does not appear as a character in a book and thus the characters cannot be seen as resembling the author.
Marc Chevalier said:I read to hear from the horse's mouth.
mysterygal said:There is a difference between that and immersing yourself in gross autrocities
jamespowers said:So you wouldn't be interested in the Josef Mengele diaries eh?
Me either.
Marc Chevalier said:Let me be clear. Mein Kampf revealed what Hitler believed and what he was prepared to do for his beliefs. The problem was that most of those who would suffer from Hitler's aggression never read Mein Kampf. Heck, most Germans didn't, either. Had they done so, appeasement would have never taken place. Its consequences would have been forseen. (By the way, there was at least one British politician who did read Hitler's book. His name was Winston Churchill.)
Know your enemy, even if it demands that you read his disgusting literature.
jamespowers said:Read Hitler's Second Book. It is a previously unpublished sequel to Mein Kampf and he sets out his real plans to finally take on America and his plans for Europe.
Marc Chevalier said:I take it you've read it, then? lol
.
That is correct. And yet, I enjoyed both books very much in spite of knowing of his KKK association. Time and distance lends a buffer to accept literature that is either offensive or created by despicable people.Jack Scorpion said:Sometimes we forget that the author of The Education of Little Tree and The Outlaw Josie Wales was top KKK, but then again, hardly anyone knows that (or, rather, knew that).