Why Shouldn’t We Compare Some Individuals to Hitler?

The general consensus is that once you introduce Hitler into a debate or an argument, you have lost that argument. Even though I subscribed to this opinion—my view has changed.

I believe not comparing some current far-right politicians to Hitler is a mistake. For example, despite what Putin thinks, he has become a far-right dictator following a similar path as Hitler from 1936-1939. However, Putin is not the only one.

Hitler didn’t start as a dictator—he gradually became a dictator. He started his campaign with legitimate political means. He also knew how to tap into the zeitgeist of the German population in the 1920s and 1930, referring to mainstream conservative German civilians. They feared their values were slowly eroding, although—there was no clear evidence. It was the perception of the time.

German citizens believed their concerns and fears were not listened to or addressed by politicians. Hitler did listen. He devised most of the Nazi policies based on those fears.

The far-right and far-left movements are basically the same but—not in name. Both are emerging globally, at the moment, for doing the exact same thing as Hitler. If you convey that in a debate today, you are immediately dismissed.

We should listen to all opinions, and if there are concerns, be they real or just a perception, they need to be addresses and not dismissed.

Denazification of the German National Anthem.

Denazification was the process of removing Nazi ideology and influence from all forms of public life in Germany after World War 2.

This process does not seem to have happened on the German National Anthem, I think this was a great mistake. A national Anthem is not just a bit of music, it instills a sense of pride and belonging in people’s hearts and minds.

It is my opinion that the German National Anthem should have been changed after the war.

The “Deutschlandlied” – “Song of Germany”)- officially titled “Das Lied der Deutschen” (“The Song of the Germans”), or part of it, has been the national anthem of Germany since 1922.

The music is the hymn “Gott erhalte Franz den Kaiser”, written in 1797 by the Austrian composer Joseph Haydn as an anthem for the birthday of Francis II, Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire and later of Austria.In 1841, the German linguist and poet August Heinrich Hoffmann von Fallersleben wrote the lyrics of “Das Lied der Deutschen” as a new text for that music. The melody used by the “Deutschlandlied” was still in use as the anthem of the Austro-Hungarian Empire until its demise in 1918. On 11 August 1922, German President Friedrich Ebert, a Social Democrat, made the Deutschlandlied the official German national anthem.

When the Nazis took control in 1933,only the first stanza was used, it was also used in conjunction with the “Horst-Wessel-Lied”

The first stanza or refrain has the following text(English Translation)

“Germany, Germany above all,
Above all in the world,
When, for protection and defense,
It always stands brotherly together.
From the Meuse to the Memel,
From the Adige to the Belt,
Germany, Germany above all,
Above all in the world!
Germany, Germany above all,
Above all in the world!”

Although they changed the anthem from the 1st to the 3rd stanza after the war, with the lyrics.

“Unity and justice and freedom
For the German fatherland!
Towards these let us all strive
Brotherly with heart and hand!
Unity and justice and freedom
Are the safeguards of fortune;
Flourish in the radiance of this fortune,
Flourish, German fatherland!
Flourish in the radiance of this fortune,
Flourish, German fatherland”

The melody remained the same and the 1st stanza is still an official part of the whole piece of music. In the recent past it has resurfaced by some far right extremists and Neo Nazis. This could have been avoided if they had changed the National Anthem in its entirety.

There were efforts between 1945 and 1950 to change the anthem, but it was not popular with the German citizens. So in 1950 they decided to stick with the anthem and to just change the stanza. I think they gave up too easy.

At least the East German government changed the anthem to .”Auferstanden aus Ruinen” risen from ruins.

For Germany to escape their constant association with Fascism and Nazism, I believe it is important for them to realize that changing the anthem will be an important step to that. Maybe they should adopt the former DDR anthem

sources

https://www.classicfm.com/discover-music/periods-genres/national-anthems/german-national-anthem-lyrics-world-war-two/

https://www.bundestag.de/en/parliament/symbols/anthem

https://www.classical-music.com/features/works/german-national-anthem-lyrics/

Removed From Society

I always take the approach to explain things so that a child can understand them, not because I am condescending, but because I know that if a child understands it, everyone else should.

How would you explain the Nazi ideology to a child, though? Especially during the 1933–1945 years.

How would you explain the removal of neighbours from your street or the classmates from the school—the removal of specific groups of people from society?

People who were just like anyone else. They looked the same, spoke the same language and dialect, and had the same habits. The only difference for most, not all, was that they had a different religion. They didn’t go to a church on Sunday but to a synagogue on Saturday.

You could not explain this to a child—because there’s no logic to it. None whatsoever.

How do you explain people being forced from their houses/apartments so violently, then taken to particular assembly points and put in railroad cars—not with sections for human beings but for cattle? To be transported far away, where they were murdered or put into forced slave labour. As one lady from Ulm described what she witnessed during her stay in the transit camp on the Killesberg in Stuttgart, “About one thousand people of Jewish descent, from all of Württemberg and Hohenzollern, were brought there on November 27, 1941. Then they were housed in the so-called “Hall of Honor of the Reichsnährstand,” built for the Reichsgartenschau in 1939. They were the first victims of a total of more than 2,500 Jewish citizens who were deported via the transit camp on the Killesberg to the assembly and concentration camps in Riga, Iżbica, Auschwitz, Buchenwald, the Theresienstadt ghetto and a camp near Wolfenbüttel. Most of them never return.”

There is no sensible explanation.

How would you explain that families were separated, destroyed, and babies murdered? And all because of a political movement headed by delusional and evil men? How would you explain that, which is so clear to see when happening, yet so there is so little resistance?

How would you explain to a child that suddenly they have to go to another dentist or doctor? Now they have to buy bread and other food somewhere else. How do you explain to a university student that their lectures in physics have no longer on the curriculum?

How do they explain the lack of resistance? Is it because of some herd mentality? Were they waiting for someone else to make the first move? You do what others do or do nothing as others do nothing.

How could you explain that it easily could be you next—wasn’t that realized? People were being executed by the Nazis—just for making jokes about Hitler. Did people not see this as something fundamentally wrong and rotten to the core?

I am not judging, as it’s easy to question all these things because I do not risk my life by asking questions. In retrospect, it is easy to be critical. The simple fact is that those who did not live in that time would not know how they would react. I know I wouldn’t.

However, with retrospect and hindsight comes the option for us to recognize the signs of the past, To take action when we see history repeating itself. Now we don’t have any excuses. Unfortunately, another fact is that people don’t learn from history. Mistakes from the past are often repeated and often amplified.

We are not that far away now from the environment that was allowed to flourish in 1930s Germany.

sources

Tatort Nordbahnhof

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Who actually are the Trump supporters?

Anyone who reads my blogs knows I try to stay away from current politics as much as possible. But sometimes I have to speak out.

I believe in everyone’s right in freedom of expression, but that will need to go hand in hand with an equal amount of responsibility.

When I saw the amount of Nazi and Third Reich symbolisms , I believe even one is too many, during yesterday’s storming of the Capitol in DC I was disturbed.

During one of the video footages I saw a few people walking around with so called KEK flags, lets just be clear about it and see, on what these flags are based on.

Even more disturbingly is the fact there were people doing the Nazi salute.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/video/c/embed/ec71b0bd-3e55-428d-89af-948d26b14e11

For all you you Trump supporters, you will have to ask yourself the question “Do I want to be associated with these Neo Nazis ?”

Only you can answer that.

sources

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2021/01/07/proud-boys-neo-nazis-protesters-stormed-us-capitol/

https://www.washingtonpost.com/dc-md-va/2021/01/06/dc-protests-trump-rally-live-updates/

https://video.foxnews.com/v/6220834007001#sp=show-clips

Munich Oktoberfest bombing 1980

pg-32-oktoberfest-bomb-1-getty

I don’t want to make this a political blog but I can’t avoid some politics without telling the factual story. Last weekend’s elections in Germany did see a rise of popularity of far right politics(and no matter what the leaders of AFD say, that is what they are).

Despite the fact the German economy is sound and unemployment is low, the AFD was able to tap into the fears of the German citizens, the fear for Islam. And yes there are valid grounds to fear Jihadi extremists. The truth of the matter  though no terror groups act out of  religion but out of political reasons and then use any excuse to validate this political act, be it religion,animal rights or otherwise.

Today marks the 37th anniversary of the biggest terror attack in Germany and this attack was not committed by Arabs or Muslims but by a German student, named ,Gundolf Köhler. Although he may have had accomplices.Gundolf_Köhler

It is beyond dispute that Gundolf Köhler, a university student from the Swabian town of Donaueschingen, made the bomb, took it to Munich and deposited it at the scene of the crime. But even today, 37 years later, his motives remain unclear.

Köhler was also killed in the attack, because the bomb went off too soon. Few people believe that he committed suicide, however. He was said to be technically adept and knowledgeable about explosives. But the student also had ties to Wehrsportgruppe Hoffmann, a banned neo-Nazi terrorist organization, and had taken part in their exercises a number of times.

At 10:19 p.m. on 26 September 1980, a bomb exploded at the main entrance to Oktoberfest, killing 13 people instantly (including Köhler) and injuring 225 people. Amongst the individuals killed were one Briton, one Swiss, and three German children, aged 6, 8, and 10; the remaining victims were West German adults.

Oktoberfest-Bomging

The bomb had been planted in a litter bin at about waist level, allowing it to wreak significant havoc upon detonation. Approximately 50 of the 225 “non fatal” casualties experienced serious, life-threatening injuries with the potential to impact the afflicted individuals for the rest of their lives. The area affected by the bombing was the size of a soccer field, which measures at 100 yards long (the same size as a football field) and 60 yards wide. Such demonstrates the devastating impact of this bomb and underscores why it was able to impact a large number of people. Furthermore, analysis of the bomb provides insight into why it was able to be particularly devastating. Reconstruction from the site of the bombing indicates that it was created from a British mortar projectile manufactured in 1954. This particular projectile was modified to ensure an intense degree of fragmentation, which would assist in causing as many fatalities (and severe injuries) as quickly as possible.

pg-32-oktoberfest-bomb-2-ap

 

The key eyewitness remains a dubious figure. Frank Lauterjung was able to provide more details about the attack than anyone else. He survived the explosion, even though he was only a few meters away, because he had had a “bad feeling” and thrown himself to the ground before the bomb detonated. Investigators questioned Lauterjung at least five times in 1980. He died of heart failure two years later, when he was only 38. But when he was questioned, the State Office of Criminal Investigation in Munich ignored his most explosive statement.

Lauterjung told investigators that he had noticed Köhler engaged in a heated conversation with two men in green parkas near the site of the bombing, about half an hour before the attack.

oktoberfest-7oktoberfest-terror-attack-in-1980-5

An unnamed nurse told ARD that shortly after the Munich bombing she recalled treating a young man whose lower arm was missing.

“The arm had been injured by an explosion and had to be amputated,” the nurse told ARD. “But he wouldn’t say how he got hurt – he was proud of it. I went into his room and he was smiling all over.

She said he was never visited by his parents but only by “groups of men”, and added: “He disappeared after a week without even having his stitches removed.”

Ulrich Chaussy, the journalist behind the ARD documentary, has suspected irregularities in the Oktoberfest attack investigation for decades. He has long-believed that the severed hand, which was destroyed by federal prosecutors in 1987, did not belong to Köhler.The formal investigation into the bomb attack was stopped in 1982. Mr Chaussy’s investigations prompted the case to be reopened in December 2014.