Seems appropos

  • thefluffiest@feddit.nl
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    4 months ago

    That we should never have allowed the nazis to get painted as this existential, somehow outerworldly pure evil. They understandably got that reputation after the holocaust and losing the war, but it obscures why so many people were so attracted to them in the first place.

    It has made it impossible for most people to see what is truly the resurrection of fascism: many people don’t see it as such because they’re not (yet) having people shot or books burned. They think ‘if I’m not pure evil, surely I can’t be nazi’. And there’s the real danger.

  • intensely_human@lemm.ee
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    4 months ago

    One important lesson of the Nazi rise to power and the Holocaust is that Nazis characterized their enemies as disgusting rather than scary.

    Disgust is a different feeling than fear, and it leads to different responses. Hitler used imagery of infection and disease to describe not only problems in society but eventually groups as well. This talk of filth and infestation laid the emotional groundwork for the “purge” solution.

    If we want to avoid another Holocaust, we need to be wary of analogies like rot, cancer, infection for describing people and points of view.

    • OceanSoap@lemmy.ml
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      4 months ago

      Curious if the word “deplorables” count.

      I see such disgust coming from both major parties. Feels like either one can easily fall into this.

  • richteas@lemmy.zip
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    4 months ago

    Erich Kästner wikipedia.org, a german writer and satirist of the time, had this to say:

    The events from 1933 to 1945 should have been battled in 1928 at the latest. Later was already too late. One must not wait until liberty is called treason. One must not wait till the snowball has become an avalanche. One must squelch the rolling snowball. The avalanche can’t be stopped anymore…

  • Foni@lemm.ee
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    4 months ago

    Create a state that cared for and protected the majority, things like insured retirement, paid vacations, universal health insurance, In Europe we have all that, in the USA it was thought that they were rich enough not to need it and it may have been like that for decades, but it seems that not anymore.

    If the system takes care of you, you are not going to sign up to destroy it, If the system doesn’t give you anything, you won’t care if it is destroyed or you will even sign up to do it.

    • Buelldozer@lemmy.today
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      4 months ago

      In Europe we have all that

      You had all of that but as it has trickled away your populations are also accelerating their move towards the Right Wing. I can’t believe how many people in here think that this is only a problem in the United States when it’s happening in nearly every country.

      • Foni@lemm.ee
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        4 months ago

        It’s true, I shouldn’t have said we have, I should have said we had. Since the 80s, everything has been dismantled, making everything worse, both right and left. Comparing ourselves to other parts of the world we are not so bad, but comparing my living conditions with those of my parents it is shameful.

          • Foni@lemm.ee
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            4 months ago

            In a small town in Spain, in the '80s only my father worked in a less qualified position than mine, at my age he already had an apartment, two children and a month’s vacation on a nearby beach. My wife and I work in more qualified positions, We live in rent with an only daughter and I am lucky when I can pay for a week somewhere quiet

  • Ephera@lemmy.ml
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    4 months ago

    Things that changed here in Germany (which I can think of off the top of my head):

    • No presidential role. We don’t have a single person with that much power anymore. The most powerful is the chancellor now.
    • No emergency laws. Many nations have laws that when something goes wrong, their president gets superpowers to do whatever they want. This is regularly abused, not just by Hitler. To my knowledge, we don’t currently have any such law.
    • Secret voting. It is now illegal to make it public who you voted for. When Hitler rose to power, Nazis would sit in voting places and pressure people to vote for Hitler. And they would heckle people who didn’t want to show their ballot card.

    Having said all that, it should also be said that we do still currently have a very real Nazi problem. It’s a few steps in the right direction, but no silver bullet.

    • TheGalacticVoid@lemm.ee
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      4 months ago

      The US has had “secret voting” laws for a while, and although it’s not illegal to say you voted for X, it is illegal for anyone to pressure you into voting a certain way.

    • Buelldozer@lemmy.today
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      4 months ago

      Having said all that, it should also be said that we do still currently have a very real Nazi problem.

      Nearly every country in the world is experiencing a shift to the right and it’s accelerating.

    • cheese_greater@lemmy.worldOP
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      4 months ago

      The emergency laws seems like an interesting one because whatever its plausible justification, in practice, it seems like the only downside it would curb would be moreso any governmental liabillity for lawsuits and judicial review.

      If the government wants to do something, it will do it and the courts will maybe take it up later. Any measure they say the needed to do they would probably just do anyway regardless of the true necessity or for whom it was evaluated in that light, the only benefit to an emergency law in that context seems to be dissolution of regular liabillity and having a talking point about being justified after the fact.

      Seems like it incentivizes an opening for bad behavior

  • intensely_human@lemm.ee
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    4 months ago

    The Nazis are only the yardstick of evil by convention. Their crimes exist in an enormous set of savage acts including genocides and invasions that suffuses history.

    The lesson “of the Nazis” needs to be that the Nazis are not unique in history, nor are they the only sort of people who commit such acts.

    • intensely_human@lemm.ee
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      4 months ago

      Just replying to my own shit to add here:

      I think the Nazis were the first instance of this kind of behavior that got caught on video. Just like the Vietnam war was the first war US citizenry saw on TV, I think the Third Reich and whatever the term is for the whole campaign of land grab invasions, and the Holocaust, is a pattern that’s been going on for thousands of years, and it’s the first time the whole world was witness to it.

      For the majority of history a king or emperor or whoever could march out armies, destroy, use a ton of his own internal political enemies as slaves and work them to death, then just murder the rest of them … and cover it up almost effortlessly by telling the town criers to announce whatever horseshit they want the farmers to believe.

      We know historically this happens. But the Holocaust is the first of the pogroms that everybody around the world saw, and in the greater set of genocides. It was the first time (I think?) that absolute mass atrocity on civilians was televised.

      But it’s not a unique event is the key thing. It’s the most well-known example of the eruption of evil into the world, but it’s a recurring part of humanity to do this kind of thing.

  • eldavi@lemmy.ml
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    4 months ago

    moderates need to stop only punching left.

    hitler got into power because their moderates refused to appeal to their leftist voters and supported facism and so hitler’s side won the election and, later, the country after they disenfranchised the moderates and executed the leftists; right now it’s looking like americans are going to follow suit.

    • Chrome@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      Idk I feel like moderates punch both left and right lol. The extremists on both sides are annoying.

      • jacksilver@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        If you’re talking about the US, they certainly aren’t punching hard enough then. Trump is an extremist and basically leading right wing politics.

      • eldavi@lemmy.ml
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        4 months ago

        i can only speak for the western world since that’s what i learned about as an american and there’s a recorded history of punching left significantly harder than punching right.

  • yesman@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    I’d warn against the idea that Hitler was somehow indispensable to the movement.

    I think MAGA is instructive here. Do you think Trump is an evil genus, or just a lucky blow-hard carried by the worst impulses of the right? Fascism is popular, and we need to stop acquitting the societies that nurture it.

    To answer your question, I’d ignore the fascist leader and the rabid followers. I’d find a scheme to impose social and financial costs on those who don’t support fascism, but are wiling to tolerate it for their own interests.

  • z00s@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    It’s already too late, America. Even if he loses the election, he’s already rigged the supreme Court.

  • MelonYellow@lemmy.ca
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    4 months ago

    There comes a point where “marginalized white men” fight back and can become dangerous. There is then a false narrative that we are under attack, and bringing back the Old Ways will fix everything. And who doesn’t like safety? Easy selling point.

    That’s why Trump won in 2016 and why he can win again. He knows that’s what gets him the votes. And the media plays into it too.

  • RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    I don’t know that authoritarian/fascist regimes can be stopped once they’re in motion. They seem to be more the default rather than stable democracies. Even countries that you’d think would have sufficient legal barriers and processes for citizens to keep political extremists out of office seem to be failing and moving to the right.

  • Burn_The_Right@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    Unchecked conservatism naturally develops into fascism. Genocidal oppression is the natural tendency of conservatives. It always has been.

  • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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    4 months ago

    That the only good Nazi is a dead Nazi.

    Every single one of them should have been executed. Might not have prevented the return entirely, but it would have made it harder, and perhaps made the newer ones less certain of their reception.