The most famous forms of Holocaust denial and revisionism tend to focus on Jews, casting doubt, for example, on how many were exterminated in the camps. But denying the impact the Nazis had on the other groups they targeted, including queer and trans people, disabled people and Romani people, is still Holocaust denial. Maybe someone should tell J.K. Rowling.

  • Lath@kbin.earth
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    8 个月前

    But there were issues. The starving ones who were fed too much and too fast died, while because the train tracks and roads leading to these camps were destroyed, logistics was slow in giving them the help they needed.
    So freedom wasn’t as instant as you’d like to believe.

    • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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      8 个月前

      There is a gulf between instant and gradual. You advocated for the latter. The latter means only killing fewer Jews.

      • Lath@kbin.earth
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        8 个月前

        When death is unavoidable, the goal is to minimize the number of deaths. Taking into account the situation before, during and after can help create the better results.

        If we just free someone without taking into account whether they’ll be able to live afterwards is just patting ourselves on the back. Sure we can say we did the right thing, but without making certain they at least have a starting point, we might just be condemning them to desperation or crime.

            • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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              8 个月前

              “In general”

              “preferred”

              Still sounds like “kill fewer and fewer Jews until the killing can stop.”

              • Lath@kbin.earth
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                8 个月前

                Actually, by in general, I was thinking about people who live their lives in constant suffering and would like to have the option of a peaceful release.
                Euthanasia is still taking a life, and I would prefer an alternative to that.

                Was writing “in general” not enough to go beyond this particular instance?

                  • Lath@kbin.earth
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                    8 个月前

                    Really? How many good men or women can one find in a country, willing and able to head out across borders to get involved into a war, solely to sacrifice themselves for the sake of saving others from genocide?

                    I’m not seeing armies heading out to save Palestine. Ukraine. Any of the African countries currently at war that i know so little about.

                    Simple truth is that not everyone agrees with this kind of selfless sacrifice.
                    The US had a small, but growing Nazism political party in its ranks before the war and the majority of those able to vote were against sending troops before Pearl Harbor happened. What do you think would have been the result had the acting US government sent troops into Europe without the approval of their citizens and without the shaming of the middling Nazis among them?

                    When forcing the issue, without making sure the ones opposing it won’t suddenly strike at your back, you only send out more people to their deaths. And instead help the enemy achieve their goals more easily instead.
                    Nazist America was a real possibility at the time, not just a fantasy.

                    So yes, moderate, cautious and gradual isn’t the evil you want it to be. It’s just another route that considers the consequences of failure. And it’s not without flaws, principal being the people involved.

                    Also, you may think I’m advocating for it, but that’s just a side effect of my original point. Anything can be a force for either good or bad. Only focusing on the bad points and ignoring the good, vilifies it.

                    Tell me how that at its most basic meaning is different from what those you claim to hate are doing. Just because the subject of the hatred is different doesn’t change the fact that the act of hatred is the same damn thing.

                    You don’t like that things can be both bad and good? That’s fine. But what you’re pursuing is purity. Doesn’t matter which side of the extreme you’re looking for, it’s still an extreme.

    • gedaliyah@lemmy.worldM
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      8 个月前

      No, the freedom was instant. There may have been logistical issues with medical treatment of the now free people. In all my conversations with Holocaust survivors, I have never heard one say that they were not free after the camp was liberated. That is just a nonsense take.