Quote:
Originally Posted by emamum
i didnt know who dr mengale was (by name, i know of the nazi dr tho) so i googled it and i really wish i hadnt
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He wasn't the only one to do it but I suppose it always helps to have one specific person to point the finger at.
I think it makes people feel better if they have someone specific to blame. And most of today's concern over the Holocaust is beyond actually solving any problems now, it's all about just looking a certain way.
I had a seminar yesterday where we were asked if we could justify the Holocaust in terms of ethical theories. There are a lot of academics who do put forward quite convincing arguments. And it isn't because they think what happened was right in anyway, but beyond just saying 'well Hitler was crazy/bad' there are ways to see how rational human beings can be capable of doing things and believing they are correct.
I find that quite interest and I see very little point in ranting about how terrible the Holocaust was because people KNOW that without even making much of a fuss about you.
The sentence '6 million Jewish people died' is enough to make people think 'that is bad', but it is much more worthwhile to consider the justifications of what happened, and as a result destroying those arguments as you build them (if you can) and actually saying something worthwhile on the subject.
People shouldn't be so afraid to speak against the norm an avoid criticism, it leads to a very boring life. WE don't live in those circumstances, so we should be able to do so without being shot down, and there is no pun intended there but lets face it, if we did live in Nazi Germany we would be shot for doing such a thing.
I've studied the Holocaust in many contexts throughout my education, less British children will learn about it in the class room because it has been taken off the syllabus, or at least it had when I last saw the issue reported on.
Is that a bad thing?
Well it was a landmark genocide, if I can call it that and not sound like I'm merely thinking of statistics, but there are many genocides which don't get the attention they deserve, some happening now, in this current lifetime, and not very much actually gets said about them.
That for me is a bigger problem, mainly because the Holocaust, as important as it was, was over 60yrs ago and hasn't made enough of an impact on the world to stop future genocides and people are still giving it more importance than the genocides which are much more close to today and those murdered in those are never mentioned.
What I find particularly odd is that Hitler is considered to be the worst when so many people have been killed under Mao and even Stalin that its just bizarre.
Syria and Rwanda are the most recent that I can think of, and obviously killings in places like Iraq and Afghanistan, and though the numbers don't compare in relation to death toll, I think it is a damn sight more worrying that AFTER Hitler, Stalin, Mao, Castro, Pinochet and all the other 'popular' (as in well known/talked about) leaders which caused so much death we can still see genocide occurring today.
THAT is what is worrying. Not the possibility of people FORGETTING the Holocaust, but the fact that people aren't seeing what is happening TODAY.
Sorry for the rant.