American Racism Inspired Nazi Nuremberg Laws

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  • čas přidán 5. 09. 2024
  • --The first half of our interview with James Whitman, Professor at Yale Law School and author of the book "Hitler's American Model," who joins David to discuss American influence on Nazi Nuremberg laws, and similarities and differences between pre-World War II Germany and America today
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Komentáře • 74

  • @3_up_moon
    @3_up_moon Před 7 lety +47

    The more we can learn from our collective histories, the better armed we will be to overcome the pitfalls of our future.

    • @blairschirmerx1711
      @blairschirmerx1711 Před 7 lety +1

      Mussolini more than Hitler.
      Trump has even been working on his Mussolini chin-jut, to hide the ever increasing fat.

    • @udvariatlanszepen484
      @udvariatlanszepen484 Před 7 lety +1

      Great, the best words ever

  • @EnnDeeKay
    @EnnDeeKay Před 7 lety +10

    This information, as ugly and horrible to contemplate, should not be omitted from history as taught in schools the whole world over. Thanks for this interview David Pakman Show!

  • @groundhogx2941
    @groundhogx2941 Před 7 lety +45

    David seems to enjoy information and facts.

    • @drakefaden1464
      @drakefaden1464 Před 7 lety +4

      Groundhog X Because he's a liberal.

    • @silkeschumann7261
      @silkeschumann7261 Před 7 lety +1

      Before Trump I would have considered this remark satire and humor. These days I can't tell.

    • @londonbowcat1
      @londonbowcat1 Před rokem

      ​@@silkeschumann7261Mark Curtis "oh dear"

  • @Malcolmmillsknows
    @Malcolmmillsknows Před 7 lety +8

    Did not know this but I am not surprised one bit.

    • @londonbowcat1
      @londonbowcat1 Před rokem

      4:00 creativity of lawyers in creating second class

  • @dennis-qu7bs
    @dennis-qu7bs Před 7 lety +5

    fascinating. Thank you, David, for a really interesting interview. The truth will set us all free.

  • @Sonia-w7w
    @Sonia-w7w Před 7 lety +4

    Not surprise...

  • @justachannel9379
    @justachannel9379 Před 7 lety +2

    Q:Where did you get the idea one person should be both head of state and head of government? A:Your American president.

  • @mbert7537
    @mbert7537 Před 5 lety +2

    facts

  • @dodopoopinpoop
    @dodopoopinpoop Před 7 lety +2

    Very good piece right here.

  • @ItsJustDan1
    @ItsJustDan1 Před 7 lety +4

    Wow, fascinating. This is news to me.

  • @MexicanEagl80
    @MexicanEagl80 Před 7 lety +1

    Very interesting

  • @aixamagr2897
    @aixamagr2897 Před 7 lety +1

    Hi David. Could you please do a video on White Supremacy Scholars like Professor BlackTruth, Tariq Nasheed TY

  • @das81
    @das81 Před 7 lety +1

    I see that even in these matters american exceptionalism kicks in.

  • @silkeschumann7261
    @silkeschumann7261 Před 7 lety +1

    I'm born in the sixties so I don't have to worry about any responsibility for the past of my country only about the future. And that the US had a troubling racism past is not a secret and that racists world wide inspire each other is not a stretch either then and now. In the end it doesn't matter who inspired whom. Nazi Germany is responsible for the holocaust and Germany's past shouldn't just be a warning to the people of Germany, but to any people in the world.
    We've seen this kind of genocidal crime since on various scales in the world. It has happen and will happen again. I don't know how to prevent this kind of hate. These days the world is (almost) in flames. I'm ashamed that a racist political party gained a voice in German politics and how openly far too many of my fellow Germans engage in hate against certain religion, ethnicity and race. I had hoped 'fremdschämen' would only apply to the generation of my grandparents but... nope.

  • @way2jaded1
    @way2jaded1 Před 7 lety

    I think what this brings to the table is solid laid out proof it is not that it was unknown that america and germany was friendly and had good relations at the start of world war 2. It is not unknown about americas own questionable past. The direct connection to the laws and it's summation that might be new, but it is not shocking. If you find it so you have not paid attention to history.

  • @geezzerboy
    @geezzerboy Před 7 lety

    It seems that the anti-Jewish laws in Germany, preceded the Nuremberg Laws. Baron Max Von Oppemheim, despite having attended school with the Kaiser, he was not allowed to work in the Imperial gov't during WWI, because of his Jewish grandparent. So were the Laws changed by the Wiemar Gov't, then back again by the Nazi's? Or?

    • @londonbowcat1
      @londonbowcat1 Před rokem

      4:00 admiring law
      The national socialist handbook for law and legislation

  • @WhtetstoneFlunky
    @WhtetstoneFlunky Před 7 lety +3

    Here are some thoughts... First, it took a while before America truly saw Nazism for what it was. Charles Lindbergh was a friend of Nazi Germany clear up until near the start of WWII. The concerns kind of came on gradually. Racist policies and laws were not a big concern of America until post WWII. Jim Crow died and interracial marriage became legal across the country. But to this day we do not criticize Japan, for example, for a racist culture.
    Secondly, I do not consider past generations to be "us". So when someone says that America has a racist past, I would never use "we" in place of "America" in that sentence. I would not use "us" (in my case, white people) or "them" (black or Asian people)when describing racial demographics.

    • @diempardon4259
      @diempardon4259 Před 5 lety +1

      “Racist policies were not a big concern of America until post WW2.”
      My god do you skim through history with rose tinted glasses. Pig laws, convict laws, and peonage before transitioning into red lining, separate but equal, race “riots”, and the instigated war on drugs.
      You like to use they because it’s coddling. But this idea that “they” colonized with no intent in building the *foundation* of a society that uplifts their own people is willfully ignorant. The colonialism was done with purpose and it surely wasn’t with the end goal of equality nor multiculturalism.

    • @absurdturk
      @absurdturk Před 11 měsíci

      To some extent I agree with your assertion that past generations are not "us" now. Of course. But at the same time...regardless of whatever your race is in America, if you live in America, especially for most of your life, we, as in, "us" right now, indirectly or directly, affect the present of America, as well as its future. "Us" does not exist outside of history; we create the present, as well as history, later on.

  • @das81
    @das81 Před 7 lety

    They also used talmudic law for Nuremberg laws.

  • @hemidas
    @hemidas Před 7 lety

    Oh the irony!

  • @jerryhewes
    @jerryhewes Před 7 lety

    So how is this relevant today davy?