Would You Have Been a Nazi?

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 31. 05. 2024
  • Then & Now is FAN-FUNDED! Support me on Patreon and pledge as little as $1 per video: patreon.com/user?u=3517018
    Or send me a one-off tip of any amount and help me make more videos:
    www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr...
    Buy on Amazon through this link to support the channel:
    amzn.to/2ykJe6L
    Follow me on:
    Facebook: thethenandnow
    Instagram: / thethenandnow
    Twitter: / lewlewwaller
    Subscribe to the podcast:
    podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast...
    open.spotify.com/show/1Khac2i...
    Description:
    There were several reasons lynch mobs in Jim Crow America and soldiers and police officers in Nazi Germany were motivated to kill African-Americans and Jews. Historical forces like a sense of victimhood - both having lost wars - cultural forces and propaganda that depicted the victims stereotypically as inferior, greedy, or a threat, and economic forces - ‘the frustration of basic needs’ as social psychologist Ervin Staub puts it.
    They were motivated, in Nazi Germany and Jim Crow America, by a moral culture made up of stereotypes, adverts, scientific literature, societal standards, norms, and sensibilities that all pushed the perpetrators towards killing.
    In both cases, the perpetrators had rationales, justifications, reasons for what they were doing, even if, with historical hindsight, we can see these to be incorrect.
    This begs an important question: how is resistance possible? How does one know when they’re being pushed by historical forces to do something that in retrospect we see as wholly immoral? How does one escape from under the hand of history - if culture, society, and the economy are all moving you towards acting in a particular way. Do we retain a moral sense?
    The philosopher Zygmunt Bauman, for example, has asked whether there can be a ‘moral responsibility for resisting socialization.’
    Often, what makes people like Rosa Parks or Martin Luther notable, is not that they are shaped by historical forces, but that that the very same forces are felt by them as coercion and that they stand up to them, counter them, resist them.
    Can we find morality and ethics in history? I look at empathy and moral sentimentalism to find out.

Komentáře • 619

  • @ThenNow
    @ThenNow  Před 2 lety +65

    You'll have a deeper understanding of the issues discussed here if you've seen my two videos on Jim Crow racism and How We Become Genocidal:
    How We Become Genocidal: The Holocaust: czcams.com/video/RPCKzgITCRI/video.html
    The Psychology of Racism in Jim Crow America: czcams.com/video/VlPSaWfa3Js/video.html

    • @OjoRojo40
      @OjoRojo40 Před 2 lety +8

      "Men make their own history, but they do not make it as they please; they do not make it under self-selected circumstances, but under circumstances existing already, given and transmitted from the past."
      Some dude with a beard.

    • @leavonfletcher4197
      @leavonfletcher4197 Před 2 lety +3

      You are fast becoming one of my favorite CZcamsrs because you force us to examine really tough issues.

    • @numbersix8919
      @numbersix8919 Před 2 lety

      You used the term "beg the question" incorrectly. You may have been aware of it. I wish you would not.
      Public discourse is nearly limited to logical fallacies, and begging the question is prominent among them.

    • @InHisService333
      @InHisService333 Před 2 lety

      "We Are Stronger"
      A Poem by Steven F Gooden
      We're never as strong, as we are until we have to be. Never Do as much, unless the need we see. Only give our best, when we fail at mediocrity. We Love rather than hate when we admit we're one humanity. We always give more, when compassion moves our heart with unbridled generosity. We Become more of our potential when we are made to see, that clearly our minds can believe in unfathomable possibilities, while seizing every opportunity, here in lies one's destiny. More than our scars, higher than our stars, for in our flaws are what defines our features, they're uniquely ours, as human creatures.
      We can run faster than on our slowest day. Reason better, and thinking it through all the way, regardless which direction our emotions may sway. We can find our voice when speechless, our strong words with meekness and our Courage in weakness. Always patience not quickness. Silence for peace than loudness, quietness of fear, not hopeless, for time and effort are equally unbiased. We are more than the stories we're told, we're the one's we write, each page unfold. We are the sum of our Lies and truth, fantasy, fiction, faith, and myths, no matter how uncouth. These are what shape us, our lives lived is the proof. We can be more right than wrong. More just than judge. More godlike than unlike. Reflecting Sunlight in our darkest night.
      Providing refuge. Never more alive until we die within and begin again. A Human Ark Divine in our human spark.
      by
      Steven Gooden

    • @numbersix8919
      @numbersix8919 Před 2 lety +1

      @@InHisService333 Thanks, poet. I copied your poem to keep, to inspire me.
      But the truth is that very few people can be held to the standard of their potential.
      And it's no fault of their own.
      Yes, most people would either be Nazis, or try to not be involved directly in the unthinkable atrocities committed by their government. The Germans were a nation of poets and humanists.
      Soon the human race, or a great part of it, will be killed off. By us! It will be much worse than WW II. So I suggest you summon some of those strengths and virtues, and take action to prevent it.

  • @mummytrolls
    @mummytrolls Před rokem +55

    Before studying Nazi Germany, my teacher had the class vote. There was candidate A and candidate B. Their ideas for each topic (like economy, immigration, government involvement in foreign affairs, etc.) were put against each other and we were to check off if we agreed with candidate A or B. There were 10 questions and I voted 5 for A 5 for B. After talking with my friends, they seemed to like B so I decided to vote for B. We all put our heads down and the teacher had everyone in class raise their hands and vote for A or B. Almost every single person voted for B. After we put our hands down and opened our eyes, our teacher informed us that with the exception of 3 people, the entire class voted for candidate B. Candidate B was Hitler.

    • @mummytrolls
      @mummytrolls Před rokem

      We used that exercise cuz a common question in school is “why would people vote for Hitler? Clearly a blood thirsty Jew hating genocidal maniac is somebody I wouldn’t vote for!” He used that exercise to show that people didn’t vote for Hitler knowing he’d kill 6 million Jews. Yes, antisemitism was (and still is to a lesser extent) popular in Europe. They’re the scapegoats, have been for centuries so when he first implemented laws like Jews can’t be doctors, people didn’t really care. It never starts with genocide, it starts with oppression, discrimination, and fear mongering. The people of Germany mostly voted for Hitler because he promised to make Germany great and pull them out of their economic depression, which was so bad people would burn money for warmth and kids used stacks of money as building blocks or arts and crafts cuz it was so useless. In 1922, a loaf of bread cost 163 marks. In November 1923, a loaf of bread cost 200 billion marks. It was that insane and Hitler promised to fix it. Starving and desperate, the German people elected Hitler. After that class I no longer wonder how he rose to power (although I’ll be very clear that I am anti Hitler). The exercise was a scary realization and my teacher, a Jew, said most classes voted for Hitler. That’s why he taught that class, to show us how easy it is to fall for politicians who promise big things and warning signs of fascists.

    • @deeznuts8659
      @deeznuts8659 Před 5 dny

      damn

  • @ryanehnat7458
    @ryanehnat7458 Před 2 lety +152

    Brilliant video! I must say though- a class dimension would have been useful, seeing as the ruling class has historically been positioned to be accountable for a whole lot more “ethical willpower” than the working class. It’s tougher to resist oppression when your very livelihood is based on carrying it out.

    • @InHisService333
      @InHisService333 Před 2 lety

      Keep Moving forward PRESSING ON! Justice Compassion and Mercy and Healing. Takes Action for Correction! Y'all Got to Move. Faith without Works is Dead. Call on Jesus and He will Give you the strength to Do what must be done.
      czcams.com/video/ybhiutd93-M/video.html

    • @LadyCoyKoi
      @LadyCoyKoi Před rokem +1

      Very valid point!

    • @mochilover7053
      @mochilover7053 Před rokem +6

      One of fascism's tenets is class collaboration. E.g. in the Antebellum south poor whites would often catch and return, or lynch runaway slaves. While the slave owner would get paid in insurance for a dead slave, returning a slave would mean compensation for poor whites. The system functions so that each organ somewhat protects the other.

    • @musamusashi
      @musamusashi Před rokem

      @@mochilover7053 that is not "class collaboration", that was a system, used to these very day, to buffer potential poor whites' rebellion, by making it sure that they always had someone under them to oppress so they could never fully realise how oppressed by that same system themselves were and are.

    • @mochilover7053
      @mochilover7053 Před rokem +1

      @@musamusashi Yeah, I never said class collaboration actually helped the lower classes in the long term. When Hitler gave speeches to workers after he had their labor organizers assassinated he wasn’t forcing them to do anything against their will. Despite the result of their collaboration, or the intentions of the ruling class the lower class still contributed to the holocaust. They contributed to slavery for a measly penance for slave capture and torture.

  • @lsobrien
    @lsobrien Před 2 lety +83

    This is one of your best videos.
    By the way, there's a very fun article called Who Goes Nazi? by Dorothy Thompson in the Harpers archive. It was written when the Third Reich was very much alive, and Thompson assesses how different sorts of psychological profiles would respond to Nazi occupation.

    • @InHisService333
      @InHisService333 Před 2 lety

      Keep Moving forward PRESSING ON! Justice Compassion and Mercy and Healing. Takes Action for Correction! Y'all Got to Move. Faith without Works is Dead. Call on Jesus and He will Give you the strength to Do what must be done.
      czcams.com/video/ybhiutd93-M/video.html

    • @andresdubon2608
      @andresdubon2608 Před rokem +3

      Thank you, that was intresting.

  • @RaunienTheFirst
    @RaunienTheFirst Před 2 lety +79

    I like to think not, but let's see where this goes

    • @njm2699
      @njm2699 Před 2 lety +3

      A curious endeavor to say the least

    • @1911dawg
      @1911dawg Před 2 lety +1

      It really depends on what the media tells you… if you don’t see it with your own eyes then your seeing it through a political lense.

    • @south1328
      @south1328 Před 2 lety +3

      Always choose the path of kindness. That’ never leads to innocent humans suffering.”❤️”

    • @tethergobrrr
      @tethergobrrr Před 2 lety

      Yeah, I’m nervous… tendency to not comply with immoral directions on one hand… a sucker for certain kinds of economic arguments on the other… maybe nazi, nice

    • @robsands6656
      @robsands6656 Před 2 lety +2

      @@1911dawg false

  • @sheldonquamina9634
    @sheldonquamina9634 Před 2 lety +23

    This is a beautiful lesson to show my children as someone from the Caribbean we take so much for granted

  • @BobHooker
    @BobHooker Před 2 lety +35

    When you see a orphan who has seen its parents killed by a mob you don't need to be informed about the nature of that child, where they grew up or what national policy is to have compassion. People see an orphan and they will know a child is a child. That is the definition of a human. It is simply a matter of having courage to do what is right or rationalization.

    • @numbersix8919
      @numbersix8919 Před 2 lety

      The children of genocided parents are often adopted into the warm, loving families of the genocidal culture. It's a normal part of genocide. The dirty work in the death camps was done by Ukrainians, some of whom, I'm sure, are fine people. Jewish prisoners did the collection and disposal of the bodies. German officers lived next door to the death camp with their families and played badminton and had picnics on Sunday. But they generally couldn't bear the brutality of their own program.

    • @lindabelcher8087
      @lindabelcher8087 Před rokem

      🙌🏻

  • @ayior
    @ayior Před rokem +29

    As a German, this video and the others on the holocaust bring me back to school times, god these talking points were our subjects for *years*
    My schools (I switched at some point) saw understanding the origins and pitfalls of radicalization that lead to the rise of the Nazis as a cultural duty of modern Germans: That these things must be understood so history can not repeat itself.
    In general, after consuming so many "breadtube" channels on american politics this one feels really refreshing in the way it reminds me of what I learned in school - Philosophy was one of my favorite school subjects and one that I really missed being exposed to after graduating.

  • @Michelle_Wellbeck
    @Michelle_Wellbeck Před 2 lety +60

    I love how your content shows blatant disregard to the sensibilities of the algorithm

  • @chana7276
    @chana7276 Před 2 lety +166

    as a jew the answer is no, but I believe there are universal lessons to be learned by using the examples of the Nazis so I'm very interested in this video.

    • @antoniorich8054
      @antoniorich8054 Před 2 lety +1

      But surely you are aware there were Jewish Nazis in Hitlers administration,sad but true.Your being a Jew certainly does not preclude you being a fascist.

    • @jcspoon573
      @jcspoon573 Před 2 lety +59

      Then look at it this way, would you subjugate a people based on the circumstance of their birth, denoting their race, heavily skewing their religion.
      To be blunt, would you justify the modern treatment of Palestinians by Israel? Taking of land, denying of equal status, confining into a limited area, out of scale responses to violence by an oppressed population.
      This question does not ask you to be exactly you, it asks you to empathize with a person LIKE you in those circumstances. You may be a Jew, but Jew is not who you are.

    • @paulreynolds7103
      @paulreynolds7103 Před 2 lety +12

      @@jcspoon573 Muslim people don't need to apologise for terrorists.... And Jewish people don't need to apologise for Israel....

    • @jcspoon573
      @jcspoon573 Před 2 lety +46

      @@paulreynolds7103 You have failed at reading comprehension and likewise missed the entire point of the video.

    • @phurian_6560
      @phurian_6560 Před 2 lety +16

      It's very easy to say you wouldn't have been a Nazi outside of the circumstances that drove the people back then towards that ideology

  • @SeasideDetective2
    @SeasideDetective2 Před 2 lety +14

    I have heard that some have argued that Nazism in Germany was inevitable at some point, due to the German cultural preference for authoritarianism. I reject this theory, since I'm aware that there have existed many egalitarian-minded Germans down through the centuries, from the ancient Germanic tribes who minimized social stratification to the German-speaking immigrants to the U.S. who became abolitionists against slavery.

    • @sometimesicryinthebasement5121
      @sometimesicryinthebasement5121 Před 2 lety +3

      Nazism was inevitable but not for those reasons. Nazism was made inevitable by the treaty of Versailles. Germans hated the treaty as Germany was (wrongfully) blamed for the Great War. Essentially, Nazism was made inevitable by the west.

    • @saturationstation1446
      @saturationstation1446 Před rokem

      i dont see nazism as an isolated thing that happened one time. you can see the base attitude for it in almost every well off european walking the earth today. eugenicist views have always been a major part of eurocentric culture. subjugating "inferior" races and believing you are of a superior evolved part of the species so you have the right and duty to take the worlds resources for yourself and slaughter everything unlike yourselves. this behavior has been displayed in europe for many many centuries. and its still in almost every european person alive today. despite how much they might deny it, they all live in the least diverse countries on the planet and all complain about being racially/culturally "replaced"

  • @tim290280
    @tim290280 Před 2 lety +32

    I agree with most of what you are saying throughout. But I think the bit about people being misinformed or misled is a bit too simple. As we're seeing now, there are people who are presented with the facts of an issue and refuse to believe it because it goes against their ideological reality. There will be strong arguments made for that ideology or the status quo, that will utilise misinformation knowingly (or unknowingly).
    This makes the question, is that immoral or is it just human? I'd argue that it makes it immoral as we have an epistemological moral responsibility to strive toward truth not ideology, but it is human to fail at doing so.

    • @moritz3168
      @moritz3168 Před 2 lety +1

      But it literally is that simple. Look at the animal holocaust. I have argued enough times with carnists, in most cases they place taste over consciousness. Do you believe these people are well informed?

    • @wordcel
      @wordcel Před 2 lety +2

      @@moritz3168 the animal holocaust?

    • @wordcel
      @wordcel Před 2 lety +5

      Who gave me this epistemological moral responsibility and why? How will it help me get more bitches?

    • @tim290280
      @tim290280 Před 2 lety +1

      @@wordcel, WK Clifford. And the moral life is one that is incredibly attractive.

    • @quantum1311
      @quantum1311 Před rokem +1

      @@wordcel so trve...

  • @stefanschnabel2769
    @stefanschnabel2769 Před 2 lety +14

    "A force as we know from physics is an impulse, a pressure, an energy." Love your vids, but this broke my little physics heart.

    • @Stretesky
      @Stretesky Před 2 lety

      Weapons of war include the use of physics that are not known to the mainstream or taught openly as military tactics.

  • @nectarshrub
    @nectarshrub Před 2 lety +7

    So many incredible questions raised. Thanks for the content🙏🏻

  • @juliemelville65
    @juliemelville65 Před 2 lety +6

    Thank you very much for this summary, you have brought together all the elements I have been trying to understand in a very clear way🙏

  • @myxomatoad2
    @myxomatoad2 Před 2 lety +36

    Wonderful! As always you come across as both curious and dispassionate, as well as grounded and concerned. Thank you so much for your work!

    • @bobsonny
      @bobsonny Před rokem +2

      Weird that you paint dispassion as a good thing in this context. I'd think that these are subjects that SHOULD incite passion at the breadth of the injustice and mistreatment.

  • @lizzie7138
    @lizzie7138 Před 2 lety +10

    I think about this a lot. My family had to flee war and genocide because our tribe was seen as a threat to government. Many people died including my uncle. My mum and her family had to walk on foot to a different country. My dad was part of the guerrilla group fighting the government. There are some nationalists that still claim the President (dictator) was a good man. Subconsciously I always hated nationalism.

  • @MannIchFindKeinName
    @MannIchFindKeinName Před 2 lety +69

    before even watching the video, as a german i gotta say yes, i likely would have been one of the bystanders. While i am weird enough to be singled out as a possible victim, i am very good at masking and i was raised in a rather right-wingish environment. Only massive socialization with far left people made me think about the systems that made me experience what i went through, but also made me understand what my neighbours (lots of refugees from irak, kosovo, albania, all the wars that went on around 1990-2000) went through.
    Without that talk i would have easily turned into a Nazi. So if i was born too late to get into the whole solidarity/communism-stuff from the workers, i see no way i wouldn't have become a collaborator.
    Btw, its terrifying what happens in the US rn, or what happened in Russia or Poland/Hungary. I really hope all those asshats die from stress induced heartfailure while raging infront of RT/Tucker Carlson/etc and spare us a lot of problems down the road.

    • @MannIchFindKeinName
      @MannIchFindKeinName Před 2 lety +4

      @Shawn 🏴‍☠️ Stafford Oh, i got that part watching the video :D
      I just think it's important to understand how it happened back then and be aware that it can happen all the time everywhere again.
      It was nothing special back then, except economy sucked a bit more than normal and there was some dude screaming more and louder than anyone else.
      I feel your sentiment, wtf is going on?

    • @paigetomkinson1137
      @paigetomkinson1137 Před 2 lety +1

      @Sören
      This is an incredible, amazing statement! That you've been able to look that far into yourself, and conclude you would have been a Nazi, I don't think many could admit that, even if they knew deep down that it was true. Kudos to you! I think, though, that the realization makes a person become aware, and change.
      I'm an American, and what's happening here is terrifying. I sort of saw it coming, in 2016, but lots of us listened to the talking heads making excuses. It didn't pacify, exactly, but maybe gave a lot of us reason to not panic. We should have panicked. Since then, I've read and watched everything I could on Fascism and Germany's history, and I know this country is in a heap of trouble.
      Anyway, I was quite impressed with your comment.

    • @KarlMarxFanClub
      @KarlMarxFanClub Před 2 lety +1

      Unfortunately, fascism is growing like cancer in America right now and they don’t even realize it. It’s called manufacturing consent.

    • @paigetomkinson1137
      @paigetomkinson1137 Před 2 lety +2

      @@KarlMarxFanClub This is the dangerous truth. Way too many people haven't realized what's happening. Either they aren't paying attention, they don't understand the signs and signals, or they're part of it. I'm very concerned, because it doesn't seem like even the elected Democrats truly understand the threat. Oh, there are a couple here and there, but overall the party is still trying to do things as if the other half of each chamber weren't big bad wolves in sheeps clothing, so to speak. I saw Ruth Ben-Giaht on a political show last week, and she had the clear-sightedness and courage to use the "F" word, three times when talking about the GOP. "Fascism," she said, and she shouldn't be the only one saying it. I was glad she did, because the word must get out, to every possible democratic voter, to everyone who doesn't want to live under a totalitarian regime of White Christian Nationalists, and that is precisely where we're headed. Normal, run of the mill, go to church on Sunday Christians, like my grandmother was, aren't the problem, but they all need to open their eyes, too. A person who believes the way my grandmother did, which was an every day Presbyterian religious outlook, will become a target of these worse than radical White Christian Nationalists, aligned with the Republican Party, forming the new Fascism. If a person doesn't believe exactly what they do, act exactly as they do, look exactly like they do, they will become another target of this poisonous ideology. We've already seen what can happen to their targets, as it happened in Buffalo, New York last week. All of us who see what's going on have a responsibility to get the message out into the majority of the public; democracy is under tremendous threat, not from the outside, but from Fascist White Christian Nationalists, their accomplices on the Supreme Court and in the halls of Congress, and at every other level of political life, governors, state legislatures, and every single local office, everywhere in this country.

    • @masterson0713
      @masterson0713 Před 2 lety

      What's wrong with Tucker? He's the one advocating against getting involved with Russia and Ukraine. I think you'd definitely be a Nazi you sound brainwashed with leftish thinking as it is.

  • @TheJayman213
    @TheJayman213 Před 2 lety +18

    "The class which has the means of material production at its disposal, has control at the same time over the means of mental production, so that thereby, generally speaking, the ideas of those who lack the means of mental production are subject to it." This is one historical force. "Resistance" to the ruling class's morality, whether motivated by individual or collective material interests, is just another historical force, rather than an overruling of historical forces.
    Empathy allows for the formation of collective interests. What you call acting morally I call acting in accordance with rising collective interests against the interests and morality of the ruling class.

  • @rbqanstxqu7959
    @rbqanstxqu7959 Před 2 lety +2

    The timing of your video topics is impeccable.

  • @lsobrien
    @lsobrien Před 2 lety +93

    Your emphasis on empathy being the basis of morality is important and well made. This is something the New Rationalists (read: New Charlatans), like Steven Pinker explicitly reject. It goes to show how too much time in the realm of thought experiments can severely lead someone astray. (So much so, that, in this case, the so-called classical liberals have completely lost their grounding in the tradition.)

    • @moritz3168
      @moritz3168 Před 2 lety +6

      It goes both ways. Empathy doesnt need to be the base for morality. Egoism and respecting conscious life in fear of hypothetical aliens could be a source of morality too.
      Although empathy plays a huge part >.

    • @thecolumbopause4961
      @thecolumbopause4961 Před 2 lety +2

      The fundamental problem with this is that empathy can be abused and used to trap an individual into taking actions or inaction. This is typically how an abusive partner will act by taking advantage of their partners empathy. It is how tyrannical get people to inform on their neighbours, friends and familly. Don't you care about "this demographic" well then you need to inform on anyone who is a part of or has sympathies towards "that demographic" or else you do not actually care about "this demographic." Or it could be as simple as holding others hostage, people will stand up for their beliefs when their life is threatened but when the lives of those they love and value are threatened they become much less willing to sacrifice. Empathy is not the basis of morality under any circumstance, it is nothing but another manifestation of mental emotions and can be corrupted, used and twisted just as much as anger, sadness, happyness or disgust.
      As an example: Hitler used the common german's empathy towards their fellow poor german's to bolster the propaganda that justified the attacks on jews. He then held them hostage through their empathy for their family, children and friends so they would inform on any "foreign bodies" pretending to be ethnic germans.
      Empathy is good but the basis for morality it is not.

    • @lsobrien
      @lsobrien Před 2 lety +5

      @@thecolumbopause4961 Noticing the well-documented differences between treatment of in-group members and out-groups doesn't somehow invalidate empathy as a grounding for morality. Moral instincts can be turned to horrifying ends, absolutely - as can every conceivable human phenomenon or technology.
      Do you think morality must be ideal perfection? That's very much the problem with figures like Pinker. They do not take account of history and contingency - morality as it's actually existed: they've imagined a totally objective, rationalist, utilitarian morality, and anything, now or previously, that doesn't align, can be categorically dismissed.

    • @JM-us3fr
      @JM-us3fr Před 2 lety +1

      I don’t think it is invalid to reject empathy as a foundation, but I do think it is unsound. For example, if Pinker does find himself as a utilitarian, I might wonder why utilitarianism and not egoism. The principle of treating everyone equally (when all else is equal) can only be justified (in my opinion) utilizing empathy; that way their pain becomes your pain.

    • @tigerwolf2243
      @tigerwolf2243 Před 2 lety

      The things he mentioned in this video about the expanding circle of empathy and books playing a role in making people empathetic to different people's experiences are two things I first read about in Steven Pinker's book "Better Angels of Our Nature." He lists it as one of the five reasons violence has declined. So no.

  • @maryblaufuss7533
    @maryblaufuss7533 Před rokem +9

    I frequently watch the You Tube videos that are produced by Dr. Ramini Durvasula. She is a famous psychologist who specializes in the study of difficult personalities such as Machiavellian, narcissistic and psychopathic. She asserts that empathy is the most important quality we humans can have,

  • @arsenelupin123
    @arsenelupin123 Před 2 lety +73

    One of the most terrifying thoughts I had while watching this video was: "what if these social forces socialize you to convince you that you are resisting"
    A lot of effort has to go in maintaining our moral center. I'm not yet sure I'm up to the task.

    • @robynsun_love
      @robynsun_love Před 2 lety

      Every fascist movement operates this way.
      It’s why they’re so preoccupied with their own ostensible victimhood. They treat their enemies as existential threats and as pathetic invalids simultaneously.
      Putin invaded Ukraine under the pretext that _Russia_ was truly the one that was at risk. Fascism is what you get when unresolved collective trauma metastasizes into a social force of white-hot retribution; like a child screaming into the void at everything that ever hurt or scared them.

    • @arsenelupin123
      @arsenelupin123 Před 2 lety +3

      @@robynsun_love Yes, that's definitely a big part of it. A lot of resentment dressed up in a mythical image of the national will.

    • @tigerwolf2243
      @tigerwolf2243 Před 2 lety

      Exactly. People lynching black people are resisting social forces by the definition of being regressive. Nazis thought they were resisting social forces that were supposedly created by the Jews, whom Hitler basically blamed both corporate greed AND the rise of communism on.

    • @ellem8990
      @ellem8990 Před 2 lety

      I think that you can definitely see that with the conservatives in america that think that the left is taking over, faking a pandemic to inject citizens and that they do trafficing.

    • @truthbtold2910
      @truthbtold2910 Před 2 lety +5

      Ask yourself what it is, that u are gounded in. What is it, that bolsters your internal self.
      What are ur principles? Those things which you will fight to keep, resist giving up?
      When u find these principles, work backward, asking yourself where U first heard it, or experienced it? Once this is clear, ask yourself if it's something U wish to keep as part of U? If not, set it aside. And begin the process again.
      Be patient with yourself, it takes time and repeated effort to even remotely understand who we are.
      Hope this helps. If u take yourself seriously in this activity, early on your head will hurt. 🤓
      Blessings Upon U in the Holy name of Jesus the Christ, Amen

  • @Skoda130
    @Skoda130 Před rokem +2

    My main problem with this video is that is assumes that all you need for agency, is a conviction.
    But it needs willpower as well, and the ability to resist ones socialization.
    I often think we have a lot less agency than we would like to admit.

  • @Grace.allovertheplace
    @Grace.allovertheplace Před 2 lety +4

    ( *22:11* I just saw that the video beneath this, is yours too and it’s specifically about personal responsibility) *20:18* I appreciate that misinformation, propaganda etc can lead to a certain behaviour between *in groups/out groups* - maybe you’ll touch on this later in the video but each person has a individual responsibility to “fact-check”, or at least try the thoughts that are brought upon them against one’s own moral (I don’t write understanding, because that often requires an active search for an alternative truth for example, and when the Nazis ruled they effectively banned •free press, •certain literature etc) but as you mentioned in another video - most people does not wake up as an evil bastard from one day to another.
    For example, I believe it’s impossible to judge someone based on “looks/religion/identity, what we can judge is someone’s actions, and no we can’t judge because we “think” we can only judge the acts that have happened and our judgment have to be consistent for everyone.
    (English isn’t my first language and I hope what I’ve written makes sense 😇)
    🙏

  • @lines1nwax
    @lines1nwax Před 2 lety +13

    It's disappointing that the video doesn't mention the Milgram experiment. This one psychological experiment explains so much about how genocides throughout history have been carried out successfully. While the aspects you mentioned do matter and do play into the broader sociocultural factors that facilitate genocides like the Holocaust, the psychological/individual level cannot be ignored. The Milgram experiment is imperative to understanding this topic.

    • @QT5656
      @QT5656 Před 2 lety +5

      But hasn't the Milgram experiment also been criticized for how it advertised for and selected it's participants in a way that biased the sort of people taking part?

    • @paigetomkinson1137
      @paigetomkinson1137 Před 2 lety +3

      Or Jane Elliot and the "Blue Eyes/Brown Eyes" exercise. I'm in awe of her.

    • @Orangeyougladx3
      @Orangeyougladx3 Před rokem +1

      He did in other videos, so I guess he didn’t want to reuse the same experiments over and over again

    • @helgahaa
      @helgahaa Před rokem

      Debunked and unethical study

  • @kahlilbt
    @kahlilbt Před 2 lety +8

    Commenting my initial reaction to the question with: depends on the context. There are definitely periods of my life where I held exactly the kinds of views that fascism stokes. But physically, I could never because of my background. If I presuppose being a white Christian German at the time, I'd have to think about if I have my opinions from now, or my opinions from ten years ago.
    Fundamentally, my answer is that in the right hypothetical context, yes, and in our real world, no, and I hope that I am building a self now that is better than all that.

  • @bman7673
    @bman7673 Před 2 lety +3

    Yes. If someone blamed my country for the war and then suppressed my ability to do well and get ahead, and then I was offered a solution...

  • @ilsevanderbij7179
    @ilsevanderbij7179 Před 2 lety +10

    I was raised in a very left-wing family (my great grandpa was actually part of a Dutch communist resistance movement along with Hannie Schaft! He was incarcerated by the Germans at camp Westerbork for the last couple of years of the war... but he survived, met my great-grandma shortly after the war, and my grandma was born as a result of that), I'm autistic and chronically fatigued due to TBI, yes I do have the blonde hair/blue eye phenotype but I don't think I could ever believe in what the Nazis believe in. Especially not based on my personality and the values I was taught while growing up. I'm not sure how I would've fared during the war, I think I would've at least be part of some passive resistance that matched my ability, or I would've been placed in the Lebensborn program by the Nazis due to my eye and hair colour. Forced to breed Nazi babies until I would no longer be useful. That or, my leftist beliefs would've landed me in the same place as my great-grandpa did at some point. I'd make him proud, though.

    • @jjdelft3216
      @jjdelft3216 Před 2 lety

      Just because you have blonde hair and blue eyes doesnt mean youd be seen as a good Aryan. Next to your leftists ideas, you also wouldnt fit in due to your autism and TBI, which would be seen as signs of weakness and not desirable.
      Being made a part of the Lebensborn program is also less likely due to that.
      For boys for example youd not only need the blue eyes and blond hair, but also be physically fit and mentally well to be seen as a true Aryan.

    • @numbersix8919
      @numbersix8919 Před 2 lety +2

      I'm not saying all the Nederlanders were heroes, but that's my general impression. You can be proud of your heritage. Including the little wisp of a ballet dancer Audrey Hepburn who was a messenger in the Resistance.

  • @el_equidistante
    @el_equidistante Před 2 lety +4

    Really good, I was afraid this was going to be a cliche answer to the question from the contemporary americanized left, reducing the question to a simplistic negative answer, but yeah, I don't know why I thought so, your videos are always much more thoughtful than that.

    • @Talleyhoooo
      @Talleyhoooo Před 2 lety

      Well the contemporary Americanized left have a point. Nazis and their ideology are on the rise, and their primary means of gaining influence is leaning on the fact that you’d rather roll your eyes at resistance from the left than push back against the resurgence.

    • @el_equidistante
      @el_equidistante Před 2 lety

      @@Talleyhoooo The question about if we would have been a nazi and my comment, have nothing to do with with the current rise of that ideology, what are you even saying?
      On the other hand you can very well roll your eyes if that resistance if grained in a bad understanding of the causes or an ineffective strategy to get to the goal of pushing back.

    • @Talleyhoooo
      @Talleyhoooo Před 2 lety

      @@el_equidistante So basically you’re totally fine with a Nazi resurgence if it’s being resisted on by people you think are cringe…
      Great, you’re more worried about woke scolding and SJW’s than a fascist takeover. And to my point, you’re exactly the kind of person Nazis need, the apathetic bystander who’s more concerned about their subjective feelings than principles.

    • @el_equidistante
      @el_equidistante Před 2 lety

      @@Talleyhoooo there is no Nazi resurgence, such a thing is impossible, people like you act as if a century of cultural shift never happened.
      Second, you are absolutely insane, you are jumping to conclusions about myself based on absolutely nothing, you make connections where there are none. Where did I mention SJWs or wokeism? What does that have to do with anything?
      The point is that maybe you should ask yourself if your self righteous egotistic "resistance" is not actually worsening the problem rather than help solving it. In any case, people like you who so gone, so engrossed in your own poorly thought out ideology that you cannot avoid framing every interaction within those terms, just look at you right now, you are taking a comment and a question that does not have anything to do with what you are babbling about because you are convinced that I have to be attacking your political action which should not be questioned, just accepted as the only possible fact of life and way to proceed, as if what you think and do is the only alternative to be an apathetic bystander, what a colossal egocentristic point of view, very much on par with American people indeed.

    • @paigetomkinson1137
      @paigetomkinson1137 Před 2 lety

      Interesting. Usually the people who have negative things to say about the American left complain about them using words that are too big, and of being elitist. This is quite a different take on it.

  • @julyrosales
    @julyrosales Před 2 lety +13

    What ever the circumstances push you to be , you might become. We do a lot of things out of survival that are not justified but hey it’s only temporary. I couldn’t answer that question because the situation never presented itself. Ask that to a Nazi ex soldier if you can still find one alive. Most are the answers were “ I was just doing my job”.

  • @ruperterskin2117
    @ruperterskin2117 Před rokem

    Right on. Thanks for sharing.

  • @blck6941
    @blck6941 Před rokem +5

    A very interesting and compelling video. However, I think you should take into consideration that people weren't necessarily ill informed, but also simply cynical and nihilistic*. They strove to identify with something - a Group or other. They didn't care if the information put in front of them was false. All politicians were perceived to be liars at that time in Germany anyway. As Arendt suggests, they simply couldn't (or didn't care to) distinguish opinion from fact*.

  • @madwiesel3466
    @madwiesel3466 Před 2 lety +4

    The quality of his videos is constantly improving

  • @Noms_Chompsky
    @Noms_Chompsky Před 2 lety

    Great viddie!

  • @chainsawninjalcemist
    @chainsawninjalcemist Před 2 lety +16

    Do a video on Israel's ethnic cleansing of Palestine (which continues to this day)

    • @annascott3542
      @annascott3542 Před 2 lety +1

      Yes, please please!!

    • @annascott3542
      @annascott3542 Před 2 lety +1

      And the complicity of Western nations.

    • @cv4809
      @cv4809 Před 2 lety

      Ah yes, the Israeli ethnic cleansing of a population that has actually increased in numbers

    • @chainsawninjalcemist
      @chainsawninjalcemist Před 2 lety +4

      @@cv4809 Over what timeframe? Certaintly not on net over the past few decades.

    • @khetamalawad4246
      @khetamalawad4246 Před 2 lety +3

      @@cv4809 typical NPC rhetoric, "if X happened then explain Y" ever heard of high fertility rate? Bosnia having more population now than in the 90s doesn't mean the Bosnian genocide didn't happen.
      Same with Jews in the 40s compared to now.
      Your argument actually is really disgusting, dehumanising and outright genocide denial.
      Gtfo!

  • @christinemareeyoung
    @christinemareeyoung Před rokem +1

    very clear presentation, thanks

  • @revalesq
    @revalesq Před rokem +3

    I feel like empathy, without compassion, isn't much in and of itself.

  • @reddmist
    @reddmist Před rokem +6

    Your videos are great, thoughtful and well researched, very thought provoking! I would like your thoughts on a video idea sometime, if you are interested at all.

  • @little_flitter
    @little_flitter Před 2 lety +4

    I truly believe that I would not have been. Not because I think I'm better than others, I'm not. Instead, because I have a strong sense of morality and a strong level of empathy that.. tbh, causes me alot of issues.
    When I was 9 years old, I was in a school with 30 students. Two of the students had a small argument which climaxed in one hitting the other. All of the students were taken inside and we were told we weren't allowed to go outside for break time now. My reaction? I got up and went to the white board and started berating the lsa who was in charge, i said it was wrong to punish all of us for the mistakes of 2 kids. I ranted about not even knowing this situation had happened until we were all called in. The funny bit of the story is that I wrote 'we were are all invincible' on the board trying to incite a mass walkout ... but I wrote invisible and the teachers actually got worried after that haha.
    I can give examples of this kind of behaviour throughout my life. I've learnt now as a 22 Yr old masters student that there's ways to go about this, but I still have an incredibly strong sense of justice, morality and an extreme empathy towards others. I know alot of people on the left who hate those that identify as right wingers for example, but j don't understand that hatred - they are people and have differences in subjective thought. I know people on the right who qlso hate those on the left, and the same thing can be said there.
    Let me lead this to another point tho... I'm autistic. I'm also possibly adhd but undiagnosed. I truly believe that this sense of morality is linked to my autism. I cannot see wrong being done. One of my lecturers didn't like me because I called out her bs a few times. I have anecdotally noticed plenty of other autistics do this. People who are adhd too.
    I think there's alot of work to be done on empathy and teaching public compassion too, alot of people are so prone to following social rules - even when they are wrong as you layed out in this video. Lots of people think they are right, disregard the subjectivity of each decision and opinion.
    I'm not innocent of this either, yet I really do think my intense empathy, ignorance of authority and sense of justice would have prevented me from being a nazi. Then again, I'm autistic, so I'd probably have ended up in a camp or scientific experiment anyway (I'd suggest looking up the history of the term asperges for that one!!! - hans asperges, was a nazi!).

    • @madelinevlogs5898
      @madelinevlogs5898 Před 2 lety +1

      I’m also autistic and have a very strong sense of justice. I assume everyone has good intentions which has gotten me into trouble before. I worry often about whether I’m a good person and I have strict moral rules that I hold myself to. Even lying to friends about really minor things makes me distressed

    • @little_flitter
      @little_flitter Před 2 lety +1

      @@madelinevlogs5898 I'm pretty much the same!

    • @jacksoncremean1664
      @jacksoncremean1664 Před 4 měsíci

      generally those that hate people who identify as right wingers have been regularly harmed or wronged by right wingers. It's hard to feel sympathy for them when you weren't shown any, and everytime you extended an olive brach, they just broke off the branch and poked you in the eye.

  • @jordanwhisson5407
    @jordanwhisson5407 Před 2 lety +3

    The question is, would you join the bullies or oppose the bullies?

    • @QT5656
      @QT5656 Před 2 lety +1

      I tend to agree. In school I found myself more than once standing between bullies and their victims. Other bystanders rarely back you up. Sometimes they emphasize afterwards but other times they sneer at your lunacy at arrogance for getting involved in the "correct order of things". Apparently for many people punching down (for little more than fun or to signal status) is fair game. 🙄

  • @J.D.Shelnutt
    @J.D.Shelnutt Před rokem +3

    I feel like we on on the road to repeating the same mistakes today. I see a lot of the same motivations

  • @camipco
    @camipco Před rokem +1

    I strongly suspect I would have complained about the Nazis at home among people who I thought were safe, avoided actively participating whereever possible, but not been willing to actually do anything meaningful to stop them.

  • @christopherbettridge5983
    @christopherbettridge5983 Před 5 měsíci

    "Morality is only interesting when it's difficult"; a great way to encapsulate a difficult but undeniably true idea

  • @endTHEhegemony_Today
    @endTHEhegemony_Today Před 2 lety +1

    Wow!
    🖤💜💙💚💙💜🖤
    Great vid. Could have been even more improved by a class dimension too!
    Much love!

  • @dabidibup
    @dabidibup Před rokem +2

    I’m increasingly convinced nations deciding their own socialized policies is a good idea.
    I’m worried that makes me racist

  • @tigerwolf2243
    @tigerwolf2243 Před 2 lety +6

    Empathy's an interesting emotion. It changes based on how you relate to a person. If you feel like someone is too powerful, if they've hurt you or if their fear and pain seems ridiculous, then their screams and their pain or fear suddenly feel like things are being set right. Suffering brings pleasure. Schadenfreude in all its forms. If you felt someone had the jump on you and now someone gets the jump on them (or even better, they hurt themselves), it's a feeling of triumph and justice. If you feel their feelings are invalid or silly, such as a silly phobia, their fear is amusing.
    I don't usually laugh or smile at suicide, but Hitler killing himself? Couldn't have happened to a more deserving man.
    An old man suffering on the floor from a heart attack with nobody around to find him 'til he's been dead for a day? Their last words being about how fearful and paranoid they feel? Good. I'm glad that's how Joseph Stalin died.
    It's not just seeing the person as bad. Seeing a sports team get crushed in a game hits differently depending on who you're rooting for. Sports basically involves rooting for someone's failure for no real reason. Other examples are many. The song "schadenfreude" by Avenue Q is full of them. But you get the point.

    • @basedanddadpilled959
      @basedanddadpilled959 Před 2 lety +1

      Stalin wasn’t alone when he died. His daughter was there, so were all of his closest advisors. They watched him die, with glee.

    • @kingstarscream320
      @kingstarscream320 Před 2 lety

      Cry baby

  • @robertafierro5592
    @robertafierro5592 Před 17 dny

    We never know how we'll react until the time actually comes, but social.pressure? That's a very different thing. "Fitting In" means EVERYTHING to most people. I really can't answer this question honestly. It's a really thought provoking question. When make a decision like joining a Party sometimes it's not a matter of choice..

  • @didles123
    @didles123 Před 2 lety +2

    I could only hope I would have sided with the National Socialists, but in a place like Weimar Germany there's always the possibility I would have gotten caught up with the communists and other evil movements of the time.

  • @AkiraIsMissing
    @AkiraIsMissing Před 2 lety +3

    Well I'm black, so.

  • @pasisovi
    @pasisovi Před 2 lety +2

    If you ignore the history, this one you know that was written by the winners, and see the real one, you definitely would change your attitude.

  • @Johnconno
    @Johnconno Před 2 lety +3

    Yes! Hugo Boss uniforms, black leather boots and a Walther pistol.
    I wouldn't have hurt anyone though...😂

  • @oggeeboggee
    @oggeeboggee Před 2 lety +2

    I would love to hear the narration made by Georg Rockall-Schmidt...

  • @saffronic3026
    @saffronic3026 Před 2 lety +2

    I would have been a Mischling of the second degree which would have made me viable for military and even SS service, and so I'm not entirely sure how I would've acted in the Nazi Order

    • @jjdelft3216
      @jjdelft3216 Před 2 lety

      Youd only be allowed into the SS if you didnt have any Jewish ancestry since 1750 though, so I doubt youd be let in as a Mischling of the 2nd degree, which would mean that youd have 1 jewish grandparent.
      There was no employment difference between Mischlings of the 1st and 2nd degree, the difference was that 2nd degree could marry non Jewish and non Mischlings, and they wouldnt be imprisoned.

  • @ktmggg
    @ktmggg Před rokem +1

    I was raised to question everything. It wasn't just because I was born in the 1960s. My parents were the WW2 generation and were horrified by the wholesale loss of human life due to twisted ideologies. It caused them to question everything; political leaders and philosophies, religion, the local PTA, service organizations, etc. Even things they agreed with were still subject to scrutiny to see if it passed their morality test. Their basic philosophy was, are you allowed to be free in thought and action, and does it serve the greater good? Those are the principles that have guided my life. So I think I would have been trundled off to the camps had I been raised in Nazi Germany.

  • @reeseseater12
    @reeseseater12 Před 2 lety +10

    I’ve always wondered things like this now. How much of me is nature (who I truly am) and how much is nurture (impacted by my surroundings). I mean I find these actions appalling but if I grew up in those times with their experiences would I still? Some did even with the similar experiences but a lot didn’t. I also look to mass shooters today too, am I actually that different from them? Is there a set of circumstances that could set me down that path or do I not have that in me at all? (thankfully in reality the answer is no) Is this something we can truly ever know?

    • @willshealy5963
      @willshealy5963 Před 2 lety

      This comment aged horribly

    • @reeseseater12
      @reeseseater12 Před 2 lety +1

      @@willshealy5963 did it? You don't wonder what impact of your surrounds have on you or if you're naturally inclined to act the way you do. If anything I believe this makes the thought experiment more real. Buffalo shooter was definitely influenced by the internet but no motivation yet for Texas school shooting (that I know of). This just shows that this isn't the past, this is the present and we all need to be aware of the capacity for harm we can commit

  • @Orangeyougladx3
    @Orangeyougladx3 Před rokem +1

    Honestly yes. While I wouldnt have been able to actually kill someone or be an nazi officer, I would def be someone supporting it from home. It’s so easy to be swept away by politics. Even during this pandemic, I was laughing at people who could have so easily prevented their death but didn’t.
    It’s sad.

  • @truthbtold2910
    @truthbtold2910 Před 2 lety +1

    The Germans, to some extent the Southerners, used the law to justify these continued sins.

  • @mjemeny5601
    @mjemeny5601 Před 2 lety

    I can understand the ‘community pull’ a sense of belonging to a group.. a feeling of togetherness.. of being part of the whole.. but I think knowing a sense of right or wrong- comes frm within.. an inner sense of morality stops ppl doing wht is wrong.. but having a/the strength to acknowledge tht it is ‘wrong’ and ‘allowing’ ourselves not to be dissuaded of this fact - I think this can be the stumbling point - do you have the courage of your convictions, to be committed to following this ‘emotional ideal’ to its conclusion, not matter wht tht myb.. the strength to stand by your convictions OR is the need to part of the whole- such an emotional draw, the overwhelming association of ‘an us- a greater sense of belonging - tht is such an emotional dependence great enough tht you dnt have the courage of your convictions - tht ultimately this inner sense of morality becomes second to the ultimate need of the sense of belonging.

  • @WanderingVedantist
    @WanderingVedantist Před rokem +1

    Half of the reasons why I watch these videos is because of how soothing his voice is

  • @yellowantonio-nado7761
    @yellowantonio-nado7761 Před 2 lety +1

    Morality beyond reason - sentiment 😭 passion. Well said

  • @nightoftheworld
    @nightoftheworld Před 2 lety

    14:32 sounds like embodied cognition thesis

  • @aaron2709
    @aaron2709 Před 2 lety +8

    I'd like to hear you talk about something closer to your home... the English subjugation of India for financial plunder. You could also include Gambia, , Nigeria, Cameroon, Sierra Leone, Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Zambia and lets not forget your crowning achievement... South Africa. Including China might be too much. How can a culture be so greedy without the slightest blush of morality?

    • @ThenNow
      @ThenNow  Před 2 lety +3

      Talked about this here: czcams.com/video/TKhj95g5guM/video.html

    • @aaron2709
      @aaron2709 Před 2 lety +1

      @@ThenNow Yes, that's about India only. You have the continent of Africa to go. Why not start with blood diamonds?

    • @paigetomkinson1137
      @paigetomkinson1137 Před 2 lety +2

      @@aaron2709 There are atrocities in every culture, unfortunately. The ones we were not alive to see cannot possibly be ours to answer for. All we can do now is work towards the realization of what causes this kind of behavior, and trying to reroute it in our societies and in ourselves. The same goes for our video host, who is trying to do so.

    • @aaron2709
      @aaron2709 Před 2 lety

      @@paigetomkinson1137 I'd like him to try more with his own culture.

    • @paigetomkinson1137
      @paigetomkinson1137 Před 2 lety +3

      @@aaron2709 These principles aren't just for one culture or another. Seeing the damage done in one place makes it more recognizable in another. We continue to address the Nazis and the Holocaust because it was the worst example of a particular kind of atrocity, one based solely on who a person's parents and grandparents and great grandparents were, systematically designed to eliminate those people from the face of the earth. The morality, or ethics, that the German people were willing to abandon can be applied to any other situation where a community turns upon another group to do harm.

  • @jeremyhorne5252
    @jeremyhorne5252 Před rokem +1

    Morality (actual behavior) stems from ethics (principles/rules of what should and should not be), which stems from ethos (core values). Ethos develops within a person according to the integrity of personal identity, which comes from that person's interrelationship to the whole, i.e., society. The integrity of society depends upon that of the individuals, and vice versa. Stemming from this dialectical relationship is the social philosophy with its attendant socio-economic system. Capitalism is an inherently predatory system and collapsed in the early 1920s, and this environment also shaped the dialectics. This is to say, when discussing ultimate human behavior (morality), we must account for all factors in an interrelated and integrated fashion. It is a lot more complex than presented here, although such is a good start

  • @smktrp
    @smktrp Před 2 měsíci

    this is one of the best videos

  • @williammaxwell2239
    @williammaxwell2239 Před rokem

    Thank You, thought provoking. Cultures and Individuals have different stages of growth-being in the felt and conceptualized expierience of I- We-It. The Good, True and Beautiful are different at each stage. The earlier stages cannot perceive later stages. Comninly known as archaic, magic, mythic, rational, post modern and intregal. Healthy growth is the latter transcending and including the previous of these growth stages. They are linear, earlier can have glimpses of later stages, but cannot integrate. Again thankyou for these thought inspiring productions.

  • @KINGREXBABI
    @KINGREXBABI Před 2 lety +3

    This invoked an emotional response. For so long we have demonized rather then attempted to understand the motivations. In the divisive culture we inhabit today rational breakdowns like this are more important then ever to hear. People can only make decisions off of good information as you so eloquently described at the end.

  • @countessmargoth469
    @countessmargoth469 Před 2 lety +15

    I have been a life long communist, I assume I would be the same in Nazi Germany... and sent to a CC. I am transgender as well, so I maybe would not have even made it to the camp. Would I have the courage to stand up to them? Easier said than done if you would meet certain death for a principle.

    • @RageTyrannosaurus
      @RageTyrannosaurus Před 2 lety +7

      I'm mixed race, neurodivergent, and a leftist so I'd be in a similar position. Just trying to share some solidarity. My pronouns are he/him, what are yours?

    • @countessmargoth469
      @countessmargoth469 Před 2 lety +8

      @@RageTyrannosaurus I'm a woman with lady pronouns :) Thank you for your solidarity. If fascism is ever to rear it's ugly head again we need to stamp it out together before we get a repeat of history.

    • @TinyBallsTickler
      @TinyBallsTickler Před 2 lety +2

      I disagree with Communism,but I agree with the other parts.

    • @paigetomkinson1137
      @paigetomkinson1137 Před 2 lety +1

      @@countessmargoth469 I think, Countess, that it's already happening. I hope all of us who aren't part of their crowd have the strength we're going to need, because it looks like rough sailing ahead to me.

    • @are_you_f_serious
      @are_you_f_serious Před 2 lety +1

      @@countessmargoth469 wait, you said that you are a Transgender but a comment later, that you are a woman. - I'm confused, are you now a women or a Transgender? 🤔

  • @paigetomkinson1137
    @paigetomkinson1137 Před 2 lety

    "There are only people who haven't realized it yet." Indeed.

  • @remc0s
    @remc0s Před rokem

    I would have chose that which would have benfited me most, as would anyone else.
    The difference is that people like me don't blind themselves with the illusion that we are "good" people, whatever that even means.
    I know i am not a good person, and the best thing is; i renounce the social pressure of accepting their idea of what a good person is.
    Now THAT is freedom.
    Show me a good person, and i'll show you a hypocrite.

  • @thedarknessthatcomesbefore4279

    Very good video, thank you. One point I want to bring up...When listing things which pervaded the population making the atrocities acceptable to the majority of the population (4.50time) I believe you should have added religion as both racism and jew hatred looked to the Bible for support.

  • @itsjustanapple5452
    @itsjustanapple5452 Před 2 lety +3

    95% of you would been.

  • @airforcemax
    @airforcemax Před 2 lety +2

    *¡pondering and wondering at 9:41 am Pacific Daylight Savings Time on Tuesday, 3 May 2022 Common Era or CE formerly known as Ano Domini or AD!*

  • @Ermanariks_til_Aujm
    @Ermanariks_til_Aujm Před 2 lety +2

    In both cases, the perpetrators had rationales, justifications, reasons for what they were doing, even if, with historical hindsight, we can see these to be incorrect.
    Ha! That's for sure not a rationale to see their claimed deeds to be for incorrect purposes.
    Oh and by the way, killing was never part of the 25 articles nor the further speeches found during this era, so of course, if asked to do so, they would have issues - it was not a part of it - especially if you consider the various speeches about tolerance and freedom which were spread to Germans (such as Walter Gross of the racial hygienic center for example).

  • @adakobusiewicz1402
    @adakobusiewicz1402 Před 2 lety

    Great! Thank you!

  • @benwilkonski8635
    @benwilkonski8635 Před 2 lety +2

    Being half Jewish and Polish I wouldn't think so

  • @Ermanariks_til_Aujm
    @Ermanariks_til_Aujm Před 2 lety +9

    Even if I fundamentally oppose most of the mainstream aspect of today's society, from its moralities to its desires, I would still end up as a National-Socialist, but probably a theoretician rather than a mob-member.

  • @kausamsalam8543
    @kausamsalam8543 Před rokem +1

    “Stand up for Justice, even if you are standing alone, or against your own kin.” (Paraphrased from Holy Quran
    Sura The Inner Apartments, Hujurat, 49:6, “O ye who believe! If a wicked person comes to you with any news, ascertain the truth, lest ye harm people unwittingly, and afterwards become full of repentance for what ye have done.” (The God/Allah in the Quran expects all His people, regardless of race, class, gender, status, or social hierarchy, to practice reading human nature, (more important than following a crowd blindly or reading blindly).
    I love the point you make consistently, through the historical examples, to “do the right thing,” even if people may punish you for it.
    Sura Balad 90:8-13, Allah reminds thinkers, “Thinketh he that none beholdeth him? Have we not made for him a pair of eyes-and a tongue, and a pair of lips?-and shown him the two highways? (Between right and wrong conduct), but man hath made no haste on the path that is steep,//and what will explain the path that is steep?-It is FREEiNG the bondman (or, slave, as Hazrat Bilal was freed for being a skilled, good human being -freed by Prophet of Equality)…then will he (man) be of those who enjoin patience, constancy, and SElF-RESTRAINT, enjoining deeds of kindness and compassion.”
    May we humans learn from our studies of histories.
    As you note, no one should be dehumanized so that the wicked can fight racial wars as Brother Muhammad Ali un-popularly said once.

  • @martinsuo8712
    @martinsuo8712 Před 2 lety

    Thanks!

  • @Jinx-iw6zb
    @Jinx-iw6zb Před 2 lety +1

    I don't think they'd let me be one even if I wanted to.

  • @Atmost11
    @Atmost11 Před 2 lety

    The question we should ask is, would we have been part of the weak corrupt so-called opposition which enabled fascism to take over.
    What social pressures drove the supposedly educated and competent ruling class to block any credible alternative to fascism?

  • @user-wb8jn4ub3b
    @user-wb8jn4ub3b Před rokem

    This video resonates highly with me

  • @zachariahpoltergeist4516

    Probably. I only say that because half the stuff we do today without thinking twice will be seen as reprehensible some time in the future.

  • @rijkersmith3241
    @rijkersmith3241 Před 2 lety +1

    Material conditions and class struggle drive history

  • @SebAnders
    @SebAnders Před 2 lety

    Probably, I wouldn't have been able to resist those black Hugo Boss SS suits.

  • @grmpEqweer
    @grmpEqweer Před 2 lety +5

    Dehumanization is how a neurotypical, empathizing human learns to disengage that empathy from the target categories of people.

  • @lingrajbpattur7777
    @lingrajbpattur7777 Před rokem

    Thanks

  • @gabrielhu6596
    @gabrielhu6596 Před 2 lety +8

    I am quite sure I would, actually. I have no delusions about myself, not anymore. I have strong emotions for matters related to nationality and welfare of my own people, strengthened by a study of history in which we were subjected with colonialism and oppression, in some sense i could relate and sympathise with the Germans after the humiliation of versailles, a common narrative of the self empowerment of our respective people etc. Their model of a state that emphasis discipline and cohesion is very useful for any nations that were formerly being oppressed and are now on the road of self strengthening. In fact in our own revolution against the old feudal empire Germany was the most supportive, and our early modernisation were also very much supported by them, even in WW2 before the Japanese declared war and invaded our nation Germany remain somewhat of an ally to us. The greatest mistake of Germany in WW1 is that they veered off course from a narrative of national self strengthening to a xenophobic fault blaming against a minority that was pathological and self destructive. If they had incorporated the Jewish people in their nation building project, considering the Jewish influence in the realm of finance and academia, and how many jews were there in America, Germany would’ve surely won the war and united Europe.

    • @lizzie7138
      @lizzie7138 Před 2 lety +3

      But can a nation improve itself without having an underdog that it constantly compares itself to and how far it has come as a nation? Can people feel cohesion without a scapegoat?

    • @paigetomkinson1137
      @paigetomkinson1137 Před 2 lety +3

      In spite of the feelings of antisemitism in ethnic Germans around the time of World War I, Jewish people were very well assimilated into the culture and society, at all levels, despite being less than 1% of the population. This was true after about the year 1900, due to legislation passed with the creation of the German Empire, which was finally becoming reality across the country. Some people didn't really like it, but mostly they didn't make trouble, which had been the case earlier on. During the war, there was a proportional representation of Jews in the army, and on the front lines in the war. This is known specifically because the government heard complaints about Jews not taking part, or taking positions that weren't as dangerous, so they did a study and found there was no truth to it. However, they never published the results, which they should have done, so a conspiracy grew around Jewish non-participation in the war. The person who nominated Hitler for one of his Iron Crosses, one of his commanders, was Jewish.
      The Nazis used the financial insecurity and instability of the inter-war years as a way to heighten the latent antisemitism in the German population. The stab-in-the-back myth had come alive right after Germany surrendered, very much bolstered by a venerated general named Ludendorff, and then broadened by nationalists, and then the Nazi party. Hitler tied that myth very firmly to the people who were in the government, and Germany's Jewish population. Perhaps, as the video states, someone else would have done the things he did if he hadn't been born, but it is hard to imagine another person with the precise mental programming being born in that same time and space.
      The assimilation of Germany's Jewish community into the larger society before the Great War couldn't have happened without the participation of ethnic Germans. There was antisemitism present, but it was not violent at that time, nor was it a leading force in the country. Nationalists, like Hitler, harangued their fellow citizens with constant streams of hatred towards the Jewish community, causing the latent feelings of the anti-semites come boiling to the surface. The biggest failing was in the Germans who didn't feel that way about their Jewish friends, neighbors, and family members, who remained silent and passive. The biggest factor in changing the national sentiment was most likely that the Nazis made being openly antisemitic acceptable. Once that was accomplished, they had half of their work taken care of. Programming the children, through school and the youth organizations made easy work of the younger generations for the Nazis, too. We can see the same phenomenon in the U.S. today, with White Supremacy and other forms of racism having been made "acceptable" by the former president. The incidents of hate crimes is still extremely high compared to what it was before he was inaugurated. It is very much like a bottle of soda that has been shaken up. It's safely contained until someone takes the cap off.

  • @raphlvlogs271
    @raphlvlogs271 Před 2 lety

    popularity and being appealing often become more important than being correct

  • @man-yp1gb
    @man-yp1gb Před 2 lety +1

    What if extraterrestrials invaded earth and imposed laws and conformity. Would we be like the natives siding with the Spaniards or resisting them?

  • @fabiodeoliveiraribeiro1602
    @fabiodeoliveiraribeiro1602 Před 8 měsíci

    The world is a mill
    It doesn't grind the wheat
    Who makes our bread
    Human dreams and ambitions
    Nightmares and pain too
    Are inevitably crushed
    By this world mill,
    that rotates
    Forced by gravity
    While crushing beauty and ugliness
    Tears and smiles
    Selfishness and empathy
    All emotional and human fuel
    When making its historic breads
    Nothing escapes the cosmic mill
    And one day the generous cosmos
    Will grind it too

  • @danquilty6580
    @danquilty6580 Před 2 lety +2

    Yes

  • @CoolBreezeAnthony
    @CoolBreezeAnthony Před rokem

    This video was excellent. KUDOS to the creator.

  • @fretnesbutke3233
    @fretnesbutke3233 Před rokem

    The maturity gained from life experience makes all the difference in the world.

  • @GrenvilleP710
    @GrenvilleP710 Před 2 lety

    Probably not as my Grandfather was Jewish However I think if I had been German adfer the Firs World War I would certainly have been enthusiastic about someone offering change and putting the country first.

  • @AMansWorldPodcast
    @AMansWorldPodcast Před 2 lety

    Just the title alone is enough to contemplate on.

  • @underoverrated2959
    @underoverrated2959 Před rokem

    I would say a lot would have been or at least looked the other way/what could you do in the situation?if you were one of the oppressed then you get the fuck out or you stay and secretly fight or don’t fight or get sent to a camp or be shot on sight.I mean only someone who lived through the horror has the right to say anything about it .

  • @sethhovis6444
    @sethhovis6444 Před rokem

    There is a time to heal, and there is a time to kill.
    To see a soul oppressed and to act violently against the oppressor out of felt anger is more legitimate than giving aid afterwards to the victim. Ending the source harm is better than repeatedly treating its results.
    It is time to kill.

    • @uptown_rider8078
      @uptown_rider8078 Před rokem +2

      How you felt saying that: 🤓

    • @sahilhossain8204
      @sahilhossain8204 Před rokem

      @Seth Hovis but what about giving aid to the victim during the oppressor's oppression

  • @GeistInTheMachine
    @GeistInTheMachine Před rokem

    Probabably. There but for the grace of God go I. Never get too cocky.
    I have seen many bad traits within myself upon self-reflection and repeated repentance.
    We are not as good and awesome as we think we are. Though, I should add, we are sometimes not as bad as we think either.

  • @nnnn20430
    @nnnn20430 Před rokem

    Empathy on it's own is not capable of resisting anything, it is a basic function of the brain needed for any human interpersonal interaction, it's just the ability to consider the needs, emotions and plight of others. Even psychopaths have empathy (despite the common misconception). It is influenced and informed by the very social forces you talk about the most, and the same nazis and fasicsts would have believed they were doing things out of empathy as well, it doesn't resist socialization, it is an integral part of human socialization. And as you said you need to be educated and socialized to consider everyone as equal to be able to meaningfully empathize as it depends on the values you internalize, also I'm pretty sure being infected by anothers feelings is sympathy not empathy anyway. I think it's an illusion to look at the past and think there is some kind of moral quality in humans that some use more of that is able to resist evil of their time. I believe the resistance we do see in history is united by necessity, necessity born out of people who don't fit in whatever dominant ideology is, and this necessity unites them in common resistance. If there is a quality of humans that is able to resist the social forces of their time, I think it needs to be more involved, it requires higher awareness of everything that is human and taking responsibility. And speaking of responsibility, social forces are still made and perpetuated by individuals, everyone participating in them is responsible whether they knew it or not.