Image transcription: an screenshot of a Twitter exchange.

A Tweet from @poppy_haze reads “German General Heinz Guderian, while being interrogated by the Americans, broke down crying explaining how the US paratroopers guarding the prison, would chase him from his cell to the showers screaming ‘RUN NAZI, RUN! FASTER NAZI! FASTER!’”

@Hanasaku_Yuri responds with a post on r/Fortnite edited to read: “I. FUCKING. HATE. ALLIED. CAPTIVITY. The Paratroopers at the prison make me run up and down the halls and shout go Nazi boy go”

End transcription.

    • Concetta@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      9 months ago

      Then you should read about him, because he absolutely should have been executed, not allowed to become a fucking author who was still a German Nationalist who had an affinity for Hitler.

        • nifty@lemmy.world
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          9 months ago

          That’s not it, I think it’s more just recognizing that you shouldn’t let your good nature be exploited by people who don’t have one. It’s the paradox of tolerance. There are definitely things worth being intolerant against, Nazi filth is amongst those

      • hydrospanner@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        Yeah anytime I’m in too good of a mood and need to be infuriated, I know I can always read about the aftermath of WW2 and the fates of so many nazis and how so very few of them faced any sort of actual justice, let alone anything remotely proportional to their actions.

    • onion@feddit.de
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      9 months ago

      That’s good. You shouldn’t throw away your ideals and stoop down to the bad persons level

      • Goldmage263
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        9 months ago

        I agree. Recognizing dissonance in yourself is good and a skill that many adults lack. Reguardless of being able to make a decision on the correct ethics, it shows a willingness to check preconcieved notions.

    • Uriel238 [all pronouns]@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      8 months ago

      Hold onto that. This is a facet of humanity I think we want to preserve. The future of civilization is one of empathy, even to those who have committed heinous wrongdoing, who hold dangerous positions or who harbor unthinkable desires.

      How we treat the caged devil speaks more to who we are as a society, whether we disregard their humanity entirely and consider them valid targets of our own worst impulses or we commit to the notion that truly everyone should be guaranteed civil rights and dignity no matter who they are or what they did. Better, I think, to contain them with respect if we are unable to reform them, but ideally to seek to return them to participation in society.

      (And yes, I did just describe the end of Nineteen Eighty-Four, or even Twelve Looks Just Like You. The science of psychology is unaligned and can be used an an instrument to promote awareness and well-being or ignorance and obedience. In fact, in our current society, psychology is more used to sell products and promote political campaigns than it is to steer individuals towards self-awareness and functionality.)

      Despite our impulses to see the worst of us as deranged or degenerate and deserving of terrible reprisal, ultimately humans are the product of heredity and upbringing. We are not intrinsically parasitic like the One Ring. We’re broken like Narsil.

      That said, injustice typically prevails in our legal systems. Those caught possessing drugs are treated worse than war criminals. Whistleblowers serve sentences worthy of first-degree murderers. False convictions serve police and legal careers as much as valid ones, and we don’t test for them despite Blackstone’s ratio, leaving an unknown but substantial number of innocents languishing in prisons lousy with vermin, disease, neglect and violence from its staff. And then elite deviants who cause more harm exponentially than petty crime are left free and above the law.

      There’s also the matter of personal privacy and protections against unreasonable search and seizure: Every time a courtroom justifies crossing these lines for heinous crimes, that justification is then used for property crime, or contraband possession, or harassment of minorities, or anything that might offend the current administration. The countless carve-outs to privacy protections we have started to catch a killer or sexual predator, but then was ultimately turned on civil rights activists, religious congregations and marginalized social demographics.

      So I can’t speak for today. We’re a long, long way from a society in which justice is fair, in which legal systems aren’t abused by the state. A system in which common speed junkie is treated with the same dignity as Heinz Gudarian, or as OJ Simpson might be centuries off. But I do hope a day will come in which the state recognizes that its purpose is not to mistreat criminals like degenerates, whether militants or fraudsters or self-abusers, but to protect and care for the people, including those in custody.