“Say I Slew Them Not” Genocide, Crimes Against Humanity, and the U.S. Response to COVID19

Friends of Padre Steve’s World,

I have to admit that the amount of ignorance in the defense of evil that I see daily is simply mind blowing. It makes me shake my head. But then I cannot be surprised anymore. Over the weekend I saw a poll in which nine percent of Americans said that holding White Supremacist or Neo-Nazi views and ideology was okay.

Now nine percent doesn’t sound like a big number or anything to worry about until you extrapolate that percentage into the numbers of people who hold that view. Based on the population of the United States that nine percent equals about thirty million individuals. Now I’m sure that many of these patriotic Americans are not card carrying Klansmen or Nazis, but the fact that they would turn a blind eye to the evil of both in the name of some incomprehensible moral equivalence as did President Trump after Charlottesville is quite disturbing. Perhaps it is his example that enables them to be so open about their acceptance of evil.

Yesterday on my Facebook page a friend of a friend commented on an article which discussed new research that indicates that the Nazis in their occupation of the Ukraine killed perhaps a half million more Jews than previously believed. That woman made the comment that there were others, and yes that is true. Had the Nazis won the war tens of millions more of the Jews as well as the Slavs who they referred to as Untermenschen or subhumans would have been killed, either directly or through a policy of intentional starvation. But make no bones about it, from the months that Hitler spent in Landsberg prison for his role in the Beer Hall Putsch of 1923 writing Mein Kampf until the end of the war as the Red Army closed in on his bunker in Berlin, the Jews above all were the object of his personal hatred.

Close to six million Jews and millions of others were killed by the Nazis. Millions of Africans were enslaved in the United States and even after emancipation were by law treated as less than full citizens. Under Jim Crow they were discriminated against at every level of government including states that were neither a part of the Confederacy or not even States when the Civil War was fought, they were impressed as forced labor under the Black Codes and thousands were murdered, often in public by people who brought their children to watch Black men die.

But these people were not just numbers. It’s all to easy to blur them into a mass of dehumanized humanity by talking about the millions, when every single one was a human being, yes, I believe created in the image of God. We have to see their faces and we have to recognize their essential humanity as men and women, children, fathers, mothers, brothers, sisters, husbands and wives, whose lives were in the case of the Jews obliterated as if they never existed, and others like African slaves who were simply property.

I explained that in quite a few fewer words and told her that she shouldn’t challenge me on the subject, which of course she did. So I went into more detail and shot her argument down in flames, to the cheers of other commentators on the post. When you have spent much of your academic life studying a subject it really gets old hearing people make excuse for evil by trying to minimize that evil, especially against the targeted people.

It’s like Confederate apologists saying that the institution of slavery which enslaved millions of Africans was actually worse for White people. Yes it is true that many poor whites benefited little from slavery, but they were not bought and sold as chattel, sold away from their wives and children, whipped, and marched across country in chains to new owners, or yes even killed simply because they were not considered human beings but property.

Sadly, as Dr. Timothy Snyder wrote “The history of the Holocaust is not over. Its precedent is eternal, and its lessons have not yet been learned.”

So there are about 30 million Americans who believe that holding Nazi and White Supremacist beliefs is okay. A few years ago I would believed that the number was lower, but after seven months of living in Trump’s America I believe that it might be even higher than the poll indicated. I only say this based on the postings I see on various social media platforms, news comment pages, the proliferation of websites that cater to these beliefs, and the lack of real condemnation of such individuals by the majority of the GOP Senate and House majorities, and the outright defense of them by other GOP representatives at the Federal and State level. These people have not learned the lessons of the Holocaust, nor American slavery.

Again I don’t believe that the majority of these people are real card carrying Nazis or Klansmen. Most would probably be considered great citizens: they work, they raise families, they go to church, and many would claim that they have “a Black or Jewish friend” so obviously they cannot be racists. But that being said they turn a blind eye to the evil of race hatred and White supremacy, and sometimes join in on social media meme wars where they mock the victims. But no matter what, not condemning the purveyors of White Supremacist or Neo-Nazi ideology, or by using the arguments of moral equivalence to minimize those crimes against humanity makes these people as complicit in the past, present, and future crimes of Naziism as if they were.

They may be ordinary people, as seemingly normal as anyone else, but as Hannah Arendt noted about Adolf Eichmann and other Nazis who advanced the destruction of the Jews was that they were so normal. She wrote:

“The trouble with Eichmann was precisely that so many were like him, and that the many were neither perverted nor sadistic, that they were, and still are, terribly and terrifyingly normal. From the viewpoint of our legal institutions and of our moral standards of judgment, this normality was much more terrifying than all the atrocities put together.”

That my friends is as true as the day she wrote it after Eichmann’s trial, as it is today, and why we must constantly educate people in every forum possible that it is all too easy to become either a perpetrator or evil or a bystander. As Snyder wrote:

“It is less appealing, but morally more urgent, to understand the actions of the perpetrators. The moral danger, after all, is never that one might become a victim but that one might be a perpetrator or a bystander. It is tempting to say that a Nazi murderer is beyond the pale of understanding. …Yet to deny a human being his human character is to render ethics impossible. To yield to this temptation, to find other people inhuman, is to take a step toward, not away from, the Nazi position. To find other people incomprehensible is to abandon the search for understanding, and thus to abandon history.”

Since they were human beings the Nazis were not unique to history. In every era of history human beings have committed atrocities, many in the name of some kind of ethnic, religious, or nationalist ideology of supremacy that held other people to be less than human. That may sound harsh, but it is all too true based on history.

Yehuda Bauer wrote: “The horror of the Holocaust is not that it deviated from human norms; the horror is that it didn’t. What happened may happen again, to others not necessarily Jews, perpetrated by others, not necessarily Germans. We are all possible victims, possible perpetrators, possible bystanders.”

In the movie Judgment at Nuremberg the judge played by Spencer Tracy noted something important about the defendants in the trial. His words need to be heard today as well:

Janning, to be sure, is a tragic figure. We believe he loathed the evil he did. But compassion for the present torture of his soul must not beget forgetfulness of the torture and the death of millions by the Government of which he was a part. Janning’s record and his fate illuminate the most shattering truth that has emerged from this trial: If he and all of the other defendants had been degraded perverts, if all of the leaders of the Third Reich had been sadistic monsters and maniacs, then these events would have no more moral significance than an earthquake, or any other natural catastrophe.

But this trial has shown that under a national crisis, ordinary – even able and extraordinary – men can delude themselves into the commission of crimes so vast and heinous that they beggar the imagination. No one who has sat through the trial can ever forget them: men sterilized because of political belief; a mockery made of friendship and faith; the murder of children. How easily it can happen. There are those in our own country too who today speak of the “protection of country” – of ‘survival’. A decision must be made in the life of every nation at the very moment when the grasp of the enemy is at its throat. Then, it seems that the only way to survive is to use the means of the enemy, to rest survival upon what is expedient – to look the other way. Well, the answer to that is ‘survival as what’? A country isn’t a rock. It’s not an extension of one’s self. It’s what it stands for. It’s what it stands for when standing for something is the most difficult! Before the people of the world, let it now be noted that here, in our decision, this is what we stand for: justice, truth, and the value of a single human being.

We have not learned any of those lessons as Americans and it is being seen in the response of the Trump Administration, Republican Senators and Representatives, as well as many GOP state and local, officials to the Coronavirus 19 pandemic. This pandemic has already claimed the lives of over 170,000 Americans, with roughly two and a half million currently infected, with over 50,000 cases a day, a number that with the reopening of many schools is probably going to increase to 70,000 or more in the next few weeks with a death rate that will increase correspondingly a few weeks later. Despite that the lies of the Coronavirus 19 pandemic deniers, led by President Trump continue to deny and lie, as if the dead were not dead. As Justice Robert Jackson said of the defendants at the Major War Crimes Trial at Nuremberg, the blood of these people is on their hands

“They stand before the record of this trial as bloodstained Gloucester stood by the body of his slain King. He begged of the widow, as they beg of you: “Say I slew them not.” And the Queen replied, “Then say they were not slain. But dead they are ….” If you were to say of these men that they are not guilty, it would be as true to say that there has been no war, there are no slain, there has been no crime.” 


That is exactly what Trump and his racist and pandemic denying cult are guilty of, and they will continue to shed to blood of fellow Americans citizens until, and probably after when he leaves office. And every person they kill through their inaction, lack of empathy, and their willingness to share in the crimes of Trump, is very little different from Germans who said nothing as Hitler’s cult slaughtered the Jews and Millions of others in their dreams of a pure Aryan race, and Lebensraum or living space, even if it meant killing millions of innocent victims. American Army Psychologist Gustave Gilbert wrote in his book:

“In my work with the defendants (at the Nuremberg Trails 1945-1949) I was searching for the nature of evil and I now think I have come close to defining it. A lack of empathy. It’s the one characteristic that connects all the defendants, a genuine incapacity to feel with their fellow men. Evil, I think, is the absence of empathy.”

The people of today who support the policies of Trump, the GOP, and their propagandists who are directly responsible through their words, policies, and lack of responsibility are no different than the supporters of Hitler who carried out the Holocaust and regarded their victims very much As such they are no different than Joseph Stalin who said: “The death of one man is tragic, but the death of thousands is statistic.”

It is high time that we learn that again and that we make up our minds to oppose the ideologies that made the Holocaust,  Slavery and our pathetic and often selfish response to the Coronavirus 19 pandemic possible. As Hannah Arendt observed: “The sad truth is that most evil is done by people who never make up their minds to be good or evil.”  Those who defend the actions, take part in them, or remain bystanders and make excuses for themselves on demonstrate the depths of moral depravity they have sunk to, the depths of their narcissism, and their complete lack of empathy for the victims. In other words just what malignant sociopaths they are.

So until tomorrow,

Peace

Padre Steve+

12 Comments

Filed under anti-semitism, authoritarian government, civil rights, Coronavirus 19 Pandemic, crime, crimes against humanity, healthcare, History, holocaust, Immigration and immigrants, laws and legislation, leadership, nazi germany, News and current events, Political Commentary, racism, Religion, state government agencies, White nationalism, women's rights

12 responses to ““Say I Slew Them Not” Genocide, Crimes Against Humanity, and the U.S. Response to COVID19

  1. Good post, Padre. The quote by Martin Luther King comes to me often these days: “In the end, we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends.”

  2. Dave M

    What is the alternative to civil war? The elections are rigged from all sides and whoever wins will declare cheating. Voter suppression, hanging chads, etc…
    Civil peace. Beatles protest songs. Love, love me do. All you need is love, etc…

    When asked for a response to what Pres Trump has said, “We do not respond to idiots or madmen.”
    Or something from your childhood that Pres Trump will understand. I’m rubber, your glue, whatever you say, bounces off me and sticks to you.

    Take Care, ttyl …

  3. VERNON PRESCOTT

    I’ll try to be as “neutral” as possible on this post in expressing my views. (1). Hitler was the closest thing to the Anti Christ in modern times. The destruction he wrought is a topic unto itself. (2). The history of past injustices against minorities is just that – history. We usually learn from history, but not always. Injustices still exist, and perhaps always will, despite the passage of laws against them. (3). The United States of America is unique among the nations of the world, but has always had it’s dark side. As long as Americans enjoy the freedoms guaranteed in our Bill of Rights and the Constitution, there will always be Skinheads, Neo Nazis, Black Panthers, Ant-Semites, Anti-Arabs, and probably another dozen “Anti’s” I cannot recall. (4). Americans enjoy an independence second to none. Defying authority is routine. Using Covid-19 as an example, college age youth gather (unmasked, with no social distancing) in bars, on the beach, and at large parties with a feeling of indestructibility, and no thought of the serious consequences of such actions. Older Americans are, at times, no better. Having a mask on and wearing it effectively has a regular tendency to short circuit, either due to age or apathy. Masks drooping in public places, citizens lowering their masks to speak, wearing a mask improperly…..I imagine we have all probably witnessed it., (5). National Leaders, irrespective of Party affiliation can only go so far as respects edicts. If our citizens don’t like precautionary edicts and restrictions, they ignore them. (6). These same leaders can only recommend to State Governments, what to do. Any many State leaders have made very bad decisions of late, along with panic decisions. I cite placing the Elderly Covid patients in Nursing homes, the panic over the need for respirators, and in particular,Governor Cuomo of New York, and his requests for a mobile hospital ( set up in the Jacob Javitt’s Center ), and the Hospital Ship docked in NY harbor, both of which saw very little, if any use. This, at the same time as Mayor DiBlasio was allowing protests, rioting, looting, arson, and virtually all crimes to run rampant thus allowing the Coronavirus to do the same. (7). Finally, there will be no civil war, public floggings or hangings of officials over poor decisions, or real accountability other than current elected officials at all levels either being re-elected, or defeated at the Polls. (8). Finally, Seattle, Portland, Minneapolis, Milwaukee, New York, Chicago……all these cities effectively ruined . Not due to National Leaders but due to local leaders yielding to the mobs.

  4. VERNON PRESCOTT

    One last thing…… The American Public, particularly the newest generation of rebel rousers, and elected Politicians, have forgotten that Reverend Martin Luther King ever existed. That, is the saddest point of all.

  5. Reblogged this on The Secular Jurist and commented:
    MUST READ, excerpt:

    The people of today who support the policies of Trump, the GOP, and their propagandists who are directly responsible through their words, policies, and lack of responsibility are no different than the supporters of Hitler who carried out the Holocaust and regarded their victims very much As such they are no different than Joseph Stalin who said: “The death of one man is tragic, but the death of thousands is statistic.”

  6. Pingback: “Say I Slew Them Not” Genocide, Crimes Against Humanity, and the U.S. Response to COVID19 — The Inglorius Padre Steve’s World | Another Spectrum

  7. maryplumbago

    One of your best posts ever.

  8. One of my fave smart folks on YouTube said it best for years, and I oughta make a t-shirt out of it (or a bumper sticker) and wear it around: We don’t teach American History, we teach American Mythology.

    So many people cling to the 1950s rah-rah patriotism and American Exceptionalism. It reminds me too much of watching “A Night To Remember” (THE BEST Titanic movie, dammit) again and watching those pompous folks insisting the Titanic can’t sink and that they’re being inconvenienced by being out in the cold, even as the water’s hitting the main deck and lifeboats are disappearing fast. It’s amazing how many people who watch will probably yell at the screen about at the arrogance and idiocy of the passengers who were about to die in mere hours. And yet, those same folks don’t notice that the water’s lapping on our decks in the U.S. right now and every country’s giving advice and guarding against icebergs themselves while we blink stupidly back at them and are going down by the bow. Other countries are looking at us in pity and disgust as we wallow in a mess and won’t do what’s needed to pull ourselves out. A few are trying, but we need the many to start bailing and fix the holes.

    Too tired to make a better analogy. I’ve heard too many arguments (including a doozy from my mother) regarding how we’re destroying our history and tearing it apart, and we’re teaching everything wrong. No, we’re finally trying to teach it right and get away from the propagandized cold-war inspired “can-do-no-wrong” image of the U.S., because heaven knows we’ve screwed up a ton in our past. Time to understand it, make peace with it, and do better.

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