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Message
re: U.S. deports 95-year-old who was a Nazi concentration camp guard
Posted on 2/21/21 at 8:39 am to LSUlefty
Posted on 2/21/21 at 8:39 am to LSUlefty
quote:
Say no to hitler
Well we found the German. Clearly your relatives fought for the nazis not the USA. Frick off and frick this 95 year old. People have no spine today.
Posted on 2/21/21 at 8:40 am to offshoretrash
quote:
involved in anyway killing and torturing innocent people
Another on who thinks that every concentration camp was a death camp.
Good god, man.
Posted on 2/21/21 at 8:41 am to offshoretrash
and every communist should die too by that measure right?
Posted on 2/21/21 at 8:43 am to Mo Jeaux
So you are ok with what this guy did.
Just an old Nazi who dindu nuffin
Just an old Nazi who dindu nuffin
Posted on 2/21/21 at 8:48 am to Mo Jeaux
Where did I say that?
The article says the guy was a guard a camp that worked people to death.
Are you a fricking piece of shite Nazi sympathizer?
This thread is not about communist but they are guilty of killing millions of innocent people as well and should pay for their sins. The left has become partners with them, the communist will do nothing but grow stronger.
The article says the guy was a guard a camp that worked people to death.
Are you a fricking piece of shite Nazi sympathizer?
This thread is not about communist but they are guilty of killing millions of innocent people as well and should pay for their sins. The left has become partners with them, the communist will do nothing but grow stronger.
Posted on 2/21/21 at 8:51 am to kciDAtaE
quote:
I’m okay with removing all of the Nazis from America. You won’t convince me otherwise
So all folks in government and the media have to do is label someone a Nazi and you're down with instantaneous deportation? Sounds like you've given them a road map to stamp out mainstream opposition. Ironically, that sounds rather Nazi-ish to me.
Posted on 2/21/21 at 8:56 am to SCLibertarian
Was this man given a trial?
Posted on 2/21/21 at 9:02 am to memphis tiger
quote:
So you are ok with what this guy did.
Just an old Nazi who dindu nuffin
I don’t really know what he did, and neither do you.
Posted on 2/21/21 at 9:03 am to offshoretrash
quote:
The article says the guy was a guard a camp that worked people to death.
Oh, the article said. Well, there you go.
I’m shocked that people were dying during a war.
This post was edited on 2/21/21 at 9:09 am
Posted on 2/21/21 at 9:04 am to Mo Jeaux
quote:
Good god, man
You have to love the Billy Badasses in this thread. If they were born in Germany between 1915 and 1925, all of them would have fought for Germany in WWII. And if all of them were assigned to be a guard at a camp rather than fight the Allies in their march towards Berlin, how many do you think would have done the very thing Berger did? I mean, this site lost its mind when folks in Texas and Louisiana lost power for a few days, but we're to expect that they would have refused the transfer and risked opening themselves up to frontline combat, in addition to the potential discipline and ridicule of refusing an assignment?
Posted on 2/21/21 at 9:07 am to Mo Jeaux
quote:
the article said.
this, journalists today are basically op-eds, every article I read seems to basically pointless mini rants stating the opinion of the "author," and typically have baseless allegations and assumptions, I did Nazi anything to prove this ole baw was involved with the extermination side of the ops
Posted on 2/21/21 at 9:08 am to SCLibertarian
The Simon Weisenthal Center spent decades looking for evidence that a Nazi was punished for refusing to take part in the Holocaust, in any form, and none was ever found. Read the Rise & Fall of The Third Reich, the most extensively researched book about the Nazis, WWII, the Holocaust, etc. Nothing found. As for John Demjanjuk, he was subsequently tried & convicted for being a camp guard at another death camp. Read any of the thousands of books, many by survivors, and it's clear that camp guards did not simply walk around the camps with their rifles on their shoulders. They were actively involved in the murders, either through accomplishment or direct involvement. International law has now established, and been accepted, that being in a death camp in any capacity is sufficient legal grounds to be charged in participation of the Holocaust. As for being 95 yrs old.....none of Weisenthal's 75 relatives who were murdered in the Holocaust had a chance to live that long.
Posted on 2/21/21 at 9:09 am to John88
It’s important to note that this guy wasn’t “just a guard” forced to do a job at gunpoint. For starters, you have to understand that he did not request a transfer of duty from being a concentration camp guard. He could have chose a combat role and I’m certain that the Nazis would have been overjoyed to accommodate him. Understand that. His country was being overrun from both directions, and he’s not fighting invaders. He’s guarding starving Jews instead. That’s the caliber of man some of you are defending right now.
But there’s an even more important detail many are overlooking here. He aided in the evacuation of a camp as the Allies approached in 1945. These evacuations were ordered for three reasons. To cover evidence of the camp from the Allies, to keep Jews away from liberation so that their slave labor could continue to be exploited, or to outright kill them on the march. 70 prisoners died on his march.
Now, it needs to be understood that he was complicit in all of this. He knew what the camp was about. He knew what the march was about. He knew he had to hide what happened in each from the Allies. He participated in a march where 70 emaciated prisoners died. He could have picked up a gun and fought for his homeland instead or he could have just walked down the road and surrendered. He did not.
He is a coward and a son of a bitch. Some of you have gone soft. You don’t let actual Nazi concentration camp guards live among you like normal human beings and be okay with it.
But there’s an even more important detail many are overlooking here. He aided in the evacuation of a camp as the Allies approached in 1945. These evacuations were ordered for three reasons. To cover evidence of the camp from the Allies, to keep Jews away from liberation so that their slave labor could continue to be exploited, or to outright kill them on the march. 70 prisoners died on his march.
Now, it needs to be understood that he was complicit in all of this. He knew what the camp was about. He knew what the march was about. He knew he had to hide what happened in each from the Allies. He participated in a march where 70 emaciated prisoners died. He could have picked up a gun and fought for his homeland instead or he could have just walked down the road and surrendered. He did not.
He is a coward and a son of a bitch. Some of you have gone soft. You don’t let actual Nazi concentration camp guards live among you like normal human beings and be okay with it.
This post was edited on 2/21/21 at 9:13 am
Posted on 2/21/21 at 9:10 am to Keltic Tiger
quote:
The Simon Weisenthal Center spent decades looking for evidence that a Nazi was punished for refusing to take part in the Holocaust, in any form, and none was ever found. Read the Rise & Fall of The Third Reich, the most extensively researched book about the Nazis, WWII, the Holocaust, etc. Nothing found. As for John Demjanjuk, he was subsequently tried & convicted for being a camp guard at another death camp. Read any of the thousands of books, many by survivors, and it's clear that camp guards did not simply walk around the camps with their rifles on their shoulders. They were actively involved in the murders, either through accomplishment or direct involvement. International law has now established, and been accepted, that being in a death camp in any capacity is sufficient legal grounds to be charged in participation of the Holocaust. As for being 95 yrs old.....none of Weisenthal's 75 relatives who were murdered in the Holocaust had a chance to live that long.
Lol.
Posted on 2/21/21 at 9:12 am to SpqrTiger
quote:
It’s important to note that this guy wasn’t “just a guard” forced to do a job at gunpoint. For starters, you have to understand that he did not request a transfer of duty from being a concentration camp guard. He could have chose a combat role and I’m certain that the Nazis would have been overjoyed to accommodate him. Understand that. His country was being overrun from both directions, and he’s not fighting invaders. He’s guarding starving Jews instead. That’s the caliber of man some of you are defending right now.
So, he was a scared 20-year old pussy. Ok, I don’t think anyone is holding him up as a paragon of virtue. But, brother, if we’re convicting people for that sort of crime, we’re getting into some messy territory.
Posted on 2/21/21 at 9:13 am to Mo Jeaux
quote:this didn't happen.
if we’re convicting people for that sort of crime,
Posted on 2/21/21 at 9:14 am to SpqrTiger
quote:
Now, it needs to be understood that he was complicit in all of this. He knew what the camp was about
I don’t understand posts like this. Again, this was not a death camp. This was a concentration camp that also held POWs. We had these too.
Posted on 2/21/21 at 9:14 am to castorinho
quote:
this didn't happen.
Well, not in this instance, yet.
Posted on 2/21/21 at 9:15 am to Mo Jeaux
Facts are amusing? In this context?
Posted on 2/21/21 at 9:16 am to Keltic Tiger
quote:
Facts are amusing?
Your musings are amusing.
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