Germany then; USA now?

by sammielee24 15 Replies latest jw friends

  • sammielee24
    sammielee24

    Thought provoking article...when it's in black and whilte it seems eerie ...I didn't write it - I stumbled across it today - sammieswife..

    America now is Germany then: Analogies 1 comment

    America now is Germany then: Analogies

    The German people of the late 1930s imagined themselves to be brave. They saw themselves as the heroic Germans depicted by the Wagnerian Operas, the descendants of the fierce Germanic warriors who had hunted wild boar with nothing but spears and who had defeated three of Rome’s mightiest legions in the Tuetenberg Forest.

    But in truth, by the 1930s, the German people had become civilized and tamed, culturally obsessed with fine details in both science and society. Their self-image of bravery was both salve and slavery. Germans were required to behave as if they were brave, even when they were not.

    It’s easy to look back and realize what happened. But at the time the Hitler administration, with the help of the media, looked pretty good to the German people. Hitler was TIME Magazine’s Man Of The Year in 1938; the German people assumed they were safe from a tyrant. They lived in a Republic, after all, with strict laws regarding what the government could and more importantly could not do. Their leader was a devoutly religious man, and had even sung with the boy’s choir of a monastery in his youth.

    The reality was that the German people, as individuals, had lost their courage. The German government preferred it that way as a fearful people are easier to rule than a courageous one. But the German people didn’t wish to lose their self-image of courage. So, when confronted with a situation demanding individual courage, in the form of a government gone wrong, the German people simply pretended that the situation did not exist. And in that simple self-deception lay the ruin of an entire nation and the coming of the second World War.

    When the Reichstag burned down, most Germans simply refused to believe suggestions that the fire had been staged by the Hitler administration itself. They were afraid to. But so trapped were the Germans by their belief in their own bravery that they willed themselves to be blind to the evidence before their eyes, so that they could nod in agreement with Der Fuhrer while still imagining themselves to have courage, even as they avoided the one situation which most required real courage: to stand up to governmental lies and deceptions.

    When the Hitler administration requested temporary extraordinary powers; powers specifically banned under German law, but powers the government claimed they needed to have to deal with the "terrorists", the German people, having already sold their souls to their self-delusions, agreed. The temporary powers were conferred, and, once conferred, lasted until Germany itself was destroyed.

    When the Hitler administration staged a phony invasion by Poland, the vast majority of the German people, their own self-image dependant on continuing blindness to their government’s deceptions, did not question why Poland would have done something so stupid as to attack Germany, and as a result Germans found themselves in a war.

    But the German government knew they ruled a nation of cowards, and knew they had to spend the money to make the new war something cowards could fight and win. They decorated their troops with regalia to make them proud of themselves, further trapping them in their self-image. The Hitler administration copied the parade regalia of ancient Rome, to remind the Germans of the defeat of the legions at the Tuetenberg Forest. Talismans were added from orthodox religions and the occult to fill the soldiers with delusions of mystical strengths and an afterlife if they fell in battle.

    Knowing that it takes courage to kill the enemy face to face, the Hitler administration spent vast sums of money on wonder weapons, airplanes, submarines, ultra-long range artillery, the world’s first cruise missile and the world’s first guided missile, weapons that could be used to kill at a distance, so that those doing the killing need not have to face the reality of what they were doing.

    The German people were lured into WW2 not because they were brave, but because they were cowards who wanted to be seen as brave, and found that shooting long range weapons at people they could not see took less courage than standing up to the government’s lies and deceptions. Sent into battle by that false image of courage, the Germans were dependent on their wonder-weapons. When the wonder-weapons stopped working, the delusion of grandeur faded, the illusion ended, the Germans lost the war.

    The American people imagine themselves to be brave. They see themselves as the heroic Americans depicted by Western Movies, the descendants of the fierce patriot warriors who had tamed the frontier and defeated the might of the British Empire.

    But in truth, by the dawn of the third millennium, the American people have become civilized and tamed, culturally obsessed with fine details in both science and society. Their self-image of bravery is both salve and slavery. Americans are required to behave as if they are brave, even when they are not.

    The American people assume they are safe. They live in a Republic, after all, with strict laws regarding what the government can and more importantly cannot do. Their leader is a devoutly religious man and with the help of the media looks petty good: TIME Magazine’s Man Of The Year 2000 and 2004.

    The reality is that the American people, as individuals, have lost their courage. The government prefers it that way as a fearful people are easier to rule than a courageous one. But Americans don’t wish to lose their self-image of courage. So, when confronted with a situation demanding courage, in the form of a government gone wrong, the American people simply pretend that the situation does not exist.

    When the World Trade Towers collapsed, most Americans simply refused to believe suggestions that the attacks had been staged by parties working for the US government itself. Americans were afraid to, even as news reports surfaced proving that the US government had announced plans for the invasion of Afghanistan early in the year, plans into which the attacks on the World Trade Towers which angered the American people into support of the already-planned war fit entirely too conveniently.

    Now the US government has requested temporary extraordinary powers, powers specifically banned under Constitutional law, but powers the government is claiming they need to have to deal with the "terrorists". The American people, having already sold their souls to their self-delusions, are agreeing. The temporary powers recently conferred will be no more temporary in America than they were in Germany.

    The vast majority of the American people, their own self-image dependant on continuing blindness to the government’s deceptions, never question why Afghanistan would have done something so stupid as to attack the United States, and as a result, Americans find themselves in a war.

    The US government knows they rule a nation of cowards. The government has had to spend the money to make the new war something cowards can fight. The government has decorated the troops with regalia to make them proud of themselves, further trapping them in their self-image. Talismans are added from orthodox religions and the occult to fill the soldiers with delusions of mystical strengths and an afterlife if they fall in battle.

    Knowing that it takes courage to kill the enemy face to face, the United States government has spent vast sums of money on wonder weapons, airplanes, submarines, ultra-long range artillery, cruise missiles, and guided missiles, weapons that kill at a distance, so that those doing the killing need not have to face the reality of what they are doing.

    But so trapped are Americans by their belief in their own bravery that they will themselves to be blind to the evidence before their eyes, so that they can nod in agreement with the government while still imagining themselves to have courage, even as they avoid the one situation which most requires real courage; to stand up to the government’s lies and deceptions. When the wonder-weapons stop working, the delusion of grandeur fades, the illusion ends, the Americans will have lost ..... themselves.

    The lesson from these facts is that it isn’t easy to spot a genocidal tyrant when you live with one, especially one whom the press supports and promotes. Tyrants become obvious only when looking back, after what they have done becomes known. The German people did not stand up to the Hitler administration because their media betrayed them, just as the American media is betraying the American people by willingly, voluntarily, even proudly, abandoning its traditional role as watchdog against government abuse.

    It is naive, not to mention racist, to assume that tyrants appear only in other nations and that somehow America is immune simply because "we’re Americans".

    America has escaped the clutches of a dictatorship thus far only through the efforts of those citizens who, unlike the Germans of the 1930s, have the moral courage to stand up and point out where the government is lying to the people. And unless more Americans are willing to have that kind of individual courage, then future generations may well look back on the American people with the same harshness of judgement with which we look back on the 1930s Germans.

    History is a great teacher.

  • PrimateDave
    PrimateDave

    Here's a different perspective from a blog I follow:

    Even at this point, the current crack-up in world finance makes the 1929 crash and the events of the 1930s look in comparison like an orderly small town auction of somebody's grandmother's effects. Back in that sepia day, America had plenty of everything except ready cash. We had, especially, plenty of our own oil, and -- you're not going to believe this but it's true -- the stuff was selling for as little as ten cents a barrel, it was so abundant. And yet still, America in the 1930s plunged into a dark depression of inactivity, loss of confidence, and impoverishment.

    This time around, things could get more disorderly. Personally, I think we may be beyond the reach even of fascist authoritarianism, because unlike the programmed industrial masses of the 1930s, we are unused to regimentation, to lining up at the factory gates and the movie theaters. Back then, society was so regimented that everybody wore uniforms in-and-out of the military. Look at movies from the 1930s. Every man-jack wore either a necktie and hat or overalls. The industrial masses behaved like termites. Once unemployment hit, they were waiting to be told what to do, to line up for something. It worked fabulously for Hitler, who took every advantage of this mentality. Luckily, the US went for Roosevelt (both FDR and Hitler entered office the same winter of 1933, by the way). FDR was more like everybody's kindly Uncle Frank, and his reassuring persona enabled Americans to suck up their bad luck and altered circumstances. Many of them retreated to the family farm (which still existed then) and waited things out -- and, anyway, the melodrama of the Great Depression soon resolved in the Second World War when Hitler's love of regimentation led him into military misadventure. He shouldn't have picked a fight with someone who had so much petroleum...

    Full article here: Kunstler.com

    Dave

  • FlyingHighNow
    FlyingHighNow

    Obviously enough Americans are just like Germans of the 1930's. Not only did they blindly trust GW Bush twice, they still haven't learned and blindly trust McCain/Palin. I see a lot of similarities between Germany and America, including the looming economic depression. GW has already taken rights away from us. John Dean wrote a book called Worse Than Watergate. In it he shows that American can fall prey to a dictatorship and that GW had taken enough individual rights away to set one up.

    Wake up, America.

  • jaguarbass
    jaguarbass

    It almost makes you think W. can read, or at least had someone read this to him.

  • sammielee24
    sammielee24
    I see a lot of similarities between Germany and America, including the looming economic depression

    As do I.

    I know people who grew up in Germany during that time, and the stories they told were horrendous. Eating food they stole from pigs in order to survive. I was close to a German woman of that time and she shared with me the story of her mother dying of starvation and how she and her brother ran after the little ambulance that came and took the mother away...and how she watched in horror as her brother stepped on a mine and died. Many,many stories about how children had to belong to the youth camps....it was easy to see how the people were beat down, depressed and suffering and why they were so easily influenced by the promise of something greater.

    At a time when personal responsibility seems to have flown out the window in favour of socialism aka bailout of wall street - how much personal responsibility should we demand or have the right to demand from that 90 year old lady who shot herself in the chest when they came to foreclose on her house?

    Screwed up world...

    sammieswife.

  • JeffT
    JeffT

    Whoever wrote that doesn't know squat about the history of Germany. As pointed out, he/she doesn't even understand Time's criteria for "man of the year."

    I suggest reading "The Coming of the Third Reich." A lot of what gets said about Barack Obama can be compared to Hitler just as easily as W.

  • sammielee24
    sammielee24

    You can read a thousand history books and not agree with them all. You can listen to a million voices and not believe one. sammieswife.

  • FlyingHighNow
    FlyingHighNow

    Worse than Watergate: The Secret Presidency of George W. Bush.

    By John Dean

    http://www.amazon.com/Worse-Than-Watergate-Secret-Presidency/dp/031600023X

    Watch out, America. John Dean has been trying to warn you for several years now about the dangerous presidential administration of Bush/Cheney.

  • Highlander
    Highlander
    Eating food they stole from pigs in order to survive.

    Instead of taking a pig's food, why didn't they eat the pig?

  • sammielee24
    sammielee24
    Instead of taking a pig's food, why didn't they eat the pig?

    Because they would have been shot trying to steal it or kill it. They didn't own the pig - they had no food, so they had to wait until the neighbour went out to feed his pigs - usually slop mixed with potato peels...and they would dive in the muck to grab all the peels they could take from the pigs. To this day, she cannot eat a potato and cannot understand the idea of a restaurant serving potato skins. sammieswife.

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