Blondie, thanks for those references. I remember reading, or hearing, many years ago about the Witness concept of community responsibility. The 1952 WT article just terrible. So some races are just beyond redemption, apparently. Has the society ever retracted that view? No.
Not long after leaving the Witnesses I met a lovely woman living in the same suburb as me who, along with her husband, was disfellowshipped by the society after fading from her congregation, moving interstate and settling quietly into a new home. She had made no attempt to contact any Witnesses in her new city, so was therefore in any way a spiritual threat to any Witnesses locally. Yet they pursued the couple and told them they needed to appear before a JC. They ignored it and were later told the JC had (naturally) decided they were apostates.
She somehow encountered a book called Life and Death in Shanghai, by Nien Cheng, which she later lent to me. The similarities between life in a tightly controlled, repressive community watched over by Red Guards, constantly fearing being reported to the authorities by her neighbours for any individual thought, forced to recite slogans, hate those the rulers decide are enemies, and unquestionably accept the teachings of the leaders ... and life as a JW are far to striking to ignore. Yet those Chinese had no religious views. They were not part of Babylon the Great. They were in every way victims of a repressive regime, utterly powerless, just the sort of people the Bible says Jesus came to earth to save. Yet they, too, are deemed by smug and arrogant JWs to be like vermin to be destroyed at Armageddon because they haven't accepted a Bible study from .... well, no one, because God has no representatives of his organization in that country. Too bad for them, I guess.