• @[email protected]
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    3 months ago

    This.

    Additionally, the nazis built infrastructure (trains, KZs, …) just to kill Jews. They optimized it to maximize the amount of Jews to bring into KZs, they built the infamous gas showers and gas chambers to be able to kill more people more efficiently.

    They industrialized genocide.

    While there were many cruel mass murders, this industrialization thing makes it unique so far.

    Greetings from a fellow German.

    • ???
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      13 months ago

      “Additionally, the Zionists built infrastructure (separation walls, checkpoints, expanding settlements) just to kill Palestinians. They optimized it to maximize the amount of Palestinians to bring into Gaza (an open air prison) or overcrowded Israeli jails, they built the infamous AI targeting systems and have gotten the biggest imprecise missiles they could find to be able to kill more people more efficiently. On top of that, they completely cut off supplies and destroyed all universities and many hospitlas water facilities in the open air prison they crowded Palestinians too”.

      • Remember, most of Gaza are refugees from other parts of Palestine who were already to Gaza. Gaza is Israel’s current genocide infrastructure just like concentration camps were the genocide infrastructure built to kill Jews in Europe.
    • ???
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      13 months ago

      Israel has literally done this though.

      By all means, it’s a Palestinian holocaust.

      • YeetPics
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        -13 months ago

        They have built infrastructure explicitly for murdering gazans at an industrial pace?

        They shipped in gazans from around Europe? Wow I hadn’t heard any of this. Is Goebbels involved, too?

        • ???
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          -13 months ago

          Yes they have industrialized it. But you seem to have some pedantic definition of industrialized mass murder that somehow only applies to Jews. Got it. ;)

          • YeetPics
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            03 months ago

            Lol you’re calling me pedantic while splitting hairs over what “THE HOLOCAUST” could mean. Check the post your commenting under.

            Please touch grass.

    • @uranibaba
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      -23 months ago

      I had a relationship with a German some years ago. I was told that there was some kind of collective punishment (my words) still going on because of WW2. That Germany still felt responsible, and pushed that responsibility onto the next generation, a generation with no relation to WW2 other than being born in Germany.

      Why can’t the older generation let the next generation move on without inheriting their burden?

      • @[email protected]
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        163 months ago

        This is an agenda pushed by the right. They don’t understand the difference between guilt / responsibility for what happened and responsibility to not let it happen again.

        We are not guilty nor responsible for what happened during WW2, but we are responsible to not let it ever happen again.

      • @NicestDicerest
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        93 months ago

        It is not “pushed onto us”. Its important to remember what happend in order to tell the signs and stop it from happening ever again. The narrative of “We are not responsible for it anymore and shouldn’t feel any guilt” is a narrative mostly used by german right-wing conservatists trying to erase this part of our history out of the books and education.

      • @[email protected]
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        33 months ago

        Because everything doable has to be done to prevent something like this from happening ever again. Feeling some guilt is a small price to pay. Sincerely, a German

        • ???
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          -53 months ago

          Does it though? Seems like it produces a weird emotional response and lots of hot air. Guilt doesn’t seem healthy nor useful nor effective in stoping future genocides.

          Otherwise we would have seen a better response from the German government who should have felt guilty enough about the holocaust to prevent one from happening in Gaza. Instead, they pledge support to Israel. Cool. Very “guilty” indeed.

          • @[email protected]
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            43 months ago

            Yes it does. It creates awareness for antisemitism and fascism. It makes you feel responsible for political changes as an individual, which is important for a functioning democracy.

            A Nazi party is currently on the rise here, they’re called AfD. Obviously, it doesn’t work for those people, but it can’t be expected to work for everyone. There have been mass protests against that party though (I’m talking multiple millions of people all across Germany were protesting) under the motto “Nie wieder ist jetzt” (Never again is now). I think that shows how the knowledge about the Holocaust mobilizes people to act against right wing extremists.

            I’m not happy with the official reactions of the German government to Israel. You need to understand, however, that after Germany tried to eradicate Jews, we’ve made it a priority to defend their right for a safe home. I agree that they currently abuse this right in many ways. There has certainly also been criticism among German highly ranked politicians of Israel’s actions, albeit probably not enough. You need to understand though that antisemitism is still rooted in German society, and it is important not to fuel it. That’s a fine line to walk on there. I agree that it’s probably not handled optimally currently, but it’s also not as easy as you make it out to be.

            • ???
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              -13 months ago

              Maybe in the way you define it, it does, but not in the way I see I being used.

              How would I be feeling anti-Semitism? I think not funding a genocide and taking. a strong human rights stance is easy and doable.

              • @[email protected]
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                13 months ago

                It is fueling it because criticism of Israeli politics is constantly mixed with antisemitic narratives. That’s the fault of antisemites of course, but the problem is there and cannot be denied. As I said, I don’t agree with how it’s handled, but it needs to be acknowledged that it’s a hard problem to solve. Believe me, I wish all this was easier. I wish I could protest Israels actions without being seen as an antisemite but I can’t because of the dynamics of the public discourse which is driven by extremists of all sides. The discourse here has been poisoned by antisemites, racists and islamophobes to an extent where expressing a nuanced and/or pure-hearted opinion on the matter is almost impossible.

                • ???
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                  13 months ago

                  How is it hard to take a stand against a genocide after Germany itself made one happen?

                  • @[email protected]
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                    03 months ago

                    Because at demonstrations that call Israel out for what it does, they shout anti-semitic stuff. I don’t want to take part in a demonstration that spreads anti-semitism.