• @[email protected]
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    131 hour ago

    There were resistance movements, some of which got quite famous. Most well-known to me would be Dietrich Bonhoeffer, a Lutheran theologian who was quite vocal about his opposition to the Nazi regime and eventually participated in plans to assassinate Hitler. It failed, as we know, and he was sentenced to death for his role. He very much grappled with the question of whether murdering a tyrant was a sin, but eventually came to the conclusion that it had to be done either way.

    He also petitioned the allies to differentiate between Germans and Nazis once the war was over, pertinent to your post.

  • @teamevil
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    328 minutes ago

    There’s an episode of Behind the Bastards that does exactly that… basically it was slightly upper middle class that was afraid of their life changing…

    Same goddamn thing will happen here unfortunately

  • @[email protected]
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    2 hours ago

    If the status quo is NAZI and you do not challenge it … then you will be remembered as a NAZI. That is all there is to this. And that is fair.

  • @bert_brause
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    143 hours ago

    Well that’s easy: everyone outside of the concentration camps more less supported them or did enough to not end up in one of the camps. Of course there were a bunch of rebellious groups of people who actively stood up against the government. Of some of them we know, others might have been forgotten. But I think with that we’re already covering at least 75% of the population. You might find the list of companies involved in the holocaust interesting. Not exactly people but you can extrapolate from there: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_companies_involved_in_the_Holocaust

  • @seven_phone
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    93 hours ago

    About the same proportion as is actively pretending not to notice now.