• hydroptic@sopuli.xyz
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    11 hours ago

    But that’s the thing: Nazis weren’t really even displaced, and many kept their jobs in eg. the judiciary because they were seen as indispensable. The failure of denazification was on display especially egregiously in Austria, where you’d have people openly wearing Nazi uniforms years after the war, and they concoted the idea that they were all just unwilling victims of Nazism instead of enthusiastic participants.

    • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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      4 hours ago

      For all the issues with Rowling, her allusions to Nazis in Harry Potter was fairly good. People in those stories said they were forced to do evil using a charm, and it made it almost impossible to identify “real” Nazis and the ones who “didn’t know better” or “couldn’t stop it.” The same is true for Nazis in real life. The people will say they didn’t know or just kept their heads down to avoid trouble, but how do you know if they’re telling the truth?

      The answer is, you can’t. You can be generous and just let them all go free (and bring Nazism back later) or be aggressive and root out the problem.

      I have no idea if this is on purpose, but it’s made pretty clear how to solve the issue in the first place, and I’m pretty sure she doesn’t agree with it. She has obvious “former Nazis” doing Nazi things in the open, but then no one does anything to stop them. How much simpler would the story have been if they had just killed the Nazis?