Pedronicus wrote:Not limiting the whole world to 1 child per family.
We are a plague of locusts consuming the planet.
But more people means more hot women!
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Pedronicus wrote:Not limiting the whole world to 1 child per family.
We are a plague of locusts consuming the planet.
InkL0sed wrote:cmckinney wrote:demon7896 wrote:Dropping that bomb on Hiroshima. One day now, one day.....
My runner ups: Electing Bush president. Starting the Iraq war. Bombing Pearl Harbor (for the Japanese at least).
Oh yes...because the Iraq war is so much worse then oh i dunno. The Holocaust?
The Holocaust was not a mistake -- mistakes are done by accident.
cmckinney wrote:You say that we invaded Iraq on "accident?" you say we elected bush on "accident"? you say we dropped the bomb on "accident"? you say the japanese bombed pearl harbor on "accident"?
Napoleon Ier wrote:No wait: I have it:
BANNING NORSE.
Eh? Eh? ...eh?
InkL0sed wrote:cmckinney wrote:demon7896 wrote:Dropping that bomb on Hiroshima. One day now, one day.....
My runner ups: Electing Bush president. Starting the Iraq war. Bombing Pearl Harbor (for the Japanese at least).
Oh yes...because the Iraq war is so much worse then oh i dunno. The Holocaust?
The Holocaust was not a mistake -- mistakes are done by accident.
InkL0sed wrote:What is up with people and Wikipedia these days? Every time someone disagrees with me, it seems like they tell me to stop reading Wikipedia, as if they knew that was my primary resource.![]()
I know full well what a mistake is, and what an accident is, thank you very much.
.
The Holocaust was not a mistake -- mistakes are done by accident.
Mylittlepuddykat wrote:I think that it is hard to name anything 'the biggest mistake in human history', because we don't know how things would have turned out if they hadn't occurred. Treaty of Versaille - ultimately meant WW2 BUT what bigger and worse wars may have occured if WW2 hadn't? At least the Allies won WW2, if it had been a different War and the 'Good' side had lost then the world could be very different.
I don't think that I would change anything in History right now because the world is mostly a good place to live in and in the places where it isn't lots of people are trying to help. Also, if you start changing History then you don't know what worse things may happen.
suggs wrote:Yeah, Nap is bang on it. Anyway, no way can Versailles be even in the top ten "biggest mistakes of human history". Theres even a decent case for arguing the peace terms were too lenient on Germany. Certainly they were barely enforced - and it didn't cause Germany's economic woes of the 20s.
Von Papen's arrogance in assuming he could control Hitler as Chancellor in Jan 1933 IS, however,a big contender...because...well...he couldn't...and some bad shit went down because of it.
I wonder if Nap would agree that the creation of Germany itself, back in 1870, was the biggest mistake?(And before I am accused of racsim or "anti-German, one of the most respected, and brilliant historians , A.J. P. Taylor, came very close to maintaning this position SO BOO SUCKS
)
PLAYER57832 wrote:
Apparently you don't. Mistakes are NOT things "done by accident' solely.
Snorri1234 wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:
Apparently you don't. Mistakes are NOT things "done by accident' solely.
True, but it does involve regret. Something I can't imagine the Nazis having.
suggs wrote:Ah, but Player, see Daniel Goldhagen's (contraversial but scholarly) book, "Hitler's Willing Executioners".
basically he suggests the German people (or the vast majority of them) were all too HAPPY to send the Jews to the camps, or as you suggest, at best turn a blind eye to the Holocaust.
The reason why it was so controversial is that we like to pretend that the Holocaust was an abberation, and that the Germans are just like us really, and they hated what Hitler made them do, but went along with it through fear etc
As his title suggest, Goldhagen paints a more worrying picture of the Germans, as a RACE, being all too keen on their own superiority.
Sounds dodgy, i know, but its a great book - thought provoking.
I've just realised there are some interesting parallels with Goldings "Lord of the Flies" here.- inherent savagery and cruelty of man to his fellow man etc
suggs wrote:Ah, but Player, see Daniel Goldhagen's (contraversial but scholarly) book, "Hitler's Willing Executioners".
basically he suggests the German people (or the vast majority of them) were all too HAPPY to send the Jews to the camps, or as you suggest, at best turn a blind eye to the Holocaust.
The reason why it was so controversial is that we like to pretend that the Holocaust was an abberation, and that the Germans are just like us really, and they hated what Hitler made them do, but went along with it through fear etc
As his title suggest, Goldhagen paints a more worrying picture of the Germans, as a RACE, being all too keen on their own superiority.
Sounds dodgy, i know, but its a great book - thought provoking.
I've just realised there are some interesting parallels with Goldings "Lord of the Flies" here.- inherent savagery and cruelty of man to his fellow man etc
suggs wrote: it doesnt really explain why WW1 happened.
suggs wrote:Ah, but Player, see Daniel Goldhagen's (contraversial but scholarly) book, "Hitler's Willing Executioners".
basically he suggests the German people (or the vast majority of them) were all too HAPPY to send the Jews to the camps, or as you suggest, at best turn a blind eye to the Holocaust.
The reason why it was so controversial is that we like to pretend that the Holocaust was an abberation, and that the Germans are just like us really, and they hated what Hitler made them do, but went along with it through fear etc
As his title suggest, Goldhagen paints a more worrying picture of the Germans, as a RACE, being all too keen on their own superiority.
Sounds dodgy, i know, but its a great book - thought provoking.
I've just realised there are some interesting parallels with Goldings "Lord of the Flies" here.- inherent savagery and cruelty of man to his fellow man etc
PLAYER57832 wrote:The regret is from humanity as a whole. Of course most of the individuals involved are conveniently dead, but I doubt we would ever see Hitler being regretful.
A lot of former nazis, though, (not all by any means) have reformed. You have to remember that not everyone was actually told of "the final solution". And, certainly we can say they "should" have been able to see the evidence in most cases, sometimes that was not true. Also, people have amazing powers of self-delusion when it serves their interests. Farm folk could have ashes pouring down on them and convince themselves, in truth, that what was happening wasn't really. Even the Jews themselves were astounded.. at least at first. It is much easier to see everything from the distance of time ... even some of the old SS do regret what they did back then. (not that regret makes it OK or better in any way)
As an aside, the current Nazis are another breed. They generally claim the Haulocaust never happened. They also tend to be more the independent survivalist types and conveniently forget that Nazi Germany was a planned and controlled economy, nothing to do with the free market or any kind of freedom.
Snorri1234 wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:
Apparently you don't. Mistakes are NOT things "done by accident' solely.
True, but it does involve regret. Something I can't imagine the Nazis having.
PLAYER57832 wrote:Actually, I believe the reason the Holocaust hits us so deeply is because we know how easily it could have been us. That is, most of us would like to believe that we would be acting the rescuer, not the conciliators, but we cannot really know. And, there are other events in our history that show us this.
Snorri1234 wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:The regret is from humanity as a whole. Of course most of the individuals involved are conveniently dead, but I doubt we would ever see Hitler being regretful.
But....isn't it only when the perpetrator regrets it as a mistake that it is actually a mistake?{/quote]
Snorri1234 wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:A lot of former nazis, though, (not all by any means) have reformed. You have to remember that not everyone was actually told of "the final solution". And, certainly we can say they "should" have been able to see the evidence in most cases, sometimes that was not true. Also, people have amazing powers of self-delusion when it serves their interests. Farm folk could have ashes pouring down on them and convince themselves, in truth, that what was happening wasn't really. Even the Jews themselves were astounded.. at least at first. It is much easier to see everything from the distance of time ... even some of the old SS do regret what they did back then. (not that regret makes it OK or better in any way)
I'd say the probable reaction of the ones doing it was: 'we were just following orders'. Something which has been said by a rather large portion of people who committed heinous acts.
It's a different emotion from regret I think. It's also why people who, if you meet them at a different time like in a bar would be nice and friendly and you couldn't imagine them commiting fucked up stuff, are capable of that same stuff. It's cowardice and the ability of people to soothe themself into thinking it's someone else's problem.
Snorri1234 wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:As an aside, the current Nazis are another breed. They generally claim the Haulocaust never happened. They also tend to be more the independent survivalist types and conveniently forget that Nazi Germany was a planned and controlled economy, nothing to do with the free market or any kind of freedom.
Different nazis then. The ones I'm talking about claim the holocaust was a good thing. Why would they deny something which would've been considered a succes if the nazis didn't lose the war
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