@tamerlane
One of my male role models growing up (he was a volunteer scout master) was an ex-Nazi.
He was in the Hitler Youth and was forcibly enlisted (conscripted) in the military after he turned 18. He told me it was either join and have food or die living in poverty at the edge of society and fear being trampled upon by the secret police. There was no morally correct choice for most people according to him.
He said most of the country knew what was going on due to word of mouth, but no one said anything or spoke up because life was good if you just lowered your head and ignored the world around you.
According to him, back then you didnât care about where your mother got the money for the familyâs food, so to speak. So long as you were all fed, you didnât ask questions. He said most people were disgusted by what was going on but they stomached it and stayed quiet because the alternative was to suffer in squalor or to be thrown in prison for speaking up.
He said the general opinion of the German people in regards to the war was that Germany and the Axis would lose the moment America was provoked.
âWhy didnât you report him to the authorities?â
Everyone in my town growing up knew him and what he did. He was the embodiment of every form of guilt imaginable.
When I was a shitlord teenager, I asked him why he didnât kill himself if he was so full of guilt and regret. He said that that wouldnât be fair to the people who died. He said staying alive and suffering the weight of what he did (ignorance but he danced around if he worked at camps and Iâm more than sure he did) was fair. But he also said that forcing his and other people from that timeâs sins onto others from Germany was a horrible idea because it validates the Nazis ideology by giving them power even after they were gone.
And because life is stranger than fiction, the woman he married after immigrating to the US is Jewish. He said he fell in love with her because, and I quote, âthe devil put the largest tits on those Jewish women.â
He was a Khazar Milkers poster before it was cool.