The German Syndrome
by Patrick K Martin
warhawke@comcast.net
After the Second World War, when the German people were confronted by the
Holocaust, most of them said, "We didn't know!" Well, they knew about the
kristallnacht. They knew about the Ghettos. They knew about Jews, Gypsies,
gays, and others who were disappearing. They knew about the trains heading
'East'. They heard the stories and rumors, and the tales of horrible things
going on. They had the information, but they didn't know! Why? Because if
they did they would have had to make a choice.
They would have had to stand up, to cease their support for the butchers
running their country, and they would have had to work to bring down the
animals responsible for the barbarity. Otherwise they would have to stand
with their government, and bear moral responsibility for what that
government did. We humans are good at that, at ignoring what we do not like,
at refusing to know rather than facing up to the decisions that knowledge
makes necessary. Sometimes it is simply easier not to know.
The urge not to know is by no means confined to Germans. In the twentieth
century people all over the world have worked desperately, not to know. The
communists in the west have refused to know about the White-sea canal, where
it's said a human death accompanied every meter of earth that was dug. They
didn't know about the millions of Ukrainians starved to death to enforce
collective farming. They didn't know about the purges, the Gulag's, the
wholesale executions, the displacements of native populations.
They didn't know about the capture of western P.O.W.'s at the end of the
war, or the anti- communists, butchered after the west turned them over to
Stalin. They didn't know about the untold millions of Chinese murdered by
the communists over a period of thirty years. Nor the chemical weapons used
against the peoples of Southeast Asia and Afghanistan. Because if they KNEW,
they would not be able to escape the fact that their dreams of socialist
utopia were really blood soaked nightmares.
Today we Americans face a crisis of not knowing. Our fellow countrymen
refuse to know that their government has it's hands soaked in the blood of
it's citizens. They refuse to acknowledge that the Constitution no longer
restrains the men in who's hands we have placed our nation's future. They
refuse to know the crimes carried out in the name of the People. They refuse
to know, because then they would have to do something about it.
I have a friend who is a lawyer. He claims to support the Constitution, and
to love the Second Amendment. He says that he is a lawyer in order to
protect peoples rights. When I attempt to show him some of what is being
done by our government however, he refuses to believe. He asks for chapter
and verse of the incident, and if I cannot provide them, he scoffs. If I do,
he attacks the source, or claims the evidence is incomplete or open to
interpretation. If he can do nothing else, he says that it is just an
isolated incident and not representative.
I used to wonder how he could be so blind, but now I understand that he has
no choice. He cannot accept that what I show him is real because he is a
part of the system, if that system is corrupt, if that system is destroying
the things he believes in, then he must abandon it, or admit that it is he
who is destroying the rights, and indeed the nation, which he has sworn to
protect.
We must learn this lesson, we must learn it well and we must learn it right
now. When we point out the errors and crimes of our government to people, we
are attacking them. It is not the abstract concept of our nation, it is not
something called a government, it is that person which we are bashing. When
you tell a cop that other cops are killing innocent Americans, you are
telling him that he is a member of the Gestapo, that he is part of a group
that murders people. How do we expect them to react?
They call them Brother Officers for a reason. When you tell a veteran that
his country is running around the world beating up defenseless people, you
are telling him that he and those he served with were bullies and thugs,
fighting, not to defend freedom and democracy, but simply to impose
something on somebody else. Do you expect him to admit to it?
Do you expect him to thank you for opening his eyes?
People tend to identify themselves with the things they love, they do not
separate themselves because they cannot. We are all Americans, so what
attacks America is attacking us. Some time ago Vin Suprynowicz was attacked
in these pages for suggesting in issue #140 that we; "... Make war in
Southwest Asia by following the rules of the last fellow to successfully
conquer the place. Genghis Khan graciously accepted the peaceful surrender
of any city that would send him tribute ... even allowing them to keep their
religion and customs. Those who demurred were left with no stone standing
atop another. Their surviving male inhabitants had their hamstrings cut so
they'd be crippled for life, while their women and children were herded back
to China to serve as slaves and concubines."
I doubt Mr. Suprynowicz was seriously advocating that we start hamstring
anyone who failed to bow quickly enough, or bring Afghan women to the U.S.
to serve as concubines. I believe he, like myself and many others I know,
simply felt that the September 11 attack was an attack on him, not on an
abstraction called American. Like a man who has had a loved one attacked, he
sought to express his rage and need for vengeance. I think this illustrates
my point. Mr. Suprynowicz is no knee-jerk, "America, love it or leave it"
reactionary, but his visceral reaction was to destroy the enemies of his
nation. Why should we expect others to react differently when we attack the
things that they hold dear?
Yes, I know that we are trying to bring back the true sprit of American. I
know that our attacks are aimed at the vermin infesting our institutions and
spilling the blood of our innocent fellow- countrymen, but we must realize
that others do not see it that way. We must begin to approach our fellow
Americans with the understanding that they will defend the status-quo, both
out of reflex and out of a sense of self-preservation. So much of their ego
is wrapped up in the idea of The United States that they cannot separate
themselves from it.
Nor can we expect those who are victims, or potential victims, of the system
to respond properly. In the words of Rabbi Mermelstein of the J.P.F.O.;
"In Germany, Jews said things like: "Hitler is a passing fad",
"Kristallnacht was an isolated occurrence", "We will be set free from the
labor camps and returned to our homes soon." "
How many people, faced with government charges of violating un-
constitutional laws on weapons possession, the environment, drugs, taxation,
etc. go eagerly into a courtroom expecting to be vindicated, when they know,
that thousands languish in prison for similar acts? What makes people expect
that their rights will be upheld, when the rights of so many others have
not? What make people think that what happened to Randy Weaver, or the
Branch Davidians, will never happen to them? Are they not reacting just like
the Jews Rabbi Mermelstein mentioned?
In picture after picture from the Holocaust, we see German soldiers and SS
men herding Jews and others with unloaded weapons. Submachine gun bolts
forward, rifle firing pins down, pistols secured in full- flap holsters,
these people had no fear of those they led to slaughter. They knew that the
people they killed had no will to resist, and they were right. Not because
the Jews or Gypsies were inferior, but because the victims refused to
believe what was happening.
In the movie 'Schindler's List' as the women are going to the gas-chambers
and bemoaning their fate you hear a voice cry out, "They wouldn't do that to
us, would they?". That is the sound of denial, that is the sound of the NRA
and Civil-libertarians as new restrictions on our rights are imposed,
because no matter what violations have occurred before, some will refuse to
believe the newest outrage.
Because if we admit the truth we must do something about it.
The day the NRA admits that the government plans to deny our rights and kill
those who resist, the NRA must call upon it' s members to act. The day the
ACLU admits that the destruction of the Second Amendment heralds the
destruction of all rights, they must act to preserve it. The day that the
American people admit that the government is out of control, that it murders
it's citizens and oppresses it's people, they must do something about it.
They must decide to risk their fancy houses and SUV's, they must risk their
lives and the futures of their children, or they must accept the blood of
innocents staining their hands, and admit that the gold the government gives
them is pried from the mouths of victims just like them.
Sometimes it's easier not to know.
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