“Here’s the thing,” Robinson said. “Whether you’re talking about Adolf Hitler, whether you’re talking about Chairman Mao, whether you’re talking about Stalin, whether you’re talking about Pol Pot, whether you’re talking about Castro in Cuba, or whether you’re talking about a dozen other despots all around the globe, it is time for us to get back and start reading some of those quotes.”

This is the Lieutenant Governor of a state (North Carolina) saying we can get gems from the quotes of genocidal maniacs. This is where we are now.

  • zib@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Has this guy ever tried reading Mein Kampf? My grandma had a copy when I was a kid (I don’t think she was a nazi…) and I looked at it once out of curiosity. It read like incoherent nonsense to me at the time. I always figured it would have been more useful as fire kindling or compost for a garden.

    • LegalAction@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Fact is, it’s an important work for historical reasons. If you want to understand how Nazism works, and how it differs from Italian fascism, and be able to draw the lines that connect Nazis to historical German (and other nationalities) anti-Semitism, you need to read it.

      If I had a copy, I wouldn’t put it on display, but it is the kind of thing I can totally see being assigned in a college course on WW2 or some similar topic.

      NB: I’ve only read a few excerpts for a class similar to the one I described above.

      Also, I am against book burning in any circumstance. A book is never worth more as kindling, unless you’re actually freezing and then it would be a hard choice.

      • Weirdfish@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I agree with everything except not burning a book to keep warm when freezing. Unless the book was “How to start a fire with other books when you are freezing”.

        • RiikkaTheIcePrincess@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          Yeah that bit was weird. Like, I’m gonna die to spare a copy of Mein Kampf? I’m sure there are others.

          Now, maybe there’s an argument to be had that I don’t own a copy of that book and must have taken it from someone else, possibly intending to use it as kindling… But like, was I gonna burn something of more interest and possible use, or the damn Hitler book only the edgiest “history” fans and a few weird history nerds seem to actually like.

          What were we talking about? Oh yeah. LegalAction wants us all to die to save copies of Mein Kampf, which will then be destroyed anyway without anyone to protect them. Kinda goofy opinion, that.

      • zib@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Sure, I was only half joking. As an academic matter of understanding the history and recognition of early-to-mid 20th century German fascism, it’s a useful learning tool. But, as a tome of intellectual philosophy (which is what nazis like Robinson seem to be implying it might be), it’s little more than garbage.