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Ich bin ein Berliner (That goes for you
too.)
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by Stephen P. Pizzo
I was born the very day World War II ended. My fellow postwar “Baby
Boomers†grew up on old black and white documentaries of that war and the events
leading up to it. But those films never really answered the most important
question, a question that has nagged me, and I suspect most of my
generation
How did Germany and the German people become the Mrs. O'Leary's cow of an entire continent? How could a culture re-formed during the Renaissance
create a horror like Auschwitz?
How does
something that extraordinary happen?
As nightfall does not come at once, neither does oppression. In both
instances, there is a twilight when everything remains seemingly unchanged. And
it is in such twilight that we all must be most aware of change in the air -
however slight - lest we become unwitting victims of the darkness.
– Justice William O. Douglas
It's a question that has not only burdened
American Baby Boomers, but three generations of postwar Germans as well. But for
them it's much more than just a historical curiosity. For postwar Germans it's
also been a nagging sense of collective guilt – guilt about events they had
nothing to do with, but guilt nonetheless. It's a guilt built on the realization
that their parents and grand parents either participated in, supported and/or
enabled what happened over half a century ago – or, at the very least, did
nothing to prevent or stop it.
Of course the fascist rulers of the Third
Reich ruled with a heavy hand. So it's not hard to understand why so many
Germans simply laid low rather than oppose the regime.
“Nazi terror from above and the demise of the rule of law started
just a few days after Hitler's assumption of power in January 1933. The
penalties of opposition became higher and higher. In the first nine months
alone, at least 100,000 people, most of them leftist Germans, were thrown into
hastily erected concentration camps. Others ended up in ordinary prisons and
many died. Countless more were roughed up by rampaging brownshirts in broad
daylight or taken into police custody on trumped-up political charges. By 1936,
a brutal police state had penetrated virtually all spheres of life.†( New
York Times books.)
While the rules have tightened here since
9/11, we've not experienced anything near that scale. Speaking out is remains a
survivable exercise.
Which begs the question; what will be our excuse?
How will we explain the things we've allowed this administration to get away
with – the torture, the “renditions,†the secret prisons, the warrant-less wiretapping, the lies we and our media
allowed to stand? What are we going to tell our grand children when they ask us
what the hell we were thinking, feeling and doing while all that was afoot?
I understand it's against the rules of polite society to recklessly
throw the “f†word around by comparing anything that's happening today to the
kind of atrocities that occurred under Hitler. It''s even worse to compare any
contemporary American political/religious/social leader to Hitler.
So I
won't. I won't go that far, because it hasn't gone that far – yet.
What I
have been doing though is cracking history books and trying to suss out an
answer to that that original question – the one that wonders how well-educated,
forward-looking modern pre-war Germans could so quickly devolve intp the most
evil nation on the planet.
I don't ask you to accept that there are any
genuine corollaries between the events that led to Germany's decent into fascism
and what's been going on in America over the last few years. I only ask that you
consider the events back then and the events we are living through now. I think
you will agree that, at the very least there are spooky similarities – and , at
the very worst, there are striking similarities.
Either way, there are
valuable lessons to be learned, mistakes to be avoided and, maybe, just maybe,
warning signs worth heeding.
Germany And Then
| Here and Now
| Use events to restrict legal rights,
like Habeas Corpus:
On the night of February 27, 1933 the Reichstag
building was set on fire. The unnerved public was told the fire had been a
signal meant to initiate a communist revolution. The Nazis found the event to be
of immeasurable value in getting rid of potential insurgents. The event was
quickly followed by the Reichstag Fire Decree, rescinding habeas corpus and
other civil liberties. (1)
| Adminstration Questions
Habeas Corpus
In one of the most chilling public statements ever
made by a U.S. Attorney General, Alberto Gonzales questioned whether the U.S.
Constitution grants habeas corpus rights of a fair trial to every American. (2)
| Use events to expand
executive branch powers new powers:
Just 30 days after fire
destroyed the Reichstag, German legislators were convinced to pass the Enabling Act of
1933. It passed with 444 votes, to the 94 of the remaining Social Democrats. The
act gave the government (and thus effectively the Nazi Party) legislative powers
and also authorized it to deviate from the provisions of the constitution. With
these powers, Hitler removed the remaining opposition and turned the Weimar
Republic into the "Third Reich". (3)
| After 9/11 US passes Patriot
Act:
Just 45 days after the September 11 attacks, with virtually no
debate, Congress passed the USA PATRIOT Act. There are significant flaws in the
Patriot Act, flaws that threaten your fundamental freedoms by giving the
government the power to access to your medical records, tax records, information
about the books you buy or borrow without probable cause, and the power to break
into your home and conduct secret searches without telling you for weeks,
months, or indefinitely. (4)
| Consolidate federal
power:
Further consolidation of power was achieved on 30 January
1934, with the Gesetz über den Neuaufbau des Reichs (Act to rebuild the Reich).
The act changed the highly decentralized federal Germany of the Weimar era into
a centralized state. It disbanded state parliaments, transferring sovereign
rights of the states to the Reich central government and put the state
administrations under the control of the Reich administration. (5)
| National Security and
Homeland Security Presidential Directive
This policy establishes
"National Essential Functions," prescribes continuity requirements for all
executive departments and agencies, and provides guidance for State, local,
territorial, and tribal governments, and private sector organizations in order
to ensure a comprehensive and integrated national continuity program that will
enhance the credibility of our national security posture and enable a more rapid
and effective response to and recovery from a national emergency. (6)
| Reduce the influence of the national
military by creating an independent force.
The German army had
traditionally been separated from the government and somewhat of an entity of
its own. The Nazi paramilitary SA expected top
positions in the new power structure and wanted the regime to follow through its
promise of enacting socialist legislation for Aryan Germans. Wanting to preserve
good relations with the army and the major industries who were weary of more
political violence erupting from the SA, on the night of 30 June 1934, Hitler
initiated the violent Night of the Long Knives, a purge of the leadership ranks
of Röhm's SA as well as socialist-leaning Nazis (Strasserists), and other
political enemies, carried out by another, more elitist, Nazi organization, the
SS. (7)
| Privitization of US military
operations
Blackwater
USA is a private military company. It has alternatively been referred to as
a security contractor or a mercenary organization by numerous reports in the
international media. Blackwater is based in the U.S. state of North Carolina,
where it operates a tactical training facility that it claims is the world's
largest. The company trains more than 40,000 people a year, from all the
military services and a variety of other agencies. The company markets itself as
being "The most comprehensive professional military, law enforcement, security,
peacekeeping, and stability operations company in the world." (8)
| Replace regional
civil law enforcement with a nationalized police force.
The
inception of the Gestapo,
police acting outside of any civil authority, highlighted the Nazis' intention
to use powerful, coercive means to directly control German society. Soon, an
army estimated to be of about 100,000 spies and informants operated throughout
Germany, reporting to Nazi officials the activities of any critics or
dissenters. Most ordinary Germans, happy with the improving economy and better
standard of living, remained obedient and quiet, but many political opponents,
especially communists and Marxist or international socialists, were reported by
omnipresent eavesdropping spies and put in prison camps where many were tortured
and killed. It is estimated that tens of thousands of political victims died or
disappeared in the first few years of Nazi rule. (9)
| Authority of the Secretary of Homeland
Security.
"All authorities and functions of the Department of
Homeland Security to administer and enforce the immigration laws are vested in
the Secretary of Homeland Security. The Secretary of Homeland Security may, in
the Secretary's discretion, delegate any such authority or function to any
official, officer, or employee of the Department of Homeland Security, including
delegation through successive redelegation, or to any employee of the United
States to the extent authorized by law. Such delegation may be made by
regulation, directive, memorandum, or other means as deemed appropriate by the
Secretary in the exercise of the Secretary's discretion. A delegation of
authority or function may in the Secretary's discretion be published in the
Federal Register, but such publication is not required." (10)
| Make militarism
pay.
Nazi rationale invested heavily in the militarist belief that
great nations grow from military power and maintained order, which in turn grow
"naturally" from "rational, civilized cultures". The Nazi Party appealed to
German nationalists and national pride. ... Many companies dealt with the Third
Reich. Volkswagen was a Nazi project. Opel employed Jewish slave labour to run
their industrial plants. Additionally, Daimler-Benz used prisoners of war as
slaves to run their industrial plants. Other companies that dealt with the Third
Reich—many of which claim not to have known the truth of what the Nazis were
doing —were: BMW,[55] Krupp (made gas chambers), Bayer (as a small part of the
enormous IG Farben chemistry monopoly), and Hugo Boss (designed the SS uniforms,
admitted to this in 1997). (11)
| Defense Contractor CEO Pay Up 200
Percent Since 9/11
The ratio between CEO and worker pay across the
market climbs to 431 : 1, up from 301 : 1 last year, according to a new CEO pay
study from United for a Fair Economy and the Institute for Policy Studies. The report, which
surveys 367 leading US corporations, focuses particularly on 34 of the top 100
defense contractors in 2004 with 10 percent or more of their revenues from
defense contracts. It finds "a trend towards individual war profiteering by
CEOs," with CEO pay at these companies rising 200 percent from 2001 to 2004.
Stepping back to look at across-the-board comparisons, the ratio of average
total compensation for all 367 CEOs ($11.8 million) to average production worker
pay ($27,460) is 431-to-1 in 2004, up from 301-to-1 in 2003. (12)
| Prosecute gays and stress "traditional
family values."
The Nazis opposed women's emancipation and
opposed the feminist movement, claiming that it was Jewish-led and was bad for
both women and men. The Nazi regime advocated a patriarchial society in which
German women would recognize the "world is her husband, her family, her
children, and her home." (13) The
Nazis believed that male homosexuals were weak, effeminate men who could not
fight for the German nation. They saw homosexuals as unlikely to produce
children and increase the German birthrate. (15)
| Congress passes Defense of Marriage
Act/Don't Ask, Don't Tell.
The Defense of Marriage Act
(DOMA) does two things. First, it provides that no State shall be required to
give effect to a law of any other
State with respect to a same-sex
"marriage." Second, it defines the words "marriage" and "spouse" for purposes of
Federal law. (14)
"What
I fail to understand is exactly how the military would be expected to house
openly-admitted homosexuals, in an environment where we force people to room
together, without seriously violating the sexual privacy rights of the
heterosexual majority, or causing major problems with morale." (16)
| Eliminate labor unions to reduce labor
costs
The Nazis abolished trade unions, collective bargaining
and the right to strike. An organization called the “Labor Front†replaced the
old trade unions, but it was an instrument of the Nazi party and did not
represent workers. According to the law that created it, “Its task is to see
that every individual should be able… to perform the maximum of work.†Workers
would indeed greatly boost their productivity under Nazi rule but they also
became exploited. Between 1932 and 1936, workers wages fell, from 20.4 to 19.5
cents an hour for skilled labor, and from 16.1 to 13 cents an hour for unskilled
labor. (17)
| The New Face of
Unionbusting
Last December the Labor Department's top official in
California made the most expensive and dangerous call of his life. Richard
Sawyer thought he was just enforcing wage and hour laws, and protecting workers'
rights. That is, after all, the Labor Department's mandate. Instead, the price
for his call was his job.Republican politicians are seeking to ban one of the
labor movement's most effective campaign strategies - Justice for Janitors.
Sawyer's predicament highlights the evolving nature of unionbusting. What has
traditionally been a business dominated by consultants, guards and lawfirms,
conducting dirty campaigns to beat unions in strikes and NLRB elections, has
taken on a much wider scope. (18) | Increase the money supply, ease credit –
go into deficit – borrow like crazy
The German government expanded
the money supply through massive deficit spending. However at the same time the
government imposed a 4.5% interest rate ceiling, creating a massive shortage in
borrowable funds. This was resolved by setting up a series of dummy companies
that would pay for goods with bonds. While it was promised that these bonds
could eventually be exchanged for real money, the repayment was put off until
after the collapse of the Reich. These complicated manoeuvres also helped
conceal armament expenditures. (19)
| Increase the money supply, ease credit,
cut taxes, go into deficit – borrow like crazy.
The U.S. budget
deficit is financed by borrowing. China's investment in U.S. government debt
(bonds) has more than tripled in the past five years, from $71 billion in 2000
to $242 billion in 2005.
Under pressure to pay for hurricane recovery, the
war in Iraq, a costly transportation bill, tax cuts, and a new prescription drug
program, Congress and the president have been unwilling to raise taxes or make
deep spending cuts. The only alternative is to borrow. (20)
| No unions, imported labor, slave labor
keep wages low.
While the strict state intervention into the
economy, and the massive rearmament policy, led to full employment during the
1930s, real wages in Germany dropped by roughly 25% between 1933 and 1938. In
addition, more than ten million people were put into forced (slave) labor,
further depressing wages. (21)
| Weakened unions, cheap labor from Mexico
keep wages low.
With the economy beginning to slow, the current
expansion has a chance to become the first sustained period of economic growth
since World War II that fails to offer a prolonged increase in real wages for
most workers.The median hourly wage for American workers has declined 2 percent
since 2003, after factoring in inflation. The drop has been especially notable,
economists say, because productivity has risen steadily over the same period. (22)
| Share the booty with helpful
elite.
What may have looked like utter confusion – within the
German government – was in fact a cunningly orchestrated program, one that was
able to mobilize such groups as Germany's elites, who were not simply delirious
with religious hope and hatred. Other more specialized works have shown that the
amount of nepotism and cold-blooded corruption under the Third Reich was just
incredible.
(V.R.
Berghahn is the Seth Low professor of history and the director of the
Institute for the Study of Europe at Columbia University.)
| Share the booty with helpful
companies
The payback from these lobbying efforts can be enormous.
Between 1998 and 2004, the 41 defense contractors that paid fees to PMA
collectively won $266 billion in contracts from the Pentagon, according to CRP.
That amounts to almost 30% of the dollar value of all contracts awarded by the
Department of Defense. Moreover, of this amount, $167 billion — nearly two out
of three dollars — was received from contracts that were awarded without "full
and open" competition. In fact, PMA clients account for 47% of all such
non-competitive contracts — contracts in which the government negotiates with a
single contractor (23)
| Deny atrocities
The
first Holocaust deniers were the Nazis themselves. Historians have documented
evidence that Heinrich Himmler instructed his camp commandants to destroy
records, crematoria and other signs of mass extermination, as Germany's defeat
became imminent and the Nazi leaders realized they would most likely be captured
and brought to trial. Following the end of World War II, many of the former
leaders of the SS left Germany and began using their propaganda skills to defend
their actions (or, their critics contended, to rewrite history). Denial
materials began to appear shortly after the war.[24)
| "This Governement Does Not Torture
People."
(George W. Bush)
There is a growing consensus that the
harrowing images of Abu Ghraib did great trauma to our national psyche - and was
one of the steepest falls from grace in our nation's history. Like everyone
else, I had seen the images that came out of Abu Ghraib and was shocked and
saddened by them. And like so many others, I wondered how could people,
particularly Americans, treat others so inhumanely? I initially set out to do a
documentary about why ordinary people commit extraordinary acts of evil. Were
the people who committed these acts psychopaths? Or were they the sweet kids
next door behaving badly in times of war? (25)
|
Of
course the enemy of all the above is truth. No people can be led willingly into
a fascist nightmare if truth prevails. Which is why it was among the first
casualties in Germany.
First a definition: The Big Lie:
"The Big Lie is a propaganda technique in which the lie is so
complex that the public will either dismiss it as impossible or choose not to
believe it out of willful ignorance. It was defined by Adolf Hitler in his 1925
autobiography Mein Kampf as a lie so "colossal" that no one would believe that
someone "could have the impudence to distort the truth so infamously".
(Wikipedia)
And
“To tell deliberate lies while genuinely believing in them, to
forget any fact that has become inconvenient, and then when it becomes necessary
again, to draw it back from oblivion for just so long as it is needed.†George
Orwell on “The Big Lie†method of governance.
But who better
to define the Big Lie than one of it's most successful practitioners, Hitler's
very own Karl Rove – Joseph Goebbels:
“Never allow the public to cool off; never admit a fault or wrong;
never concede that there may be some good in your enemy; never leave room for
alternatives; never accept blame; concentrate on one enemy at a time and blame
him for everything that goes wrong; people will believe a big lie sooner than a
little one; and if you repeat it frequently enough people will sooner or later
believe it... The lie can be maintained only for such time as the State can
shield the people from the political, economic and/or military consequences of
the lie. It thus becomes vitally important for the State to use all of its
powers to repress dissent, for the truth is the mortal enemy of the lie, and
thus by extension, the truth is the greatest enemy of the (fascist)
State."
And so it came to pass – then and there and here and
now. Which is why I say, Ich bin ein Berliner. I – we – have begun down the same
road. On September 12, 2001 we stood where the German people did on February 28,
1933, the morning after the Reichstag building was destroyed. They were lied to
by their leaders and allowed the fear of enemies – real and imagined – seen and
unseen – to replace common sense and reason. They allowed those lies to supplant
curiousity, suspicion and the search for truth. They allowed false patriotism to
mask the genuine motivations. And thus they shared the guilt for the horrors
that followed.
I now understand how it happened, though that
understanding has not – and cannot – led to forgiveness. Some things are simply,
and literally, unforgivable.
And I better understand how we got where we
are today.
I also understand that history is unlikely to forgive us
either.
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