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  #21  
Unread 07-18-2019, 01:47 AM
Andrew Frisardi Andrew Frisardi is offline
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This article about Trump's rally in N.C. gave me the chills even more than the tweets and Kimball's article.

I mean, if there's one thing a rabble rouser needs, it's rabble. Without it, they're just vomiting into their own mouths.
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  #22  
Unread 07-18-2019, 02:18 AM
Mark McDonnell Mark McDonnell is offline
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Max — thanks for correcting me on the numbers, which I knew, but went with the lazy (and ironically less shocking) headline figure which only totals Jewish victims. I take your point. I bristle a bit at the word 'chauvinism' as I did at 'spineless'. Perhaps I'm wrong to.

Aaron and others: Yeah, I may well have been hasty in my initial point to you, Aaron. It's uncomfortable to admit to being guilty of complacency, publicly or to oneself. I'm not American and don't live in the States and that matters for a start. I should probably shut the fuck up and listen and think more ha. Problem is, I often find out what I think by expressing my thoughts in writing. I need them to be out there before I can interrogate them, or allow others to. Finding Mike Godwin (he of the 'Law') arguing on Twitter is pretty extraordinary. As someone in that thread put it, his idea

'was NEVER meant to be an injunction against making any comparisons to Nazism; it was the observation that the many spurious ones drown out the fewer valid ones.'

It was that idea of spurious claims drowning out more valid ones that I was originally trying to get at by questioning your labelling Kimball as a Nazi, and out of (perhaps ill-thought-out) respect for Holocaust victims. I certainly wasn't trying to diminish the vileness of Kimball's rhetoric in that horrible article or of Trump's rhetoric and actions. Perhaps comparisons are valid here. I can understand the logic of invoking the term as a way of drawing attention to the signs of nazism before they escalate.

Well, thanks for making me think, there's nothing more valuable. Cheers.

Andrew - that is chilling. It's a truly frightening situation.
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  #23  
Unread 07-18-2019, 04:41 AM
Matt Q Matt Q is offline
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Excuse me, did you just call me a Nazi? (You'll likely need to switch the English subtitles on)

Last edited by Matt Q; 07-18-2019 at 05:00 AM.
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  #24  
Unread 07-18-2019, 05:08 AM
Orwn Acra Orwn Acra is offline
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I hadn't quite realized how dumb Roger Kimball is until this article.
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  #25  
Unread 07-18-2019, 05:20 AM
James Brancheau James Brancheau is offline
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Great, Matt-- thanks for that!
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  #26  
Unread 07-18-2019, 07:32 AM
Roger Slater Roger Slater is online now
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Yes, Matt. I'll be sharing that on Facebook.
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  #27  
Unread 07-18-2019, 11:20 AM
Max Goodman Max Goodman is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mark McDonnell View Post
I bristle a bit at the word 'chauvinism'
Fair enough, Mark. I suppose if I weren't Jewish, I'd be reluctant to criticize the way Jews remember the Holocaust.

Because I respect you, I'd be happy to hear you reframe the situation in a way that might make me reconsider. I think the dominance of the smaller number requires some explanation.

I hope this doesn't feel argumentative. I don't think we disagree in a significant way. I admire the way you think and conduct yourself, and I pursue this issue on the chance that I might learn something about it from you. (I'd be very happy to feel better about the way we Jews collectively deal with the Holocaust.)
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  #28  
Unread 07-18-2019, 01:18 PM
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Quincy Lehr Quincy Lehr is offline
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At what point a contemporary political phenomenon crosses over into fascism can be a matter of taxonomical pedantry, often misguided—for instance, Bolsonaro’s economic policies are more dick-out neoliberal than Mussolini’s, but the term”fascist” is relevant and in no way hyperbolic. I’ve been cautious about drawing the analogy too closely with Trump and his foul helpers, but a combination of the concentration camps and not only the emails that got Kimball wet but their aftermath—that at-best semi-coherent melange of demonization where one’s enemies are depicted as simultaneously ethnoculturally unassimilable, communist (read: economically egalitarian in some sense), and effete and anti-“hard-working regular people”... well, that has some antecedents.
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  #29  
Unread 07-18-2019, 01:36 PM
John Isbell John Isbell is offline
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It’s an interesting moment in thought when one can be both communist and anti- hard working regular people. But I think America has put some work into that gymnastics.

Cheers,
John
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  #30  
Unread 07-18-2019, 03:54 PM
Mark McDonnell Mark McDonnell is offline
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Hi Max,

It doesn't feel argumentative and thanks for the kind words. I sometimes feel I dig myself a hole then ask for a bigger shovel with the way I think, so it's appreciated. Asking me to teach you something is a tall order, because I'm not an expert on anything, rather I'm a mess of half remembered facts and instinctive opinion. Perhaps not being Jewish makes me reluctant to question the way Jews remember the Holocaust. I have no great theories as to why the six million is the number that has stuck in the public imagination, rather than the full 11 million total. But here goes.

Many different groups were persecuted and killed by the Nazis, but I think anti-semitism was the sickness that fueled the Third Reich. This isn't to diminish the suffering of those other groups that the Nazis hated and murdered: homosexuals, even 'pure' German ones, were seen as effeminate and weak, and useless to the master race as they wouldn't reproduce, the disabled were imperfect and a burden, communists and Russian prisoners of war were just political enemies. But the Jews (and the Slavs) were the truly sub-human. Two thirds of Europe's Jews were murdered; the Final Solution was to be the annihilation of every last one.

I don't even know if the dominance of that 6 million figure is something that is aggressively or deliberately propagated by Jews themselves, or if it has just naturally stuck in the collective psyche of Jews and non-Jews alike because it feels important somehow (maybe Jews were at the forefront of Identity Politics ). Anyway, the US Holocaust Memorial Museum seems to be pretty clear and inclusive in honouring non-Jewish victims too, and calling them Holocaust victims

https://www.ushmm.org/remember/resou...d-victim-names

Some rambling thoughts:
Christians make up around 32% of the world's population and Muslims around 24%. Together they number more than 4 billion people. There are approx 15 million Jews in the world. That's 0.2% of the world's population and less than double the population of London. I know the Holocaust was perpetrated on racial rather than religious 'justifications', and also that as an atheist who basically thinks the world would be a better place if everyone gave up on their magic books these figures shouldn't mean much to me. But they're striking. Even today, in the insane carnival of religious and political polarisation, Jews seem to get it from all sides: I can't think of another group that, for different reasons, unites the far right, the far left and the more extreme wing of both of the world's dominant religions in varying levels of hatred. I don't blame them their protectiveness and bunker mentality, or their tendency, if such it is, in wanting to somehow 'own' the suffering of the Holocaust.

Personally, as a bright Catholic teenager, out of step with the 80s, growing up in working class Northern England – and before I even knew all these things/people were Jewish – they were among the things that helped shape me. They gave me Bob Dylan, old Hollywood, Allen Ginsberg, The Marx Brothers, Mike Leigh, Leonard Cohen, Stephen Fry, Woody Allen, every good secular Christmas song ever. All this and more they did shortly after (or sometimes during) a period when two thirds of them were wiped out in conditions the human mind can barely contemplate. I have nothing but respect.

I doubt I've convinced you of very much with these personal ramblings and I've probably managed to incense at least one person (no I'm not making the false equivalence between far right and left in their level of anti-semitism..). But anyway. Them's my unschooled thoughts.

Not sure how I got from calling Roger Kimball a dick to here.
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