matrixmann (
matrixmann) wrote2016-09-01 12:00 pm
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Memento
Originally posted by
matrixmann at Memento
Deutschland - Polen.
Beginn des zweiten Weltkrieges.
Germany - Poland.
Beginning of World War II.
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Deutschland - Polen.
Beginn des zweiten Weltkrieges.
Germany - Poland.
Beginning of World War II.
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Especially Ford (car Ford) did continue to trade with Germany for pretty long as Mr. Ford himself didn't keep it very well with the Jews himself.
But also IBM comes to my mind - I remember some documentary film - was it "The corporation"? - speaking you could find calculating machines manufactured by IBM in German concentration camps. Not even with the name of some overseas offspring firm of them attached to the machines, it was directly American IBM logos as one knows them from them.
They were used for Nazis' index card system where it was noted down where you were from, which reason your were in the KZ for and so on - the famous cataloged bureaucracy that the allies later could find and see how big the extent of this killing machine of the Nazis really had been.
About the antisemitism part I don't know that exactly, but partly this trade was possible as America did some neutrality politics at this time episode. Don't ask, don't tell, we don't care - that was their politics at this time, so that's why even nations leading war still received goods from them.
I think, they even changed it in their treaties and official papers as it was due that they could also deliver to these countries, before they were only allowed to deliver goods to nations which weren't at war with another at this time.
So to speak - as German politics sometimes are like in these years now too, I admit -: Deliver to your enemies as well as your friends, that's the way how you make the most profit from it. Don't care about anything, just sell anything to them all.
I'm writing this only down from memory, correct me if I'm wrong.
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I also know that too, the question about the guilt of WWII is a little more twisted and complicated if you just take a look at the bigger picture. The machinery of the Reich takes the great part, but even that situation that the Reich could get as big as that lies with the governments of other countries which haven't bothered the circumstance for a long time.
Only when the size of the Third Reich and its ambitions started to turn against the Western "partners", they started to act against them - realizing, like today with all the Middle East programs, that you can't control somebody for always and forever which you only rent for serving your needs.
But that point had been relatively late in the progress of the events - they didn't bother much about Poland, about the Sudeten territories, about Austria, I think not even about the Scandinavian occupations.
As far as I remember learning it in history classes, even after WWI, one "mistake" (or intention?) the allies made was allowing them to have the general military service relatively quickly again. So they were able to build up an army pretty very fast again.
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But who knows what cruelties still sleep in the drawers of all what has been kept secret until today? Cruelty is universal, not exclusively a German invention.