See, racists (even in a fairly strong sense) would often have been in power. I don’t know what verbal beliefs you think characterize Nazis more than their willingness to use violence against particular targets. Hitler had belonged to (what they would later call) the Nazi Party for at most two months when the cited violence happened. He wouldn’t write Mein Kampf for more than three years. Mussolini allegedly said,
The Socialists ask what our political program is. Our political program is to break the heads of the socialists.
I don’t know what verbal beliefs you think characterize Nazis more than their willingness to use violence against particular targets.
You don’t? Well, you may not have heard of this, but they had kind of a thing about Jews. Thought they were subhuman and corrupting society and all sorts of crazy shit.
Is a typical Nazi closer to someone who privately thinks Jews are subhuman and corrupting society and is exactingly nice and friendly to everyone so that the Jewish conspiracy have nothing to use against her, or to someone who advocates violence up to and including mass murder against green-eyed manicurists on the grounds that they are subhuman and corrupt society?
Well, let’s compare Nazis to Ankharists. Ankharists if anything have a longer hitlist than Nazis, although they have nothing in particular against Jews. Are Ankharists more Nazi than Nazis? Uh, no. Ankharism is actually an entirely different ideology, with little in common besides the long hitlist (consisting of different targets.)
Of course with respect to the original question it’s also true that there are lots of distinctions between National Socialism and the various ruling racist ideologies that preceded them other than hitlist as well, so.
What is Ankharism? Google does not find anyone but you using this word. I suspect you have fabricated an English word by transliterating from another language, but I cannot trace it.
Somewhere you talk about Cambodia. Perhaps you mean Angkorism, a rare name for the ideology of the Khmer Rouge, after the Angkor Empire?
(There is also the Ankharite, named after the Egyptian Ankh, which may be displacing the term you use.)
The latter, historically. However, focusing on the specific example is probably counterproductive, as it doesn’t affect the point that certain verbal beliefs are dangerous; specifically those that stereotype, demonize and dehumanize particular groups. Obviously most who hold such beliefs will never attack anyone; but … if they were restricted, there would be less hate crimes. This would cause irreparable damage to society in other ways, of course—that’s rather the point.
Apparently people dispute that Georg Ratzinger published the same beliefs. But again, since I’ve apparently had trouble making myself understood: none of those verbal claims, at least the ones publicly known before the start of violence, distinguished the Nazis from other people (if not literally people like GR within the German government).
Oh, right. Well, it’s certainly true that anti-semetism was a lot more popular and socially acceptable before the holocaust. But it was even more popular, socially acceptable, and extreme among Nazis.
It was such incidents I had in mind. Clearly, I was suffering from the illusion of transparency; I’ll change it.
See, racists (even in a fairly strong sense) would often have been in power. I don’t know what verbal beliefs you think characterize Nazis more than their willingness to use violence against particular targets. Hitler had belonged to (what they would later call) the Nazi Party for at most two months when the cited violence happened. He wouldn’t write Mein Kampf for more than three years. Mussolini allegedly said,
You don’t? Well, you may not have heard of this, but they had kind of a thing about Jews. Thought they were subhuman and corrupting society and all sorts of crazy shit.
Is a typical Nazi closer to someone who privately thinks Jews are subhuman and corrupting society and is exactingly nice and friendly to everyone so that the Jewish conspiracy have nothing to use against her, or to someone who advocates violence up to and including mass murder against green-eyed manicurists on the grounds that they are subhuman and corrupt society?
Temperamentally, or in terms of verbal beliefs?
Yes.
Well, let’s compare Nazis to Ankharists. Ankharists if anything have a longer hitlist than Nazis, although they have nothing in particular against Jews. Are Ankharists more Nazi than Nazis? Uh, no. Ankharism is actually an entirely different ideology, with little in common besides the long hitlist (consisting of different targets.)
Of course with respect to the original question it’s also true that there are lots of distinctions between National Socialism and the various ruling racist ideologies that preceded them other than hitlist as well, so.
What is Ankharism? Google does not find anyone but you using this word. I suspect you have fabricated an English word by transliterating from another language, but I cannot trace it. Somewhere you talk about Cambodia. Perhaps you mean Angkorism, a rare name for the ideology of the Khmer Rouge, after the Angkor Empire?
(There is also the Ankharite, named after the Egyptian Ankh, which may be displacing the term you use.)
It was a garbled version of Angkorism, sorry.
I don’t get any informative results from looking that up, either.
The latter, historically. However, focusing on the specific example is probably counterproductive, as it doesn’t affect the point that certain verbal beliefs are dangerous; specifically those that stereotype, demonize and dehumanize particular groups. Obviously most who hold such beliefs will never attack anyone; but … if they were restricted, there would be less hate crimes. This would cause irreparable damage to society in other ways, of course—that’s rather the point.
Apparently people dispute that Georg Ratzinger published the same beliefs. But again, since I’ve apparently had trouble making myself understood: none of those verbal claims, at least the ones publicly known before the start of violence, distinguished the Nazis from other people (if not literally people like GR within the German government).
Oh, right. Well, it’s certainly true that anti-semetism was a lot more popular and socially acceptable before the holocaust. But it was even more popular, socially acceptable, and extreme among Nazis.