Nazi prison guard living in Tennessee gets deported (user search)
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  Nazi prison guard living in Tennessee gets deported (search mode)
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Author Topic: Nazi prison guard living in Tennessee gets deported  (Read 7686 times)
lfromnj
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« on: February 21, 2021, 04:37:07 PM »

Fuzzy Bear and The Reckoning defending a literal Nazi is not surprising.

Where did I defend a Nazi? All I’m saying is, throwing this 95 year old in prison for something that he did 75 years ago when he poses no threat to the world today isn’t making the world a better place. He was a teenager, and teenagers make mistakes. If he had said no, he might have ended up where he was guarding.

And you calling someone a Nazi for something they did 75 years in the past, and not allowing any room for development, is rather against the whole liberal idea of “people can change, 2nd chances, etc.”- one of the ideas that has contributed the most to the development of a civil society today.

Getting deported to Germany is hardly the end of the world.
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lfromnj
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« Reply #1 on: February 21, 2021, 07:29:37 PM »

https://talkelections.org/FORUM/index.php?topic=430716.0

Ok, TheReckoning/Fuzzy answer this question then.
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lfromnj
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« Reply #2 on: February 22, 2021, 12:14:29 PM »

Which of you as a teen didn't know better than to commit genocide.
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lfromnj
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« Reply #3 on: February 22, 2021, 12:24:59 PM »
« Edited: February 22, 2021, 12:41:16 PM by You Code 16 bits- What do you get? »

I do wonder if he got the vaccine before being deported.
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lfromnj
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« Reply #4 on: February 22, 2021, 01:18:59 PM »

Given that no state has a statute of limitations for murder, the main difference here is that what this man did was legal according to the government of Nazi Germany at the time.   I don't know if that should make a difference or not, given how utterly abhorrent what the Nazis did was,  even according to the rather bloody standards of history.

However it isn't legal to be in the US when you previously committed genocide.. End of discussion.
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lfromnj
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« Reply #5 on: March 15, 2021, 03:30:04 PM »
« Edited: March 15, 2021, 03:44:32 PM by You Code 16 bits- What do you get? »

For the love of God, he wasn’t at a camp where extermination was taking place, what was he supposed to do? He was 18, his brain wasn’t even fully developed yet, and theirs no proof this person actually made a conscious, willing choice to participate in the Holocaust.
The SS was a volunteer organization.

Maybe on paper.

No it literally was a volunteer organization, why would they want people who weren't fully committed to the Nazi ideology for the SS?
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