Very soon after the program started, due to the emergence of the Cold War, the western powers and the United States in particular began to lose interest in the program, somewhat mirroring the Reverse Course in American-occupied Japan. Denazification was carried out in an increasingly lenient and lukewarm way until being officially abolished in 1951. The American government soon came to view the program as ineffective and counterproductive. Additionally, the program was highly unpopular in West Germany, where many Nazis maintained positions of power. Denazification was opposed by the new West German government of Konrad Adenauer, who declared that ending the process was necessary for West German rearmament.

  • I_Has_A_Hat@lemmy.world
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    Shit like this is why I shake my heads at dumbasses going “Just you wait ICE agents! Things didn’t work out too well for all the former Nazi’s who tried to say they were ‘just following orders’!”

    Yes things actually did turn out just fine for the overwhelming majority of Nazi’s. Only like a couple dozen faced any sort of consequences. The rest quietly returned to their lives as machinists, butchers, office workers, farmers, etc.

    • rustydrd@sh.itjust.works
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      You probably mean Beate Klarsfeld. The Nazi she slapped was then-chancellor of West Germany Kurt Georg Kiesinger. Her work also helped bring several high-ranking Nazis and war criminals to justice, Klaus Barbie being one of the more well-known ones.

  • InfiniteGlitch@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    Honestly; I’m curious how does one de-program another person. How do you denazification, defascism etc.

    When I look at the world right now, it feels as if these things never left. Nazis stayed Nazis, fascism stayed with fascistic people.

    All the while capitalism uses it to gain more money and wealth while looking at the world and not giving a care.

    • bearboiblake [he/him]@pawb.socialOP
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      It’s probably a similar kind of approach as would be taken for cult deprogramming - fundamentally, a form of therapy, to deconstruct the harmful beliefs and brainwashing of the ideology from first principles.

      Obviously though it should have began with a complete ban of anyone who supported the nazi regime ever holding a position of power and authority ever again, and the fact that it didn’t, tells me everything I need to know about the “effort”.

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        Unfortunately to your second point, I don’t think that’s the best approach either. Check out the first 6-12 months of the Iraqi government rebuild during the Iraq war. The Americans basically fired 20,000 Iraqi officials and military members who then had nothing to lose anymore. They then immediately started an insurgency.

        Also after these fascist take overs, it’s not as easy as simply saying “you’re a Nazi, therefore you go to jail” because if you didn’t swear fealty to the new government (i.e. if you were Democrat you would now have to call yourself Republican) you could be summarily executed on the spot (check out the video of Sadam’s take over).

        So you could resign. But then you get called a coward by armchair generals for not trying to stay in the system and slow it down as much as possible.

        So you stay in and keep your head down, and may try to slow the processes down enough to hopefully save some innocents without getting pulled out back and shot. But then you’re called a Nazi collaborator. Idk, I would probably just as well resign, but that could put a target on your back, too, because you’re basically outing yourself as hostile.

        Personally, i think how we handled it after WW2 wasn’t perfect, but should be the goal. There’s always clean up that can happen even years afterwards. But if you go purging an entire country’s worth of government officials, you have to replace those you purged with equally qualified people. And you often find that those who are eager to step in, are often just eager to enact revenge, or in some cases, even worse than their predecessors because they are just opportunists who now have the good graces of the new regime who just wanted a quick transition to a friendly government.

        • bearboiblake [he/him]@pawb.socialOP
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          Pure copium, sorry. The US invasion of Iraq should never be used as a template for anything. The US itself is a fascist nation and has been since its inception.

          “I’m fighting the system from the inside” is mostly cope, too. There was plenty of german resistance to the Nazi regime from outside the system. For most people who feel that they can do more good fighting the system from inside, they’re just rationalizing. The stories of people like Oskar Schindler are interesting because they are exceptional.

          • CainTheLongshot@lemmy.world
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            I never said Iraq should be the template, I implicitly said Post-WW2 recovery should be. I was referring to Iraq as an example of what not to do, because it was specifically called out for a purge of Nazi officials at every level, which is exactly what happened in Iraq.

            As for German resistance, yes of course there were forces outside of government, and they used insiders for information. To believe anything otherwise is just being willfully ignorant, and a waste of time.

          • FlashMobOfOne@lemmy.world
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            “I’m fighting the system from the inside” is 100% pure cope, too.

            Eh, 100% pure cope is a bit hyperbolic.

            There are at least tens of thousands of accounts of Jews who lived, in part, because of the intercession of people who existed within the Nazi infrastructure. We just don’t most of the names because people couldn’t actually use their names when operating within resistance networks, but there are some famous accounts, like Schindler and The Pianist.

            It is not always possible for people to work outside of a fascist system, and to pretend that it is is absurdly idealistic.

    • foggy@lemmy.world
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      We don’t give the fact that people can be effectively brainwashed enough attention.

      Just as people can be programmed, they can be deprogrammed.

      How do you deprogram 30% of a nation? Not without yourself committing atrocities.

      Time is a flat circle.

    • FlyingCircus@lemmy.world
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      Fascism is a social disease that is injected by the bourgeoisie into the petit-bourgeoisie during times when capitalism is in crisis. They do this through propaganda and economic warfare like austerity coupled with tax cuts for the rich. This results in an economic downturn that hits the “middle class” the hardest (relatively - poor people are also fucked, but they had less to lose in the first place). Economic woes coupled with divisive and authoritarian propaganda and — boom — fascism.

      So how do you stop it? Well, ultimately by dismantling capitalism and removing the power of the bourgeoisie. Otherwise fascist crises will just keep being manufactured.

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      So this often comes up and there’s a lot of opinions. I often reference the Nuremberg Trials as an example of how a society expresses the consequences of not changing behavior and ideology. You know, if the failure of their war, and the craven suicide of their fuhrer hadn’t already.

      But, probably the best example is Pu-Yi and how the CCP handled the Chinese emperor that collaborated with the Japanese.

      In short: education and work. Teach them the right way and make them work a job that satisfies the material conditions of a common citizen.

  • Zwiebel@feddit.org
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    This was a huge societal topic in the 70s as the after-war generation were becoming adults, and many realizing that their own father had been a nazi

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    Not just west Germany. There was also a pipeline from the Gestapo to the Stasi.

    The cold war ended up preventing the denazification programs from being concluded everywhere.

    • ohulancutash@feddit.uk
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      At some point the occupation administration realised that if they got rid of all the nazis there wouldn’t be a functioning government, legal system or military.

      • bearboiblake [he/him]@pawb.socialOP
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        This is no excuse. The Allied powers could and should have trained up anti-fascists to fulfil those roles. You should be asking yourself why they didn’t.

    • bearboiblake [he/him]@pawb.socialOP
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      That’s interesting, do you have a source for that? I’d like to learn more, I did a quick search and I didn’t find anything, and the Wikipedia article said this:

      In contrast, in the Soviet occupation zone and later East Germany, denazification was considered a critical element of the transformation into a socialist society, and the country was stricter in opposing Nazism than its counterpart.

      I’m not defending the USSR by any means, just to be clear, I know Lemmy has a bunch of tankies, I’m not one of them! I just would like to learn more.

      • Zwiebel@feddit.org
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        The soviets declared the denazification to be complete in march '48, before the GDR was even formed in '49

        Btw your quoted wiki section is missing a source :/

  • adeoxymus@lemmy.world
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    I recently read the book aftermath from Harald Jähner. In the last chapter he argues that this sort of “clemency” for the nazis was necessary to recreate the German society. After the war there were still 6 million Nazis, and one way or another these had to be integrated in society. That way was to start with a new beginning for everyone. According to the author it was mainly the children of that generation that did wanted to deal with the crimes and horrors of their parents past. Years later, in the 60s and 70s.

    Link: https://app.thestorygraph.com/books/ce8bc276-180b-4c3c-9d79-9585178fd2b1

    • bearboiblake [he/him]@pawb.socialOP
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      Pure, unadulterated copium. Sorry. There is no excuse. I’d say that denazification efforts were abandoned because the Western powers were themselves fascist. Look at our society now.

  • yucandu@lemmy.world
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    East Germany, in contrast, declared everyone that opposed the state to be a ‘nazi’ and had them imprisoned.

    Even before denazification was officially abandoned in West Germany, East German propaganda frequently portrayed itself as the only true anti-fascist state, and argued that the West German state was simply a continuation of the Nazi regime, employing the same officials that had administered the government during the Nazi dictatorship. From the 1950s, the reasoning for these accusations focused on the fact that many former functionaries of the Nazi regime were employed in positions in the West German government. However, East German propaganda also attempted to denounce as Nazis even politicians such as Kurt Schumacher, who had been imprisoned by the Nazi regime himself.[34] Such allegations appeared frequently in the official Socialist Unity Party of Germany newspaper, the Neues Deutschland. The East German uprising of 1953 in Berlin was officially blamed on Nazi agents provocateurs from West Berlin, who the Neues Deutschland alleged were then working in collaboration with the Western government with the ultimate aim of restoring Nazi rule throughout Germany. The Berlin Wall was officially called the Anti-Fascist Security Wall (German: Antifaschistischer Schutzwall) by the East German government

    Yeah that’s right, I can quote wikipedia too.

    • bearboiblake [he/him]@pawb.socialOP
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      You realize I’m not a tankie, right? I don’t care to defend the USSR or East Germany in any way.

      the West German state was simply a continuation of the Nazi regime, employing the same officials that had administered the government during the Nazi dictatorship […] many former functionaries of the Nazi regime were employed in positions in the West German government.

      Gotta hand it to them, though, sometimes they do call balls and strikes.

      East German uprising of 1953 in Berlin was officially blamed on Nazi agents provocateurs from West Berlin

      While I’m sure there absolutely was popular opposition to the increased work quotas, I can believe that this might have some truth to it, too. There’s absolutely shitloads of evidence that Western powers love to turn civil unrest into uprisings and attempted coups in socialist and anti-imperialist countries.

      • subversive_dev@lemmy.ml
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        Gotta hand it to them, though, sometimes they do call balls and strikes.

        What materialist analysis does to a MF