Many people live with many things - in my experience.
War experience itself can be pretty nasty - as can something like working in the police or fire service.
I guess you could say to yourself - I had no option but to do it. It wasn't my fault etc etc. That was then, this is now. Even in Germany after 1945, re-inventing yourself.
Of course, some people are to blame, but many must have been caught up in a nightmare that they did not understand.
Not all people are deeply self-refective or well educated/intellectual. Many poorer, working class, under-priveleged people seem to respond to stimuli, peer pressure and views or basic prejudice. Did the people who protested in Portsmouth UK some years back against a doctor dealing with children (paediatrician) because they thought he/she was a paedophile guilty, or did they just go along with others? Do they regret what they did or just not think about it?
Did Moseley's followers in 1930s britain, often anti-semitic in the way of the times, regret their stance after 1945? Or did they just say "that was then:this is now"?
I have no answers, only questions.
Phil
War experience itself can be pretty nasty - as can something like working in the police or fire service.
I guess you could say to yourself - I had no option but to do it. It wasn't my fault etc etc. That was then, this is now. Even in Germany after 1945, re-inventing yourself.
Of course, some people are to blame, but many must have been caught up in a nightmare that they did not understand.
Not all people are deeply self-refective or well educated/intellectual. Many poorer, working class, under-priveleged people seem to respond to stimuli, peer pressure and views or basic prejudice. Did the people who protested in Portsmouth UK some years back against a doctor dealing with children (paediatrician) because they thought he/she was a paedophile guilty, or did they just go along with others? Do they regret what they did or just not think about it?
Did Moseley's followers in 1930s britain, often anti-semitic in the way of the times, regret their stance after 1945? Or did they just say "that was then:this is now"?
I have no answers, only questions.
Phil
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