You always provide food for thought. Just a small historical point. Hitler murdered 2.7 non-Jewish Poles beyond the Holocaust. Some were combatants, so we could say they were casualties of the war. Others were ordinary citizens and died in camps, forced labor, mass roundups, and reprisals, etc. Same for other countries, but I don't have numbers. I understand this is not about the point you are making. You might enjoy East West Street by Phillipe Sands. It's about the origins of the terms genocide and crimes against humanity at Nuremberg. He's an international human rights lawyer.
Providing food for thought is the raison d/être of Still Wondering. Thanks for reassuring me that it succeeds. Thanks, too, for the information about Hitler’s other victims. The sheer horror of the Holocaust can make the “lesser” evils hard to remember. And thanks for the book recommendation.
You always provide food for thought. Just a small historical point. Hitler murdered 2.7 non-Jewish Poles beyond the Holocaust. Some were combatants, so we could say they were casualties of the war. Others were ordinary citizens and died in camps, forced labor, mass roundups, and reprisals, etc. Same for other countries, but I don't have numbers. I understand this is not about the point you are making. You might enjoy East West Street by Phillipe Sands. It's about the origins of the terms genocide and crimes against humanity at Nuremberg. He's an international human rights lawyer.
Providing food for thought is the raison d/être of Still Wondering. Thanks for reassuring me that it succeeds. Thanks, too, for the information about Hitler’s other victims. The sheer horror of the Holocaust can make the “lesser” evils hard to remember. And thanks for the book recommendation.