NeoScribe said:
I apologize if I offended you in some way. If its any consolation, the Death Claw is a single person and his underlings are ordinary people who have made some seriously bad choices, you just reminded me of that actually. Odd how I never thought of the Nazis as human 'til I read this.
Oh, it's not that odd. Almost every movie about those times only shows us sneering henchmen with a barking voice and a permanent scowl, committing atrocities offhandedly.
They don't have a name, they don't have a personality, they don't have a history or family. They are just "the Nazi" - which works well enough and is all that you need for the context of the average film, in fact. You cannot bother to give depth to your cannon fodder, after all, and you want the audience to feel that they deserve what is getting to them (which they did anyway, at least those who were involved or even fully aware of the atrocities that were committed).
But once you reach deeper, once you go beyond the surface and delve into the dark heart of the matter, true horror waits.
Imagine Gerda Schütz. Gerda was born in Bavaria in 1924. Her father has been crippled in the trenches of WW1, and is an embittered veteran who just cannot believe how miserable his life has become. He is a staunch patriot, intensely proud of his country, and still cannot understand that all has led to utter defeat. But then, there's the story of the dagger thrust: some of his fellow soldiers claim that Germany didn't just lose - it was betrayed from the inside, by Jewish conspirators who wanted to topple the Emperor and seize power for their own sinister plans. And why shouldn't he believe that this is true? He's lost his job, and the economy is collapsing, but all around him he sees Jewish lawyers, doctors and bank managers living comfortably.
So he teaches his daughter from an early age on that she must never forget what those traitors have done to the Best Country In The World and its People. It's a family of proud Germans who sing the national anthem whenever they go to the stadium to watch a football match, standing up and touching their heart with their right hand: "Unity and Justice and Freedom for the German fatherland. Germany, Germany above all."
The nation of poets and thinkers. The country of Goethe, of Kant, the country that gave birth to the automobil, the printing press and so many other achievements. And it lies in ruins. (They won't mention Marx, the evil Jewish communist who started the whole mess that led to the treason of 1918.)
The Nazi party promises them everything: they want to redeem the injustices of the Great Defeat, undoing the damage caused by the pact of Versailles and bringing Germany to the top again.
But when Hitler has just been voted Chancellor, a Jewish anarchist burns down the house of Parliament! Revenge! Retribution!
So Gerda and her father cheer when Hitler declares that he will seize power and dismantle parliament. After all, it was just a debating club that could never arrive at a conclusion because there were too many dissenting voices. Now, the nation stands united, led by One Strong Voice. (to be continued)