Thursday, June 20, 2024

In what ways did German people benefit from the Nazi regime?

 Lots of sex if you were young and thought of genetically desirable. They were breeding healthy Aryan girls with an equivalent sorts of men. Blonde and blue eyed to the front of the road .

it had been free, uncommitted sex. Something children tend to love . and therefore the Reich took care of the babies in special SS “Kindergartens” called Lebensborn to boost them to repopulate the conquered territories.

Most would be adopted bent select families, mostly of the SS. it's estimated 900 pregnancies resulted from the Nuremberg rallies alone.

Sex between select, young, genetically pure Germans was encouraged. Awards, like Cross of Honour of the German Mother got to women who contributed the foremost to the Reich.

The German supreme headquarters knew that they had to form up for the many soldiers and civilians who would be lost within the war.

They thought future . But the Reich only lasted 12 years, not a thousand, so it had been all for naught.

  • Sports and fitness were also widely organized and encouraged. and other people were taught to embrace manual labor, not look down thereon as in previous generations.
  • Hitler made German people feel proud and brought a sense of strength back to the country after the embarrassment and shame of the treaty of Versailles.
  • Workers went on holidays for the first time. Hitler’s ‘Joy through Work’ programme allowed people to go to places like Norway and free trips to the German coast.
  • Many German people benefited under Nazi rule in the 1930s. The massive economic problems from the Wall St Crash in 1929 had ended.
  • In their place there was employment and financial stability. The Nazis also replaced Germany’s honour and pride. There was more optimism and self confidence.

So life was pretty good for many Germans until the war came home to them.

Pics: Google

Woman, 23, born without a vagina has one made for her by doctor and has become the first in the world to have one made out of FISH SKIN and she can finally have sex with her boyfriend

A woman born without a vagina has become the first in the world to undergo reconstructive surgery to have one built out of fish skin.

Jucilene Marinho, 23, from Ceará, Brazil, underwent a neovaginoplasty in April last year after being born with Mayer-Rokitansky-Küster-Hause (MRKH) left her with no cervix, uterus or ovaries - meaning she will never have children.

The procedure, performed at the Federal University of Ceara involved creating an opening where Ms Marinho's vagina should have been before inserting a genital-shaped mould lined with the skin of the freshwater fish tilapia.

The fish skin was then absorbed into her body and transformed into tissue that lines the vaginal tract. 

After spending three weeks in hospital, Ms Marinho - the first of four patients given the procedure - was discharged and is now thrilled with the results.

She said: 'My family and friends took me out to "toast" my new vagina!'

Ms Marinho, who spiraled into a deep depression when she thought she would never have an intimate relationship, has even been able to have sex for the first time with her boyfriend of over a year Marcus Santos, 24. 

She added: 'It was a wonderful moment because everything worked perfectly. There was no pain just a great deal of pleasure and satisfaction.'

The R*pe of Nanking vs. the incident of Nanking.

The R*pe of Nanking vs. the incident of Nanking.


The Rape of Nanking
vs. the incident of Nanking: a Literature ReviewAbstractThe Nanking Massacre has become deeply ingrained in the cultural history of both the Chinese and theJapanese; however it has taken on two perhaps contradictory narratives in each of those communities.

Man 3the two works are Iris Chang’s The Rape of Nanking: The Forgotten Holocaust of World War IIand Higashinakano Shudo’s The Nanking Massacre: Fact Versus Fiction. An Overview of the Chinese Perspective One historian has estimated that if the dead from Nanking were to link hands, they would stretch from Nanking to the city of Hangchow, spanning a distance of some two hundred miles.

Their blood would weigh twelve hundred tons, and their bodies would fill twenty-five hundred railroad cars. Stacked on top of each other, these bodies would reach the height of a seventy-four story building. - Iris Chang, Rape of Nanking: The Forgotten Holocaust of World War II In general, this is representative of the Chinese perception on the happenings at Nanking. Iris Chang states in her novel that “experts at the International Military Tribunal of the Far East (IMTFE) estimated that more than 260,000 noncombatants died at the hands of Japanese soldiers at Nanking in late 1937 and early 1938” (Chang 1997: 4).

Though she cites primary evidence from the Red Swastika Society, this figure is a source of contention. Furthermore, Chang uses photo evidence, like the one below, in order to illustrate the barbaric atrocities that the Japanese had inflicted upon the Chinese. 3Man: The Rape of Nanking vs. the incident of Nanking: a Literature RevPublished by ScholarlyCommons, 2012


Man 5above. In his novel, he declares “20 days before and immediately prior to the fall of Nanking, the city’s population was 200,000, according to Europeans and Americans who were there at the time. Eight days after the fall and on Christmas Eve, it was still 200,000” (Shudo 2005: ii). This means that according to Shudo, no significant massacre even occurred. The Japanese, of course, generally favor Shudo’s account of the events.

Not only does his version of the story of Nanking acquit the Japanese from accusations, but it also paints the Japanese as a kind of generous patron-like figure toward the Chinese. In fact, his novel briefly mentions how the Japanese soldiers transported displaced civilians back to their own cities. As a history professor, Shudo makes use of many primary documents such as war journals and official orders.

In contrast to Chang’s book, which makes use of photo evidence and anecdotes in order to evoke horror and outrage, Shudo’ novel relies less on heated pathos and more on a calm logos. His main purpose in writing the novel, it appears, is to discredit the Nanking advocators and prove that the Nanking massacre was a hoax. Also, having written his novel after Chang’s novel, he has the advantage in that he can rebut the claims made in Chang’s novel. Already on the first page of his novel, he writes, “the western world is beginning to realize that Chang’s book relies on faked photographs and hugely exaggerated accounts” (Shudo 2005: i).

In reading both of these novels, I find that there exist a couple parallel elements and themes that both authors discuss with different spins. The rest of this paper will be devoted toward the analysis of these themes in the context of Nanking and the evaluation of why each author decided to present each concept in a different light.

The four themes that will be discussed are the dehumanization of the enemy, the breakdown of rationality under stress, the Lucifer effect and the tendency toward victimization post-conflict. These elements will be presented in 5Man: The Rape of Nanking vs. the incident of Nanking: a Literature RevPublished by ScholarlyCommons, 2012

Man 6the aforementioned order because they represent roughly the chronological order of occurrence during Nanking. Dehumanization of the Enemy By dehumanizing enemies, animal metaphors reduced the sense of guilt about killing human beings in battle. The “lower” the phylum, the lower the sense of guilt, and few phyla ranked lower than insects - Edmund P. Russell III, Speaking of Annihilation: Mobilizing for War Against Human and Insect Enemies Throughout the history of warfare, dehumanization or demonization of the enemy has been a major technique utilized, and Nanking is no exception.

In her novel The Rape of Nanking: The Forgotten Holocaust of World War II, Iris Chang cites the diary entry of a Japanese soldier named Azuma Shiro. In it, Shiro describes his observation of the captured Chinese soldiers: “They all walked in droves, like ants crawling on the ground. They looked like a bunch of homeless people, with ignorant expressions on their faces. A herd of ignorant sheep, with no rule or order, marched on in the darkness, whispering to each other” (Chang 1997: 44). This clearly demonstrates how at least one of the Japanese soldiers believed that the Chinese forces were subhuman. Chang attributes this mindset to environmental factors such as the Japanese education system.

In Chang’s opinion, Japanese schools “operated like miniature military units” (Chang 1997: 30). Textbooks functioned as military propaganda and teachers as military recruits. One particular textbook uses the shape of Japan as justification of Japanese superiority: “We appear to be standing in the vanguard of Asia, advancing bravely into the Pacific. At the same time we appear ready to defend the Asian continent from outside attack” (Chang 1997: 30).

Man 7Chang, it was this flaw in the education system of Japan that facilitated a superiority complex among the Japanese people, justifying mistreatment of the Chinese. Furthermore, Japanese schoolteachers also blatantly promoted hatred of the Chinese. Yelling at one of his students for refusing to dissect a frog, a teacher exclaimed, “Why are you crying over one lousy frog? When you grow up you’ll have to kill one hundred, two hundred chinks!” (Chang 1997: 30). Not only does the term Chink degrade human life, but it also trains the Japanese to feel less guilt at taking human life.

In an equal and opposite manner, by describing Japanese dehumanization techniques, Chang dehumanizes the Japanese, likening them to killing machines. Shuda counters this himself by demonizing the Chinese. He cites ancient Chinese historical literature to support the notion that barbarity also courses through Chinese veins: “the Empress Dowager cut off Madame Qi’s arms and legs, put out her eyes, burned off her ears, forced her to drink a potion that made her deaf, caged her in a tiny room, and named her the ‘human pig’” (Shuda 2005: 8).

Again, animal imagery is used, which demonstrates how savagery and dehumanization techniques are not unique to the Japanese. He provides a further example of dehumanization when he explains how Chinese soldiers treated each other: “According to Nanking Incident Source Material, Vol. 1: American References, Durdin recanted, admitting that there was a confrontation at Yijiang Gate between Chinese soldiers attempting to escape. Some of them were trampled to death” (Shudo 2005: 56). In using the adjective trampled, Shudo likens the Chinese to a herd of cattle, not much different to how the Japanese soldier called the Chinese “a herd of ignorant sheep”.Clearly, dehumanization played a large role in promoting the events that occurred in Nanking.

According to Chang, the Japanese labeled the Chinese as subhuman due to their belief in their own superiority. This notion of superiority the Japanese acquired through propaganda, 7Man: The Rape of Nanking vs. the incident of Nanking: a Literature RevPublished by ScholarlyCommons, 2012

Man 8received through the medium of school. In his novel, Shuda himself demonstrates the continuation of this trend by demonizing and degrading the Chinese. Breakdown of Rationality Dehumanization of the enemy happened before the war. The breakdown of rationality occurred in Chiang Kai Chek’s decision to defend Nanking “to the last man”, but first the event that started the war must be discussed in order to fill in the gap between these two themes.

Between the two authors, there exists extensive disagreement. Chang states in her novel that the war started with Japan when “the Japanese army blew up the tracks of a Japanese-owned railway in Southern Manchuria...and fabricated a story for the world press about Chinese saboteurs” (Chang 1997: 29), giving the Japanese an excuse to invade Manchuria. This incident, which occurred on September 18, 1931, is commonly referred to as “The 9.18 Incident”. According to Chang, it was this unjust event that led to the unlawful occupation of China by Japan, which later escalated up to war. Of course, Shudo does not place the start of the war at this point.

Instead, he suggests that the war began on July 7, 1937 (just five months before Nanking) with The Marco Polo Bridge Incident. During this conflict, Japanese soldiers were engaging in final maneuvers, practicing with blanks, when they “were attacked without warning by Chinese troops, who were using live ammunition” (Shudo 2005: 2).This places the blame on the Chinese for the start of the war. Though the two novelists disagree on this point, they seem to agree that Nanking was an untenable situation.

The overall sentiment expressed by the narration suggests desperation in face of chaotic management and overwhelming enemy power. Chang herself even gives credit to the massive disparity in the technological capabilities of both nations by mentioning the Meiji Restoration in which Japan transformed into a military nation: “Schools were not run for the 8Momentum, Vol. 1 [2012], Iss. 1, Art.

Wednesday, June 19, 2024

Despite being quite tame compared with modern horror movies, what made Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho so influential as a film?

 

Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho is like the granddaddy of modern horror. Sure, compared to today's bloodbaths, it’s pretty tame, but man, it left a mark on cinema that’s deeper than Norman Bates’ mommy issues.

Nobody can deny the power of suspense in it. Hitchcock was a master at cranking up the tension. The way he builds the atmosphere in Psycho is pure genius. He makes you feel on edge without showing much. It’s all about what you don’t see, which is somehow even scarier. Your mind fills in the blanks, and shoot, that’s where the real terror lives.

Then there’s the infamous shower scene. Even if you’ve never seen the movie, you know this scene. It’s iconic. The quick cuts, the screeching violins, the silhouette of the killer – it’s a masterclass in horror. Hitchcock used innovative techniques to film it, and it shocked audiences to their core. People were used to seeing their leading ladies safe, not butchered halfway through the movie!

Speaking of which, killing off the main character, Marion Crane (played by Janet Leigh), early in the film was a huge twist. Audiences were left in a state of WTF disbelief. It broke all the rules and kept viewers on their toes, wondering what the heck would happen next. That kind of narrative shock was revolutionary.

Hitchcock also tapped into deep psychological fears. Norman Bates, played by Anthony Perkins, is one creepy dude. His split personality and weird relationship with his mother added a layer of psychological horror that messed with your mind. It wasn’t just about the killer; it was about the disturbed human psyche, which is freaky as heck.

And let’s not forget the music. Bernard Herrmann’s score is hauntingly perfect. Those sharp, stabbing violins during the murder scenes are enough to make your hair stand on end. It’s simple but incredibly effective, proving that music is a crucial element in scaring the pants off audiences.

Psycho changed the game for horror movies. It introduced new techniques, broke conventions, and showed that you don’t need buckets of blood to scare the crap out of people. Hitchcock’s blend of suspense, shock, and psychological terror set the standard for the genre. So, even if it’s not as gory as today’s flicks, Psycho remains a monumental influence in the world of horror.

allen German soldier still wearing his helmet in no man's land somewhere on the Western Front.

On this day I saw one of my comrades walking around very disheartened and not saying a word; when I asked what was wrong, since he looked so defeated, he said that he didn't know, but he was probably ill.

Just as he stood and spoke, a shell struck, and a fragment tore his forehead open and exposed his brain; in silence he collapsed to the ground to never rise again until...


Fallen German soldier still wearing his helmet in no man's land somewhere on the Western Front, ca. 1918.

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The following is 19-year-old Danish-German soldier Asmus Andresen's diary entry from the Western Front on an incident on May 28, 1918 - today 106 years ago. Translated by myself:

   ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀

"On May 28 I saw one of my comrades walking around very disheartened and not saying a word; when I asked what was wrong, since he looked so defeated, he said that he didn't know, but he was probably ill.

.

That was in the morning, but in the afternoon, while we stood by the artillery cannons, he approached our Officer to report his sickness. Just as he stood and spoke, a shell struck, and a fragment tore his forehead open and exposed his brain; in silence he collapsed to the ground to never rise again. There were many others besides him who foresaw a similar fate."

Thanks for reading leave your thoughts in the comments section below

What were the punishments for women who had S#X with Nazi soldiers

 During World War II, the Nazi regime implemented policies that legalized and organized prostitution in military brothels as a means to control soldiers’ sexual behavior and prevent sexually transmitted diseases (STDs). This territorial conquest policy had harrowing consequences for the women coerced into sex work. This note focuses on the aspects of sexual violence perpetrated in the name of war crimes and the resentment and persecution faced by prostitutes in Nazi Germany in the aftermath of World War II.


In the occupied territories, women were forced into sexual slavery to serve in military brothels, which were labeled as “treatment centers.” The Nazi regime considered these women racially inferior, exploiting them to further Nazi ideological goals. A prisoner-of-war manual issued by the OKW in 1940 explicitly condoned rape and sexual violence against civilian women in the occupied territories.

The exploitation of these women constitutes a war crime, as defined by the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court. Article 7 of the Rome Statute, on Crimes Against Humanity, outlines that sexual enslavement is a punishable offense and that the use of civilian women for sexual purposes is encompassed within its definition. The Nazi actions clearly violate modern international law and standards.

The post-war period in Germany brought about intense scrutiny and silencing mechanisms concerning sexual violence and the role of Nazi brothels. Women forced into sexual labor and rape survivors faced lingering shame, stigma, and psychological suffering. Additionally, women who worked in these brothels were denied reparations for the traumatic experiences they endured and were mired in stigma and embarrassment.

Prostitutes in Nazi Germany were seen by society not as victims but as collaborators who deserved punishment. Even though they were compelled into this work, they faced severe legal repercussions and exclusion from social safety nets after the war. For instance, the 1953 German Law on Prostitution criminalized those who engaged in sex work, aiming to reduce the spread of STDs while simultaneously ignoring the broader systemic issues that initially enforced such sexual exploitation.

How common were instances of sexual abuse in Nazi concentration camps.

 





How common were instances of sexual abuse in Nazi concentration camps. The accounts that rap£ or prostitution was common, Were the guards were given "free reign" over the prisoners given view of them as subhuman


The Nazis sort of developed a network of state-controlled brothels during the war. This included both the civilian and military brothels. The Nazis even set up brothels for the forced labor inmates that helped with the German war effort as incentives for higher production from prisoners in camps.


Back then these brothels were suppose to serving several needs. For the soldiers that were far away from home, the Nazis thought that having these brothels would reduce the possibility of rape in occupied lands and reducing the sexual relations with impure local women or forced laborer's, as well. Heck, the Nazis tried to use these brothel women to cure homosexuality as a treatment with male prisoners that were gay.


Regular German women were exempt from serving in these brothels. German women were suppose to “bear children for the Führer and Fatherland’’ both within marriage or even in some cases, outside of it.


Women serving as sex workers in these brothels were recruited, sometimes voluntarily and sometimes forced. I read that a major source of prostitutes were local women that had been rounded up from the streets to serve in occupied lands.


I also read that Jewish women were not used as prostitutes in these brothels. They had strict laws against ‘Rassenschande’, or racial shame, prohibited sexual contact with Jews.