My grandmother is German and grew up during WWII, they were aware of camps but only knew them as internment camps. They saw the prisoners out in the fields working in the next town over from her and she said they never looked mistreated. When the Americans invaded her town they put up signs explaining what had “happened” at the camps and nobody believed it. It took a good amount of time for the people to bend the knee and go along with it.
I've been trying to tell people: "Internment Camp" "Worker Camp" even "Concentration Camp" were at the time politically correct, "nice" sounding terms.
They did not have the connotation of "Prison Camp" that they have now, and there was a common acceptance that they were necessary. It wasn't until after the fact that people realized that allowing the government to round people up for any reason is a bad idea.
I remember seeing a polish guy interviewed about his experiences in auschwitz, and he was pretty cheery all things considered. He didn't see any jews there, but he apparently made buddies with POWs from many different countries.
Do you think we'll make friends when they put us the covid containment facilities?
What was there to be aware of? The "jews" had declared war on germany, a land that they had no business living in, yet they did. What would you have done better to deal with the situation? The germans tried to avoid war but they knew it would be forced on them. The bolshevik massacre of german civilians in danzig forced their hand. Would they just allow their people to perish?
Imagine being a german knowing what the bolsheviks had done in russia and ukraine and poland, where actual genocides had happened, and then learning that your nation was next.
Its far more sensible to compare todays covid fueled regimes to the bolsheviks. Communist ideology, check. Openly anti-christian, check. Heavily influenced by "jews", check. Advocating the destruction of white Christian society, check.
Tbh most Germans were aware, it was just too difficult to talk about. Nobody wants to admit to themselves that their government is evil - same thing we see nowadays with the jabs. Very few are prepared to confront reality, especially since the mass feminisation of society.
So every German was aware of the hundreds of concentration camps. They were literally described and spoken about at length in the party newspapers and other media.
What many were not aware of was the six death camps. Though this too can be overstated because a lot of people knew and for everyone else the rumors certainly by 1944 were very widespread.
All the "proof of death camps" were discovered by bolsheviks in east germany. The boldheviks themselves were bloodthirsty murderers that killed far more than the germans ever did. Their story clearly cannot be trusted. Zyklon B is a delousing agent and the people dying in the camps discovered by the american forces were dying of starvation and disease due to lack of supplies.
My grandmother is German and grew up during WWII, they were aware of camps but only knew them as internment camps. They saw the prisoners out in the fields working in the next town over from her and she said they never looked mistreated. When the Americans invaded her town they put up signs explaining what had “happened” at the camps and nobody believed it. It took a good amount of time for the people to bend the knee and go along with it.
I've been trying to tell people: "Internment Camp" "Worker Camp" even "Concentration Camp" were at the time politically correct, "nice" sounding terms.
They did not have the connotation of "Prison Camp" that they have now, and there was a common acceptance that they were necessary. It wasn't until after the fact that people realized that allowing the government to round people up for any reason is a bad idea.
I remember seeing a polish guy interviewed about his experiences in auschwitz, and he was pretty cheery all things considered. He didn't see any jews there, but he apparently made buddies with POWs from many different countries.
Do you think we'll make friends when they put us the covid containment facilities?
What was there to be aware of? The "jews" had declared war on germany, a land that they had no business living in, yet they did. What would you have done better to deal with the situation? The germans tried to avoid war but they knew it would be forced on them. The bolshevik massacre of german civilians in danzig forced their hand. Would they just allow their people to perish?
Imagine being a german knowing what the bolsheviks had done in russia and ukraine and poland, where actual genocides had happened, and then learning that your nation was next.
Its far more sensible to compare todays covid fueled regimes to the bolsheviks. Communist ideology, check. Openly anti-christian, check. Heavily influenced by "jews", check. Advocating the destruction of white Christian society, check.
Patton learned the truth, why cant you?
Tbh most Germans were aware, it was just too difficult to talk about. Nobody wants to admit to themselves that their government is evil - same thing we see nowadays with the jabs. Very few are prepared to confront reality, especially since the mass feminisation of society.
So every German was aware of the hundreds of concentration camps. They were literally described and spoken about at length in the party newspapers and other media.
What many were not aware of was the six death camps. Though this too can be overstated because a lot of people knew and for everyone else the rumors certainly by 1944 were very widespread.
All the "proof of death camps" were discovered by bolsheviks in east germany. The boldheviks themselves were bloodthirsty murderers that killed far more than the germans ever did. Their story clearly cannot be trusted. Zyklon B is a delousing agent and the people dying in the camps discovered by the american forces were dying of starvation and disease due to lack of supplies.
Ah, Holocaust deniers.
The bottom feeders of the gene pool.
You know who NEVER denied the Holocaust? Not once in over 800 war crimes trials?
The Nazis.
And the six death camps were in Poland, not east Germany.
Meh.noobody cares about that small beer after years of crying.