Quote from: Jess42 on April 16, 2013, 03:56:40 PM
What bothers me is that as a society, if we start banning words, what else will be next?
Okay. Please.. picture yourself in a pine forest, with trees either side of you. Under your feet is a path about the width of a suburban street of lush green grass. All around you birds are singing as you walk up a steadily incline to the top of a hill.
At the top of a hill there is a bank. The trees stop. You come to the edge and you find yourself on the edge of what appears to be a disused quarry which is now overgrown.
It is silent. No birds. No trees. Just silence.
You turn back and you walk back along the grassy road between the trees. You start to hear birdsong again. It all seems natural again and this continues for about a mile and a half. Then you come to a clearing.
There's another path leading into the forest. It takes you left into the forest towards another clearing. In the distance you can see a fairly distinct rectangular patch in the ground. You turn back on yourself and see another. Then another. You realize that there were once buildings here.
But what?
You continue. To your right you see a greyish-blue concrete wall. It's about fifty or sixty feet across. About eighteen feet high. Smooth grey blue concrete.
You walk past it and see the other side. On the other side it's not so smooth. There's chips and pock marks in the concrete along the lower half - up to about six or so feet (though one or two are higher). There's a concentration of these pock marks in the centre of the wall.
A little further to your left you see flagstones under clumps of grass and for a moment think it's another causeway or road.
It isn't. It's a disused railway platform.
Welcome to Treblinka. Or more specifically Treblinka II.
That railway station platform was the final destination for the Jews from the Warsaw Ghetto and others, such as Roma, Poles, Serbs, the untermenschen from Germany, and others.
Those rectangles were the barracks. That concrete wall was where prisoners were executed by firing squad every morning and every evening at roll call. Prisoners were beaten, whipped, kicked, punched. If you had a mark such as a bruise on you at roll call, you were executed.
That grassy road in the forest? That was The Tube - where men, women and children were forced to run chased by guards and dogs up to the gas chambers at the top. The screams of people being gassed literally caused people to relieve themselves, so the condemned were forced to run through a route more than ankle deep in human feces.
The bodies from the gas chamber were cleared, placed on -pyres and set fire to. The stench of burning flesh etc could be smelled over two miles away at Malkinia where the branch to Treblinka left the main Warsaw - Bialystok railway.
In the year between 1942 and 1943 when Treblinka II was operational some 865,000 or so people were exterminated. This was the second highest of all the camps in Poland, second only to the camp at Auschwitz-Birkenau.
I have been there. I still remember that day vividly. I don't think I will ever forget some of those eerie silences.
One of the problems with having complete freedom is that you can end up with anarchy. Anarchy is fine if you don't mind living in a society based on the laws of the jungle where only the strong survive.
Or you could end up with something far worse.
Let us not forget that the Holocaust started out with just words and a few ideas.