Cindy.
I can't, of course, comment on your father. It is good that he was able to face up to his experiences to the extent that he was able to talk about them. From what I understand about commandos, though, they tended to be of significant intelligence and of a narrow band of personality types. I did have the good fortune to meet a few. I found them to be the sort of people it is difficult not to respect, on any level. But to be quite honest, I think I would have found a close social relationship with them quite difficult. They seemed to be emotionally capable of breaking my neck. (I don't mean that is a derogatory sense). And since I had a pretty poor impression of myself at the time, I think I would probably have thought I deserved it.
I'm sure I've mentioned before, my father fought in India WW2 along with one of his brothers. The other was in the navy.
My mother's brothers also fought, but in Europe. My mother and her two sisters were nurses, my mother and one sister working in London.
All I know about them and most other people I knew who served, was that they never spoke about it. The reasons I can only speculate. I do know my father had some anguish over what he'd done. But since he was a military policeman, it may have been related to that.
However, my thesis is directed at those who do reprehensible things, from abusing concentration camp inmates, to attacking indigenous civilians. My own, brief realisation of my own insanity, when I laughed at the torment of that very frightened man made me realise how much my attitudes had changed in the short time I was in that locked ward.
I, of course, was able to leave and did so soon after that. Moreover, I was given my assignment to develop my experience. My skills were recognised and put to the test there.
But soldiers assigned to camp duties would be those deemed unsuited to front-line fighting. We know that Germany was desperately short of front line troops at that time, this emphasises the military inadequacy of these troops. Added to that, the inmates of the camps were said to be there because their presence in society was disruptive. Homosexuals, communists, Jehovah's Witnesses, Jews and Gypsies. I know a little of the social history of the Jews and Gypsies in Europe. I can understand, but of course not sympathise with the label that was attached to them.
In this context, their behaviour becomes more understandable. These were people unsuited to the rigours of military discipline, put into a situation that no-one should have to deal with. I can't imagine that the inmates would have been particularly friendly or co-operative.
Milgram, in this context, is seeking explanations where they are simply not necessary. Moreover, it is seeking identifiable culprits beyond those political leaders responsible for ordering these camps.
The cause of this and other war time atrocities is war. In the minds of the people of Israel, the war is continuing. These mindsets are tools, used by governments to manipulate their peoples. The consequences are theirs. But, sadly, so are the tools of justice and retribution.
Quote from: CindyJames on April 11, 2010, 04:31:46 AM
I think the gap between civilization and the wild is narrowing and not widening. Sadly, I think when children can watch movies and games in which killing and mutilation are a prize, we are de-humanizing ourselves. We are paying for it and will continue to do so.
Cindy
I will agree with you on that point.
Young men have always joined gangs. These are generally centred around one or two particularly aggressive young men. Social history from before the 20th century is very sparse, largely because those who kept the records tended to regard the lower classes as unimportant.
I have found this record of Razor gangs in Glasgow prior to WW2.
http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/special-reports/crimes-that-rocked-scotland/2007/10/19/razor-gangs-ruled-the-streets-but-even-in-the-violence-of-pre-war-years-one-man-stood-out-86908-19978261/There is also evidence of Socrates, 2500 years ago, attempting to reform the youth of his day.
What does seem to be happening, increasingly, is that degenerate behaviour is becoming more accepted by individuals.