“Community
Columnist” Michael Schrader
(About the dangers of Trumpism)
Written 19 February 2017
After the
most contentious and nasty election in my lifetime, I decided to take a break
and delve into the world of history.
Reading history is my comfort food; I find it a wonderful distraction
from the day-to-day drama of life. There is an old expression that those who do not learn from the
past are doomed to repeat it; I am afraid we are all doomed.
I have been
reading about two major World War II battles that are not
really talked about in our history classes, because we were not
involved, and if we were not involved, it is somehow not important; but it
is. The siege of Leningrad lasted almost
three years from 1941 through 1943, and exposed one of the most diabolical
objectives ever in war – the complete and total annihilation of a group of
people, the Slavs, whom the Germans felt were inferior and were using resources
that would be better used by the Germans.
The Germans attacked the Poles and the Russians with the objective of
depopulating the land and using it for German colonization and expansion. A
German “Manifest Destiny” if you will.
When the
Sioux refused to give up their land in the Black Hills, the solution was to
starve them to death to get the land by cutting off their food supply, which
led to the wholesale slaughter of tens of millions of buffalo. The Germans used the same concept at
Leningrad- get the land by starving the people to death. Reading the first-hand accounts of the
Leningraders, reveals the bad and good of human nature – there were many bad,
who hoarded food and had no qualms about watching others die, but there were
many more good people, who took a “whatever you to others, you do to me”
approach. Incredibly, even though
hundreds of thousands died, hundreds of thousands lived.
Fast forward to the last battle of the war, Berlin. With the tables turned, the Russians had
Berlin surrounded. Unlike in Leningrad,
the cradle of socialist atheism, where the majority of people opted to help
each other, Berliners helped themselves.
Neighbor turned against neighbor and did not hesitate to turn them into
the authorities for “liquidation”. The
German government decided it would be better to destroy the city and the
million plus people in it than let the Russians have it, even blowing up
infrastructure that the citizens relied upon to live. When the Russian troops entered the city, one
of the first things they brought was food.
Yes, the Russians did commit atrocities, but those paled in comparison
to what the Christian capitalist Germans did to them.
So, are we
Leningraders or Berliners? I have heard
some very nasty rhetoric lately, that somehow if you are not a Christian
capitalist you are somehow subhuman. Ironically,
it was the Godless Communists of Leningrad who
actually behaved more Christian than the Christian Germans did. Your religion, or lack of one, does not make
you better or worse than anyone else – it is how you treat others. When I see someone walk around Kroger wearing
a shirt with the outline of the continental 48 and the words “F—you! We are
full!” that is alarming. If you have
ever been west of the Mississippi, you know that there is plenty of room
available; or is it that we do not want people who we deem as “subhuman”?
When I see a
customer at Kroger take every single loaf of wheat bread without any thought
that others might want wheat bread, I wonder.
When people hear insults and putdowns of others and do not stand up for
what is write, that gossip mongering is wrong, and instead pile on because they
do not like the target of the gossip, I wonder.
When people know that someone is sick or injured and do not bother to
check up on them and see if they are okay or need anything, I wonder. If we were under siege, would we be the
Leningraders or the Berliners?
Seeing how
uncivil, uncaring, and rude we have become with each other, I am pessimistic.
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