Hitler, Assad, Trump, Spicer, Godwin, Sarin, Zyklon B, Chemical Weapon, Termites

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Why Hitler is Different

Hitler is not entirely different from Pol Pot, Stalin, and the other mass killers. He is not entirely different from other fascists. But there is a short list of people, with Hitler on that list, who have this characteristic: They were so bad that we can not and should not compare their badness to each other outside of certain limited academic contexts, and they were so bad that any comparison made between them and their works to anyone not on that list, or to their works, threatens to devalue their badness.

We can not devalue the evil of Hitler or his kind. Historically, Hitler is our contemporary. His Holocaust was horrible and it could happen again. Oh, and this: It really happened. “To forget the dead would be akin to killing them a second time.”*

The third or fourth most common fallacy on the Internet is that Godwin’s Law prohibits making references to or comparisons with Hitler or Nazis. This is untrue. Godwin is not a law, but an observation, that among certain sorts of internet denizens, given enough time, someone would make a Hitler or Nazi comparison. And, it was a joke. It was Godwin’s Joke.

But, that fact that Godwin’s Law does not actually exist does not mean blithe comparisons to Hitler or Nazis are not frequently unwise. However, the fact that such comparisons are frequently unwise does not mean that they are always unwise for the same reasons.

When people compare Donald Trump to Adolph Hitler appropriately (meaning, in a defensible manner helpful to understanding current events by reference to history) they are potentially doing a good thing. Making that comparison to Hitler that devalue Hitler’s badness is always bad, even though that is usually not the intent of the comparison. Simply saying that Trump and Hitler are the same is an example of that. The comparison that I’ve seen that does potentially make sense, and that does not devalue the horrors of the past, is really one comparing the people and politics now to the people and politics then.

Here is the argument for that.

If we regard Trump as a demagogue who has never shown one iota of respect for the democratic process, then we may be very concerned that when push comes to shove, he’ll push the Constitution and the law out of the way and shove whatever he wants down our throats. He has said many things that indicate he is capable of this, and has even said things suggesting that he may be planning this. Since we can’t tell the difference between Trump’s purposeful bloviating and his incidental ignorance, we must assume that when he tells us that his popularity would go up if he murdered someone, that Trump murdering someone is on the list of possibilities. When he tells us that he intends to make Mexico pay for a wall, and since we know that the only way to force another country to pay for something they refuse to pay for is to take over their government, then the possibility that an invasion of Mexico is in fact on the table, as outrageous as that sounds.

If Trump is heading in the direction of tossing aside democracy, which as I’ve argued elsewhere would not be difficult in our system, given the fact that he is in charge of the most powerful country in the world, the possibility of a Hitler-resembling result has to be considered. Trump is a democratically elected leader of a country with elections. Hitler was too. Hitler became a fascist dictator. Trump talks like a fascist dictator, like a person who wants to be a fascist dictator. It is said that Trump’s followers feel dispossessed and that is why he won the election (I do not fully subscribe to that but it is said…) Same with Hitler’s supporters. Polls have indicated that many of Trump’s followers disdain democracy and would be OK with a dictatorship as long as it is their guy in charge. And so on.

The comparison between any rising leader with fascist tendencies supported by people who are not appalled by fascism, on one hand, with any or all actual historical fascists, is not only acceptable but necessary. “As an online discussion grows longer, the probability of a comparison involving Hitler approaches 1” becomes “As the prospect of a fascist taking over the country grows larger, the probability of a comparison involving Hitler approaches 1.” No longer a joke, is it?

Spicer’s Sin

Sean Spicer, the hapless presidential press secretary, made that Hitler comparison the other day, and outraged people. Then, of course, the Internet got it all wrong.

Spicer said,

We didn’t use chemical weapons in World War II … You had someone as despicable as Hitler didn’t even sink to using chemical weapons. If you’re Russia, you have to ask yourself if this is a country and regime that you want to align yourself with…When it comes to sarin gas, he was not using the gas on his own people the same way that Assad is doing…In the way that Assad used them where he went into towns and dropped him down on innocents in the middle of town was not the same.

The Internet, in response, said,

Of course Hitler used chemical weapons on his own people, that’s what the Holocaust was, stupid! Zyklon B is what Hitler used, and that is a chemical weapon!

And, references to Zyklon B have increased dramatically. Zyklon B was one of the killing tools used during the Holocaust, the preferred gas chamber chemical.

The Internet is wrong about his in two important ways.

First, Spicer’s reference was not a sin because he messed up the chemical weapons problem (we’ll come back to that in a moment). His reference was a sin because he totally messed up history while at the same time equating Assad with Hitler. Now, nobody likes Assad, and it is quite possible (if not likely) that this jerk would be just as bad as Hitler if he was in Hitler’s boots. But he wasn’t, and therefore he didn’t. Hitler was Hitler because of what he thought and what he did, and whom he cultivated and surrounded himself with, and the historical contexts of his time allowing him to get away with certain things, and so on. Assad in a Tardis, replacing Hitler in 1938, might have even been worse than Hitler. But that didn’t happen. The comparison devalues Hitler simply because Assad, in the big historical pictures, is a real jerk, but in fact, a minor jerk. Hitler, by comparison, and Hitler’s Holocaust, is on the list of the worst things that happened ever.

Spicer was, however, trying to make a valid point but because a) he is ignorant of history and b) insensitive to the Hitler problem, totally screwed it up. Or at least, I think he was trying to make a valid point. Here is how I might have said it, subject to revision:

Assad’s use of chemical weapons goes against a global disdain for such things, that has been embodied in international law for decades. The Hague made them illegal at the end of the nineteenth century, and their occasional use has universally been regarded with disdain.

By the way, Hitler produced chemical weapons and had artillery shells armed with them, but never used them. There were plans for significantly expanding their production, never finished by the end of the war. While the Japanese used chemical weapons during that war, the Germans did not really do so. The reasons are not clear and this is a point of controversy among historians. The Germans relied a great deal in some theaters on horses, and despite their efforts, the Germans were not able to make an effective equine gas mask. The allies were known to have large stockpiles of chemical weapons, despite them being illegal, and Hitler was sufficiently afraid that they would be used in retaliation of German use that he never allowed armed munitians to be near front line officers, who might go rogue and fire them off.

What the Germans did do, in the war theater, was to use chemically produced gasses to clear mainly Russians out of underground bunkers, and in one or more cases, to kill large number of people hidden underground, in Odessa and various locations in the Crimea (See: “Absolute War: Soviet Russia in the Second World War”).

The second thing the Internet got wrong was the seemingly innocent but in fact very dangerous conflation of the idea of gassing people on the battlefield using a chemical weapon and gassing people in death camps as part of the Holocaust. The word “gas” is used in both places, but there is a nearly complete (see below) and critical distinction between the two. This may seem like an academic nitpic, but it is not.

At some point in the future, the future version of Colin Powell is going to explain to the UN, the US government, Congress, the American People, etc. that we need to invade a certain country because they have weapons of mass destruction. But it might be a lie, like it was last time. And, following our most recent bout of self inflicted ignorance, that lie could rely on the conflation of killing gasses used in warfare with killing gasses not used in warfare.

The former are restricted by international law and highly monitored. The latter are routinely produced in numerous factories around the world and used in agriculture and other areas. Zyklon B was an insecticide, then it was used to kill about 1 million people in the Nazi death camps. Then it was an insecticide again, and it still is. It is not the most commonly used insecticide, but it or a close version of it is still produced in various countries, and a wide range of roughly equivalent gasses are produced widely and used widely. If we want to say that these are “chemical weapons,” which is exactly what the Internet is insisting that we say right now, then we are handing Future Colin Powell Clone an argument to invade.

Now, I need to add an important detail. Even though Hydrogen cyanide (which is what Zyklon B delivers) is primarily an insecticide these days and not generally useful as a weapon of war, dropped on enemy troops or people and the like, it has been used for this. Zyklon A (called just “Zyklon” before “Zyklon B” came along) was actually used (not extensively) during World War I (called “The Great War” before “World War II” came along). So called “blood agents” using Hydrogen cyanide are among the chemicals listed as “chemical weapons” but they are not considered very effective or useful on the battlefield. Also, note, while Zyklon B was used to kill more people in the Holocaust other gasses were used that would have made even less effective chemical weapons, such as CO.

Screen Shot 2017-04-12 at 9.29.53 AMIt is not sufficient to say, as some will I’m sure, “it is too a weapon because it was used to harm or kill therefore it was a chemical weapon therefore shut up.” But that is simply wrong. Again: someday someone is going to argue for an invasion of some place because of WMD’s and the WMD’s are going to be pesticides manufactured in a legal and normal factory in that country for use in agriculture or other legal contexts. That’s going to happen no matter what. Let’s not lay the groundwork to make that easier.

The other part of Spicer’s remark that is clearly wrong is the idea that Assad attacked his own people last week, but Hitler “did not use gas” against his own people. The difference between using real chemical weapons vs. some other kind of gas on his own people is in this context a pedantic point. That it is pedantic in this context does not mean it is also pedantic in the context of what a Weapon of Mass Destruction is. It is partly because of Spicer’s ham handed treatment of the discussion that we might end up making this mistake where making the mistake has significant material and life threatening consequences. Yes, of course, Hitler attacked his own people. No, it really wasn’t using “chemical weapons” as they are defined by treaty and conventions of warfare. But no, it does not matter in understanding the idiocy of Spicer’s remarks — not the remarks but the idiocy. Never mind the additional complexity that the Jews and others were not Hitler’s own people according to Hitler, or that the Syrian “rebels” are not Assad’s own people according to Assad.

My advice to Spicer: Don’t ever make any references to history, because you know nothing about history. Try, generally, to say less because you almost always screw up whatever you say. Consider a different job, like the job you formerly had in the White House, as shown in the illustration to the right. And just, well, shut up.

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29 thoughts on “Hitler, Assad, Trump, Spicer, Godwin, Sarin, Zyklon B, Chemical Weapon, Termites

  1. Thanks for this post.

    Just as a point of pedantry (because you were pretty thorough, and it hit me squarely in my OCD), the Syria-Germany comparison is apples and oranges anyway since Germany wasn’t in a civil war, no?

  2. “…but Hitler “did not use gas” against his own people.”

    Hitler didn’t think the people he killed were his people. A part of me wonders whether Spicer views things the same way.

  3. Hitler…who cares…he was possibly as stoopid crazy as the tumpkin, but they are NOT the problem!! How many people did Hitler kill?? NONE!! It was the Nazis that where the real evil. Hitler (tumpkin) can give all the orders he wants, If everyone else says “FUCK NO” then it is nothing. But there are too many who are like the Nazis, in that they agree that its OK to just kill people because some dumb-ass says so!!! And that is what I fear here!!!

  4. Knowledge is knowing an apple and an orange are both fruit. Wisdom is not making applesauce out of oranges

  5. “…but Hitler “did not use gas” against his own people.”

    Nope, he did. German Jews and Bolsheviks and the educated were all sent to concentration camps, most of those died from chemical weapons used by Germany.

  6. Ah!
    🙂

    On even days I’m a splitter
    On odd days I’m a lumper
    It’s all in the sauce…

    ———–

    “There are two kinds of people in the world: Those who believe there are two kinds of people in the world and those who don’t.”
    ~ Robert Benchley

    And apologies in advance, because it’s a compulsion with me:

    “It’s a little wrong to say a tomato is a vegetable, it’s very wrong to say it’s a suspension bridge.”
    ~ The Big Bang Theory

  7. It would be easy enough to say that Spicer’s comparison of Assad and Hitler was misspoken, were it not for Spicer’s subsequent “clarifications”.

    The initial statement was that Hitler did not use gas during World War II. Which, of course, he did. The people responsible have been sacked.

    Then he amended that to Hitler not using gas against his own people. Which, again, he did. The people responsible for the sackings have been sacked.

    Then he admitted, OK, there were “holocaust centers”. Most people refer to them as “concentration camps” or even “death camps”. The people responsible for sacking the people responsible for the sackings, have been sacked.

    Oh, and there was a good reason Hitler didn’t use gas on the Western Front. A slight wind shift would result in him gassing his own troops instead of the enemy’s. The risk is reduced if you are using them against a fortified position, like the trenches of World War I, but it is not entirely absent, and during World War II the Western front was not so heavily dependent on fortified positions.

  8. I don’t know who first stated this: Those that forget history are bound to repeat it.

    It appears that the leaders of this country have forgotten history either willfully or through plain lack of intelligence.

  9. When will Sean Spicer be sacked? (Actually it looks like even odds whether he is sacked or leaves of his own accord.)

    By the way: relevant to the second picture that goes with this post, I wonder if anyone who posts here, besides myself, has seen Donny Darko.

    Here’s an image.

  10. Eric, exactly.

    I’d like to mention though that the word “center” appears in the terminology of the death camps. I’m pretty sure, just can’t remember exactly how. May look it up.

  11. #3 dean

    Hitler didn’t think the people he killed were his people. A part of me wonders whether Spicer views things the same way.

    That was what struck me. Not unreasonably, IMO, given the miasma of antisemitism in the air at the moment.

  12. Rich Bly – it was the Italian philosopher George Santayana. The exact quote is “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.”

    Greg – another way to “make” Mexico pay for the wall is one that Trump hinted at – put an import duty to be paid on all goods crossing the border that originate in Mexico and use that – . Another way would be to blockade Mexico and then close the border to all trade until they agree to pay. Of course either of those would wreak havoc on the US economy but neither involves invading the country.

  13. Trump’s paternal ancestry is indeed German (the surname was Anglicized from the German Drumpf). His mother was a Scottish immigrant.

    Which means that none of Trump’s children have four US-born grandparents, and only one (Tiffany, who is Marla’s daughter) has more than one US-born grandparent.

  14. >When people compare Donald Trump to Adolph Hitler appropriately

    Comparing people to Hitler devalues his badness except when it is done by you or against people you dislike.

  15. Except for Greg, Trump’s opponents are saying Hitler analogies are terrible no-nos. Are we sure it was a gaffe by Spicer? That use of ‘Holocaust center’ in Eric’s comment makes me suspicious. It sounds like something Trump would say.

  16. “Comparing people to Hitler devalues his badness”

    No it doesn’t Comparing the size of London to the size of Paris doesn’t make London change.

    Comparing people to Ghandi doesn’t devalue his greatness, either.

    Comparing people to other people is a comparison.

    Only those who have nothing accurate to claim about the comparison being incorrect make any bones about the comparison itself rather than whether it is validly computed.

  17. “Trump’s opponents are saying Hitler analogies are terrible no-nos.”

    What? All of them?

    Bull.
    Shit.

    Practically all of them?

    Bollocks.

    Some of them? Possibly, where, though? Because “some” include “one”, and you’ve given not one yet, so we don’t even know it is that high.

    All we have is a moron claiming that others said it, when they take those people’s word for nothing, meaning that they should be taking their word for nothing here either, and, indeed, should be shouting, as they always do with their claims, the actual opposite.

    So why aren’t you clamouring for comparisons to Hitler for the german anchor baby, “mike”?

  18. Greg’s point was echoed by Chris Matthews 4 years ago, and no one noticed.

    “don’t use chemical weapons. We didn’t use them in World War II, Hitler didn’t use them.”

  19. Nobody noticed Chris’ making that point and nobody noticed Greg making it either.

    Since you knew both made it, your “nobody” must be “practically nobody”, and since there are 7 billion people, the vast majority who never even visit this site, nobody noticed this time either.

    And looking for the phrase ” We didn’t use them in World War II” only you said that. Care to support your claim or source where it came from if you’re merely yet again parroting another person’s claim (or lying about it).

  20. Pedantic objection: Zyclon-B was used as a fumigant, not an insecticide. The difference is subtle.

    First, the building needs to be sealed completely for the lethal concentrations of HC to collect. Second, unlike most insecticides HC as used has essentially no residual effect once the building is ventilated. Third, HC in the concentrations used kills pretty much everything and was, in part, valued as a fumigant because it was effective on mice and rats, pretty much every living thing, in addition to insects.

    Also, Zyclon-B was a HC delivery system, not the killing gas, HC, itself. The product was originally designed to be placed in the building to be fumigated and unsealed and spread out only as the operators quickly left the building. The HC gas was released from the spread bulk product as the Zyclon-B warmed.

    It also needs to be noted that the HC in Zyclon-B was derived from peach, apricot, and other stones from fruits. Many pits have significant amounts of organically bound HC in them. Process and chemically unbind them and you have Zyclon-B. I keep that in mind when anyone tries to tell me that organic products are safe.

  21. Art, that is also very useful to know if you are ever held hostage in an orchard setting. I’m pretty sure McGuyver used this method once.

    Thanks for the clarification on the details of terminology.

  22. Art, it’s not like intensively farmed peaches don’t have HC, though, is it, so it’s kinda redundant to keep that in mind only for organic peaches et al…

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