Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Jan 29, 2025 4:28 pm
Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Wed Jan 29, 2025 12:53 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Jan 28, 2025 3:10 pmFreidrich Pollock, himself an extremist Socialist (associated with the Frankfurt School, if you recognize that) and a staunch critic of Fascism, writing in 1941 gave the following analysis:
If you are going to cite, it would be helpful if you could provide references so that we can get the context. Given that Friedrich Pollock was a "staunch critic of Fascism, what you cite looks to me like a staunch criticism of Fascism.
He was trying to criticize Fascism, alright: but even he had to admit the truth you deny.
Just because someone says something you interpret as a point you agree with doesn't make it "the truth".
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Jan 29, 2025 4:28 pm
Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Wed Jan 29, 2025 12:53 pmThe Nazi party were Fascists. Two words that
are contradictory are Fascism and Socialism.
If you watched any of the video, you'd know just how wrong you are. But you didn't, obviously, so you don't.
But you should. It's a very nuanced and fair treatment by a specialist and author in the field.
Well, if you are going to cite videos, it would be helpful if you could pick out the parts, either by quoting or giving time references, ideally both, that you believe support your argument. Just asserting that somewhere, some guy says so, therefore it is true is an appeal to authority. It's another fallacy that shows the weakness of your philosophical skills.
Here's how you do it. First of all, a bit of background research for some context. Who is Rainer Zitelmann, and what platform is he speaking from? Wikipedia, not authoritative, but a first point of entry says this: "Zitelmann pursued a career in conservative print media."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rainer_Zitelmann
Then there's the platform, a pod cast called "Dad saves America" hosted by "Proud papa, filmmaker, entrepreneur, and arm-chair philosopher John Papola". His latest pod cast, 24 Jan, is an interview: "Katharine Birbalsingh Is Leading the Charge Against Woke Schooling"
https://www.dadsavesamerica.com/p/katha ... is-leading
Katharine Birbalsingh is the headmistress of a school which Wikipedia describes thus:
"The school emphasises discipline and has a traditional style of teaching. There is a "zero tolerance" policy regarding poor behaviour. A "boot camp" week at the start of the year teaches the new year 7 pupils the rules and the consequences of breaking them. There is a strict uniform code and no group work. Children sit in rows and learn by rote and walk in single file between classrooms. Staff at the school "tend to reject most of the accepted wisdoms of the 21st century." Pupils must be silent in school corridors and are forbidden to gather in groups larger than four. The school policies have been described as "neo-strict" because it combines the use of punishments with rewards; "merit points" are given for good behaviour and achievement." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michaela_Community_School
None of which has any bearing on the strength of Zitelmann's argument, but it helps to have some idea of where he is coming from.
According to Wikipedia:
"As a historian, Zitelmann is best known for his argument that Nazi Germany followed a conscious strategy of modernization. In his doctoral thesis, Zitelmann strove to show that the modernising efforts of the Third Reich, which had been diagnosed by scholars like Ralf Dahrendorf, David Schoenbaum and Henry Ashby Turner, were intended as such. Unlike Dahrendorf, Schoenbaum and Turner, who argued that the modernisation of German society during the Nazi period was an unintentional side effect or merely a necessary adjunct towards achieving profoundly antimodern goals, Zitelmann argued that modernization of German society was intended and a central goal of the Nazis."
So clearly Zitelmann has an interest in and particular view about Nazi Germany, but again, that it is someone's view doesn't make it "the truth".
Anyway, on to the video in question. From 6.48 Zitelmann explains how he perceives the difference between a free market economy, and a planned economy. He gives the example of the current German government legislating to outlaw the registration of combustion engined cars from 2035. His point being that in a free market, private companies decide what to produce, and whether they stand or fall depends on consumer choice. That the current German government has limited the economic viability for combustion engined cars in Germany post 2035 is what Zitelmann calls at 8.14
"The modern form of socialism" It is this "modern form of socialism" that Zitelmann attributes to the Nazis. The difference is that there are opportunities, between now and 2035, for the German electorate to democratically choose a government that will not impose the ban. This 'modern socialism' operates in a democratic framework and is a very different beast to the one you describe here:
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jan 27, 2025 10:05 pmBut the words "Socialist" and "democrat" simply contradict each other. No such thing is even possible. To be a "democrat" one cannot seize all the means of production (which Socialism demands you do), and cannot allow rival political parties (which Socialism makes absolutely indispensible)...
You are using an example of 'socialism' that you don't believe is socialism, to prove that Hitler was a socialist. That is something an idiot might do. If you think Zitelmann makes a point that actually supports your case, quote that point and explain its relevance.