Sorry to revert progress buuuuuuut……
@KurtGodel7:
L. Hoffman wrote:
The stunning assumption here is that the Captain (… Hitler) has to choose people to die at all.
It’s not an assumption. It’s a basic statement of fact.
Let X = the number of calories needed to keep everyone in German-held territory alive
Let Y = the number of calories physically available in that territory.
If X > Y, people will die. The larger the difference, the more people die.
Mathematically that makes sense. However, you are reducing a very complicated equation down to (2) variables and completely ignoring my point: why was it okay for Hitler/the Nazis to make that choice? Why did they have to make that choice?
Your statements would indicate that (Embargo) + (Too Many People) = (People must be killed so they don’t first starve).
If the number of people who would starve is the same as those that would be killed, then why not simply restrict their food such that they starve? Why systematically kill them? I am not supposing you have an answer for this, it is just rhetorical.
The underlying assumption here is that the logical and obvious choice for Hitler/the Nazis was to exterminate certain people so that ethnic Germans did not starve. Why is this logical and obvious? (I know it was to the Nazis, but why do you imply that it is rational, excusable or a choice that can be sympathized with?)
@KurtGodel7:
The people in Germany (and their leaders) had more options than stay and die of starvation.
What options were those? No major Western democratic nation offered Germany any peace terms other than unconditional surrender. After Barbarossa, the unconditional surrender was required to be to all the Allies, including the Soviet Union.
I did not mean that Germany’s leaders should have opted for Unconditional Surrender. What I was saying is that the leaders of Germany had more options than simply to exterminate all the Jews and whomever else deemed unfit. And the persecuted people had more options than to simply stay in Germany.
Nazi leaders could have relocated all the undesirables/foreigners to non-German (i.e. Ukraine, USSR, Greece, Hungary, Africa, France, etc…) territories. They could have placed them on barges and set them adrift in the Mediterranean. If truly deprived of their food and facing persecution in Germany, I am sure many Jews (et al) would have (and did) voluntarily emigrate if given the chance or free passage to do so. (Many did, but many more were not given that opportunity.)
My point is simply that Nazi Germany need not have expended such an effort to kill all those involved in the Holocaust. Impending Starvation does not logically lead to Kill A Portion of Your Own Populous. There were other, non-genocidal ways of removing undesirable people. If the Nazis were at all capable of separate coexistence or had any compunction over atrocities, they could have made different choices. To insinuate that Hitler/the Nazis had no choice but to kill people is blatantly false.