this post was submitted on 29 Jan 2026
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Chapotraphouse

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I am watching a BBC doc about the Nuremberg trials. It is overall propagandizing against the concept of trying crimes against humanity at all. Due to, as described, the british position: it'll just be another chance for the defendants to present their position to the world so better to hang them and be done with it.

Q: Agree/disagree with the above? Both in the specific instance, and in general.

It was the first, but not the last, such proceeding. What are we learning from subsequent?

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[–] Keld@hexbear.net 16 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago)

What we learned from the Nuremburg trials was that you can just do things. On one hand in the sense that the Nuremburg trials had no real legal basis and were basically made up ad hoc, it wasn't illegal to do what the nazis did prior, as indeed most of the winners of ww2 had committed and would go on to recommit similar acts. But on the other it also shows us that you can just do things once attention is no longer on the matter. As soon as the eyes of the USSR and the US were elsewhere the surviving nazis were let out by West Germany and the whole thing was made a farce.

There are people who committed acts of petty crime who served longer sentences than mass murderers tried at Nuremburg, and the "Just following orders" defense worked for many.