This moral equivalence thing is making me sick inside. It's part of a global historical revisionist trend. In the past several years, there have been numerous articles about the carpet-bombing of Dresden and Hamburg. What the ...! Are we supposed now to feel sorry for the "poor German civilians" who died in the bombings? What? Again - the moral equivalence between Hitler and his victims? This is just [censored]!
And you know - I am not only not anti-German, I happen to love Germany, Germans, and the German culture. I would put Germany as the #1 culture of Europe (in historical terms), closely followed by the French culture, and then, at some distance, by the British. So - no, I am emphatically not a German-hater. But if you are at war, then the enemy is the enemy. You are not supposed to humanize the enemy. You are not supposed to empathize with him. You are supposed, on the contrary, to demonize him and to summon all the hatred and rage against him that you heart is capable of - and then some more! Otherwise you are doomed to lose the war before it even starts. During the Second World War, a Russian-Jewish poet, Iliya Ehrenburg, wrote a poem that was very popular. Some lines from it that I remember were: "Kill the German. Wherever you find him - kill him." And that was the right thing to do then.
And now these spoiled ninnies, these scum of the earth, who don't know what war is and what moral choice is, dare to make these moral-equivalence statements! They are the enemy! We should be ruthless!
Forgive my rant. This is just the kind of thing that pushes my buttons. A large part of my family dies during WWII - both fighting in the army and killed by Germans and local collaborators for being Jewish. "The ashes of Klaas knock at my heart."