| Someone wrote: "There are numerous conflicts worldwide where one side is trying to systematically destroy the other population, civilians and all. Whether they are exactly the same or how you define that is pretty secondary to that fact." To which you responded: "Whatever. Since my last Wikipedia spree on that topic i feel such comparisons are highly inappropriate." This was in reply to this specific context: "It's interesting we always talked about the Holocaust and the Nuremberg trials when talking about accountability, as if similar atrocities aren't currently happening." Now, what would it take for you to change your mind and to start agreeing that contemporary crimes of deliberate starvation and exterminationist policies should be tried in an international court or tribunal? To you, what is it that makes the Holocaust so very special? To a large extent it was perpetrated in the same manner as the genocide against the circassians, and to an extent in the same manner as the genocide against the herero and nama peoples. In your mind, was the Holocaust just the killing by poison and that's why you don't see any contemporary cases of similarity? |
Nothing, because that's already my opinion.
> What is it that makes the Holocaust so very special?
The name.
So this has been a trivial misunderstanding on terminology, and you kinda went full flak on me. Someone else got their point proven.