This is going be an angry thread. It’s angry, because of what I see, compared to what I’ve been spending the last few days researching. Let me tell you about what happened shortly after the Nazis were voted into office, & how your both-sides-bad inertia is criminally naive. /1
As early as 1921, Adolf Hitler had talked about the need to contain the ‘bacilli’ of Germany's enemies such as Bolsheviks, other left-wing agitators and, of course, the Jews. Even then, his solution was to be a series of camps that would contain them, modelled on POW camps. /2
In the spring of 1933, following Nazi rise to power, the SA (the party’s early paramilitary) & police arrested thousands - partly in retribution, partly to remove any opposition. These arrests were called ‘Schutzhalt’, or ‘Protective Custody’. /3 dhm.de/lemo/kapitel/n…
‘Protective Custody’, of course, was a euphemism. Nobody was being bloody protected. They were taken to one of hundreds of locations across Germany that were used as makeshift concentration camps - prisons, children’s camps, even former SA clubs, with no judicial involvement. /4
To begin, these ‘camps’ were bounced between a number of agencies. The SA controlled some, the police, & others the SS. How you fared depended wildly on who was in control. Police custody could be no worse than normal prison. SA facilities, with untrained guards, was hell. /5
Did people know what was happening? Of course they did - they may have seen some of the prisoners being paraded by SA units to their nearest place of incarceration, or heard the cries of prisoners, especially in some urban locations. This was no secret. /6 theguardian.com/uk/2001/feb/17…
However, people had been told for years via Nazi campaigning that those arrested were the enemies of Germany, & had to be pre-emptively detained for their own good. By the time that the population began to understand what they’d enabled, they were often too scared to protest. /7
Early on, being sent to one of the camps wasn’t permanent. Men were released after a couple of months to bear the scars of their ordeal. In a way, this was a deterrent to those considering criticizing the regime. Many knew of a broken man who had returned from a camp. /8
Dachau would be the model for what was coming. Near Augsburg, it opened on the 22/3, 1933, & primarly took political opponents of the Nazis. At first, things weren’t too bad, later descended into a lawless state. The murder of several forced Himmler, SS head, to step in. /9
Theodor Eicke, a fanatical Nazi, was placed as SS commandant of Dachau in 1934. He regulated the use of violence & punishments. No longer would conditions be changing - from this point, prisoners knew to expect prolonged suffering & humiliation. /10 holocaustresearchproject.org/othercamps/eic…
Eicke would later become inspector of camps, and move around the country closing the smaller camps and managing the transition of prisoners to the larger ones, until the outbreak of war, when he was made the head of an SS combat division. He died in 1943. /11
Over time, the SS ‘Totenkopfverbände’ (‘Death’s Head Guards’) were placed in control of all ‘concentration camps’ in Germany. Detailed regulations were drawn up for guards, & plans for standardised layouts and facilities. All this occurred in less than 10 years. /12
Buchenwald, Sachsenhausen, Bergen-Belsen, Ravensbruck, Flossenburg and Lichtenburg were all built and populated before the outbreak of the Second World War. All had thousands of German opponents of the regime pass through them, before Jews arrived following 'Kristallnacht'. /13
The Nazis would continue building camps in the occupied territories. Each owed their structure and organization to the work that had been done throughout the 1930s by Eicke and Himmler, learning from mistakes and challenges that they’d been confronted with along the way. /14
It’s important to understand that these camps were not designed to kill at first. Extermination camps would follow as a result of the 'Final Solution', agreed in 1942. While concentration camps saw many deaths, they were not their purpose - only incarceration and punishment. /15
It’s also very important to note that the world knew about the Nazi concentration camps long before 1945. Very few prisoners had escaped, but a few that had written accounts & lobbied foreign powers to press the Nazis. There were a few inquiries, but they were toothless. /16
Even when pressed, the Nazi regime had their answers prepared - their usual line that the camps that they had created were no better or worse than the ones the British had used in South Africa, or French POW camps of WW1. ‘Whataboutism’ was the standard defence. /17
My point is this - long before the ‘industrialization’ of killing, that we now call the Holocaust, the Nazis were perfecting techniques on those it considered the enemies of the state within. For much of that time, it did not have the appearance of what it would become. /18
Things didn’t get worse along some sort of predictable trajectory. Conditions in camps and on the streets seemed to improve to many, and outwardly, it might have seemed like ‘schutzhaft’ was a necessary step to many Germans - especially after 1934. /19
Germans were not confronted with industrial killing floors in their backyard - not at first, at least. They simply thought that the camps were places where a threat was being contained, not eliminated. Reasonable enough, right? /20
So when you hear stories about ‘tent cities’ on the US border, or militias and ICE working together, think of those first few months of 1933. When someone calls for ‘Antifa’ crackdowns, think about what happened only weeks after the Nazi’s rise to power. /21
Europeans, when some pissant demagogue in a suit starts railing against the enemies of your less-than-200-year-old nation, understand exactly what the endgame of that bullshit is - mindless violence, transforming into a machinery of death. /22
No one is your fucking enemy. No one is out to get you. The enemies of freedom are every jumped-up shit that parrots the same lines about ‘invasion’ or ‘purity’ that the Nazis were using when they paraded bewildered men through city streets towards beatings and floggings. /23
Educate yourself. Understand that the Nazi state didn’t spring into existence suddenly. There had to be agreement that some people, purely because of what they believed, needed to be placed in extra-judicial prisons. Read this book, for instance. /24 amazon.co.uk/dp/0349118663/…
And before anybody starts in on communists, or gulags, or any of that utter tripe, I don’t see any fucking Stalinists about, do you? So quit with that absolute garbage. The Far Right is on the march, the Far Left is having trouble putting its boots on. /25
Turn off the proponents of division. Stop making excuses for those among you that call for others to be removed, silenced or worse. Stop being so goddamned scared. Fear is what gave us the horrors of Dachau. /26
Fear is what will kill millions more, if we’re not careful. /FIN
PS. So that's why every single idiot child in this photograph throwing a Hitler salute should be made to tour @AuschwitzMuseum if they think they're going to college.
You know what really fucks me up though? That some adult thought if was appropriate to take a staged, professional photo for sale. wheelmemories.com/bhs-prom-pics/

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More from @MikeStuchbery_

Feb 18
Every day, here in Germany, it seems like I come across something weird and slightly puzzling from a historical perspective.

Today, I'm wondering, why were 700 'erdstall', short manmade tunnel systems, built under Bavaria and Lower Austria?
No two 'erdstall' are exactly the same, but do include common features such as slips, where a person could sit or stand.

This one can be found near the municipality oft Beutelsbach.
They're not wine cellars, or places for storing goods - they're simply not built to store things, and they're often damp and confined.
Read 7 tweets
Feb 16
I've wanted to talk about the 'Gold hats' found in Germany and France over the last few centuries for a while.

Now that they make an appearance at 'The World of Stonehenge', the time has arrived!
The first to be found was in my neck of the woods of Southern Germany, back in 1835 at Schifferstadt, near Speyer. It's considered to be the best preserved of the four in existence.

It dates to between 1300 - 1400 BCE, during the chrinological period known as the 'Bronze Age'.
A few years later, across the French border at Avanton, near Poitiers, another hat was found. This one was a little damaged, and restored before display.

It dates from around the same age range as the Schifferstadt hat.
Read 14 tweets
Feb 16
So, here's a story that I can't quite believe - it's simply too, for want of another word, baroque. I've told it before, but the details I've read give it a simultaneously gruesome and tragic flourish.

This is glorious city of Esslingen, near Stuttgart - a magnet for tourists.
In the mid 17th century, Esslingen was a free imperial city, essentially a microstate, albeit one that was on the decline.

The Thirty Years War had devastated the countryside and famine and disease was not uncommon.

Despite this, it enjoyed a commanding presence in the area.
In 1651, a 32 year old lawyer married Ursula Margarethe Schlossberger, from one of the patrician families of Esslingen.

While Daniel Hauff came from no humble background, this marriage was advantageous for him.

Here's their home. Her arms are above the door.
Read 18 tweets
Feb 11
This afternoon, I saw an acquiantance having achieved something I've long dreamed of, but never managed to achieve.

The bubbling emotions made me think about the grief and resentment that can follow an ADD diagnosis. (🧵)
After the initial relief that most of us who have been diagnosed have experienced, there's quite often a period of tremendous grief that follows.

Considering that most diagnosed - both women & men - are so in their 30s/40s, this can be incredibly disruptive.
In my case, it put into sharp relief the signposts by which we chart the course of a 'successful' adulthood - career, a partner, children, a financial safety net.

To be in your late thirties, and become acutely aware of just how 'behind you're lagging' can feel devastating.
Read 12 tweets
Jan 27
Having played a bit of @ExpeditionsGame, I've been more interested in understanding at what my immediate surroundings were like at the time of the Roman Empire.

So, I decided to find out...
First things first - if I woke up sometime in the late first century, not only would I find myself in the middle of expansive forests, but I'd be on a frontier - the Roman province of Germania Superior, on the 'Limes', or imperial border.
The 'Limes' were a wood and earthen border stretching across what is now Germany from Nordrhein-Westfalen to Bayern.

Regular watchtowers and forts would guard the border from the possibility of raiding Germanic tribes.
Read 8 tweets
Jan 26
So I'm now living by myself - pretty much for the first time as an adult. Prior to now I've either been in cohabiting long-term relationships or married.

I gotta say, it's quite a trip - and has made me think a lot about, well, what I'm doing with my life.
For many, many years, I felt like I needed to care for others - that if I wasn't effectively tending to someone else, I was wasting my time.

This, I think, was a compensatory move to offset my (undiagnosed) ADD - I may be hard work, but at least I was trying.
Living by myself, I find that there's so much time that I have that I never noticed before. I must have been running myself really ragged!

So, almost to comfort myself, I end up doing chores, cleaning things, throwing things out - even if it ends up being exhausting.
Read 6 tweets

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