Joerg Koch on Wed, 31 Mar 1999 23:17:42 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> Re: the personal is political/Trivialising Holocaust |
At 14:53 Uhr +0000 31.03.1999, Richard Barbrook wrote: >A Kosovan representative said yesterday that: "To oppose the bombing is to >support fascism in Europe, to support the new Holocaust." Do you dare to >disagree with her analysis? Dear Richard, A simple answer: OF COURSE. it's interesting to observe how a lot of so-called left-winged people morph into Nato-cheerleading boosters. Whether the likes of former street fighters like our German foreign minister Joschka Fischer or French intellectuals or British academics like you, they all believe in the power of bombs. History teaches us that bombing a population has NO effects on the state policy. The allieds did massive bombings in Germany in the 2nd WW, hoping to avoid using ground troops. More than 500.000 people died. Did the Germans rise up? No. America has dropped more bombs on Iraq in recent years than throughout the Gulf War. Did the Iraqi people rise up? No. If you bomb a country ruled by a dictator, the attacked people won't rise up to topple the dictator. They do not associate the bombs with Milosevic but simply with those who drop them. What the Nato has achieved so far with their air attacks is a political homogenization of the Serbian political landscape (copy'n'paste from my posting to the rewired list). Opposing the Nato bombs is not about supporting Serbia or Milosevic, it's about thinking a little bit more & optioning for other possibilities. But what really PISSES me off, Richard, is that a well-educated mind like you tosses around the word Holocaust as if this is a tag attachable to every bad incident in human history. I am NOT defending NOR downplaying the Serbian assaults in Kosovo, but I really can't see how the war in Kosovo even slightly resembles the dimensions of the Holocaust. If there's a holocaust in Kosovo, then there's a holocaust in Turkey, then in Burma,in Colombia, etc. But when the Holocaust is no longer an unique atrocity in human history. It's just another war-related story. And that's exactly what neo-nazis and revisionists worldwide work for. As horrible as the war in Kosovo is & as horrible this must sound to fleeing Albanians in Kosovo or in the refugee camps, you do trivialize the Holocaust, a mass-industrialized genocide, by comparing it to a bloody civil war. greetings from berlin, joerg koch __________________________________________________ Joerg Koch | gps 52°31'N - 13°24'E I koch@well.com --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@desk.nl and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@desk.nl