Comment on project paperclip be like
Jakeroxs@sh.itjust.works 23 hours ago
I did a report on this in 5th grade, people thought I was making it up.
Comment on project paperclip be like
Jakeroxs@sh.itjust.works 23 hours ago
I did a report on this in 5th grade, people thought I was making it up.
Quill7513@slrpnk.net 22 hours ago
i had someone here on lemmy try to say the scientists recruited to the US via operation paperclip weren’t involved in crimes against humanity. a lot of people have missed in the shuffle of the past 80 years exactly what happened during the holocaust.
TheRealKuni@piefed.social 22 hours ago
The US is all about realpolitik, and begins to make a lot more sense when you look at everything through a Kissinger-shaped lens (rest in piss, you evil bastard). We pretend to be ideological so our citizenry can feel good about ourselves, but the way the nation operates is purely pragmatic. Look no further than Israel-Palestine and how buddy-buddy we are with Saudi Arabia for modern examples. Even our support of Ukraine, while overlapping with an ethical imperative, is driven primarily by the interests of NATO and the relatively inexpensive degradation of Russia’s military and political standing we can participate in. We only give a shit about “human rights” when it benefits us.
Operation Paperclip was pragmatism. It creates a sense of cognitive dissonance when we try to hold in our minds that we brought Nazi scientists over and the idea that we’re “the good guys” and fought for “justice,” so our brains try to reduce that cognitive dissonance by saying those scientists weren’t behind any of the evils of the Nazis. They were, obviously. That didn’t matter to our government, but they kept the operation classified for a reason.
TranscendentalEmpire@lemmy.today 20 hours ago
Not to excuse the US’s history of foreign diplomacy, but I think it would be naive to believe that there exists any major power who doesn’t treat geopolitics with the same level of pragmatism.
The Soviets hated the Nazi even more than the US did and yet they still had their own version of paperclip. Operation Osoaviakhim brought almost double the number of Nazi scientists into the Soviet Union.
azi@mander.xyz 17 hours ago
Osoviakhim was somewhat more ideologically consistent than Paperclip. The scientists weren’t invited to the USSR with promises of cushy jobs and immunity from prosecution: they were forced from their homes, loaded onto freight trains, and made to work. It was part of the wider trend of the Allies using the forced labour of Germans as a means of war reparations.
yucandu@lemmy.world 21 hours ago
The US does not currently support Ukraine or NATO, and is allied with Russia.
And when it comes to Nazi rocket scientists falling into the hands of post-WW2 America, or the USSR, I’m quite glad it was the former.
Jakeroxs@sh.itjust.works 17 hours ago
I wouldn’t say we’re allied with Russia lmfao, that’s liberal bullshit, Trump is only looking after himself and whoever gives him the most in return. Very transactional, which means we are essentially allies with whoever gives us (him) the best offer. Whether that be literal gifts or things for his “legacy”.
TheRealKuni@piefed.social 18 hours ago
I suppose with regard to Ukraine I should have said “our support was.”
jorge@lemmygrad.ml 21 hours ago
You think the USA is morally superior to the former USSR?
kameecoding@lemmy.world 17 hours ago
I think the US media has washed their image so clean with the WW2 movies that most people have no idea about stuff like the nazi rally happened in the US and the support for eugenics in the Us, and the concentration camps in the Us.
DeathsEmbrace@lemmy.world 1 hour ago
Or the Japanese concentration camps. USA bigot since day one. USA more like a white supremacists wet dream.
Quill7513@slrpnk.net 17 hours ago
lord… i live near two of the american concentration camps called out by name in the planning docs for auschwitz…
AnarchoBolshevik@lemmygrad.ml 10 hours ago
Where did you learn this?