Private Panic, thanks for the intelligent reply. I will do my best to address the points you’ve raised. However, I’m feeling a bit sleepy, so it’s possible something will get past me. If it does, let me know.
However, for “if I kill one person today then more people will be saved tomorrow” to possibly be
an absolute exoneration for killing one person today, I need perfect knowledge
I’m not sure about “perfect knowledge,” especially because there is so seldom perfect knowledge in this world. Newton’s laws of physics were once considered perfect knowledge, but have since been modified in the light of relativity, for example. Phenomena at the quantum level are not explained by Newtonian or relativistic principles. Perfect knowledge may be an unattainable goal.
Instead of “perfect knowledge,” I’d argue that it’s enough for people to make reasonable predictions, based on continuation of current trends. In 1940, German government officials predicted the occurrence of severe food shortages starting in 1941. That prediction later proved correct. At no point in the war (except possibly early on) did Germany have anything close to enough food. I don’t think that anyone is asserting that Germany killed more people than necessary to solve its food problems. On the contrary: millions of Soviet POWs conscripted for German weapons production died due to lack of food, despite Hitler’s order that they be fed. The government official tasked with feeding those POWs didn’t have food to feed them.
Inflicting per-person suffering that is no worse than might otherwise have happened is not a defence.
Normally, using food as a weapon (which the Allies did) implies widespread starvation. The blame for that suffering should be laid at the Allies’ feet, because it was their decision to use that weapon. In cases where the Nazis inflicted death in ways less painful than starvation, it should be recognized that they chose a lesser evil than the one the Allies chose. In cases where their chosen method of death was more painful than starvation they should be blamed for inflicting a greater evil than the one the Allies attempted to inflict.
the concentration camp system as a whole inflicted deliberate mental and physical anguish on millions who were not gassed.
My understanding is that the inmates were divided into two categories: the strong and the weak. The weak were gassed immediately. The strong were given small quantities of food, and large quantities of work. The combination of those two things led the strong to come to resemble human skeletons.
As cruel as that system was, it was not (at least not in most cases) a system for deliberately inflicting suffering. On the one hand, Germany was at war for its very existence, which meant that it needed as much work as possible from as many people as possible. On the other hand, its food situation was abysmal. The above-described approach to concentration camps was designed to maximize productive output while using as little of Germany’s (very scarce) food supply as possible. The thinking which led to that decision was based primarily on meeting Germany’s military and resource needs.
Such a process might be based on random selection or volunteers for the greater good.
I would argue that in a famine situation, the feeding of those who are above average in ability or character should be a higher priority than the feeding of those lacking in those two areas. Anyone who volunteers to be a famine victim might well be above-average in character. People like that shouldn’t be weeded out. Random selection would be better than asking for volunteers. But it would still not be good. Do you really want to snuff out the life of a bright and promising child, in order to feed an elderly person who only has a few years left anyway? Do you really want to starve some brilliant scientist or engineer so that a relatively unintelligent petty thief can live?
Decisions like the above shouldn’t be based on what makes us feel good. They should be based on what is good for the nation as a whole–and on that one criterion only.
If an irreproachable process of selecting those to die had been put in place then the Allies
would have been unable to avoid a share of the responsibility for those deaths.
I’m puzzled by the above view. I would argue instead that if the Allied food blockade and Stalin’s scorched earth policy were expected to kill X many millions of people, the Allies deserve the blame for the first X million deaths that occurred in Germany. Hitler deserves the blame for any deaths over and above X.
But a million deaths is not always the same as a million deaths. For instance, if nation A kills a million hardened criminals, and if nation B kills a million anti-communists (typically intelligent and idealistic people), nation B has committed a far worse crime than nation A.
When the Allies imposed their food blockade, they had every reason to believe it would kill tens of millions of relatively ordinary people. If the people the Nazis killed were higher in quality than the Allies had reason to expect, the Allies still deserve blame for the number of people killed. But the Nazis would deserve blame for the fact that the best people had been singled out.
But that’s just a hypothetical scenario. I am not aware that those whom the Nazis killed were either better or worse than those they let live.
but to most of us many of those loyal servants of the state were themselves guilty of far worse crimes than any common criminals.
Most of us have spent our lives immersed in fundamentally dishonest Allied propaganda. Opinions will tend to reflect the ideology of the propagandists, which is not necessarily the same thing as reflecting a legitimate moral code or accurate historical understanding. In particular, those propagandists would have people believe that the Nazis were somehow less moral than the communists or than Western democratic politicians. Neither assertion is even remotely true. Both the communists and the Western democracies were guilty of every major crime of which they accused the Nazis, specifically including the deliberate mass murder of millions of people. The guilt of Western and communist nations does not lessen the Nazis’ guilt–at least not in cases in which the Nazis were actually guilty. But just as a king under siege in a castle does not incur blood guilt by deciding which people to feed and which to let starve, I don’t think the Nazis can reasonably be blamed for the deaths caused by the Allied food blockade.