Amen to that.
Two generations of my family damn near lost their lives in 1918 and 1945 fighting for those nit wits.
I remember my father telling me how angry and bitter my grandfather was when France fell in 1940.
My grandfather spilled his guts all over the Meuse-Argonne and when the Frenchies gave up my dad said my grandfather was pissed off.
My great-uncle was killed in WWI, two months before the Armistice in France while serving in the Canadian Expeditionary Forces. He's buried in a British Military Cemetery in Wimille, France.
After the Treaty of Versailles, I personally feel that Europe dropped the ball and failed to make Germany comply with the Treaty. All Germany did was whine about how harsh the Treaty was, but they signed that Treaty. The bottom line is, don't start wars unless you make damn sure you win them, and don't cry about your punishment after you lose the war you started.
Germany's major arms manufacturer since the early 1800's has been Krupp Industries. Even after being banned by the Treaty of Versailles, they never stopped producing war machinery...but no one in Europe held their feet to the fire. I think they were more interested in the fines that Germany was paying than if Germany was following the post WWI rules. After WWII, at Nuremberg, the head of Krupp at that time, Alfried Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach testified that Krupp had never stopped producing weaponry after WWI, despite being banned from doing so. His father Gustav had been spared from being charged at Nuremberg because he had managed to become senile sometime in 1943. Alfried Krupp was charged with profiting from the war, and using slave labor. He was convicted and sentenced to serve 12 years in prison. He never accepted any guilt. He was also ordered to forfeit a large majority of his holdings in the company. As usual, Nazis like Krupp was released after only 3 years, and the forfeiture of his property was reversed. He died in 1967.