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It Can’t Happen here…Or Can It?
Focus On The Family ^ | August 1998 | Tom Neven

Posted on 11/24/2002 4:51:39 AM PST by Stand Watch Listen

"A witness to Hitler and an official observer at the Nuremberg war crimes trials warns against what happens when a nation’s moral foundations are shattered But his years studying in Berlin in the shadow of Hitler have perhaps had the greatest effect in shaping him. Today, he has many things to say as our culture continues to wallow in abortion on demand and careens headlong toward physician-assisted suicide, euthanasia and even eugenics, the belief that we can "improve" the human race through science.

The living room and study of his Colorado Springs home groan beneath the weight of books and testify to a keen intelligence and wide-ranging curiosity. Plutarch’s Lives of the Caesars, Winston Churchhill’s five-part history of World War II, an entire shelf of Tolstoy and the complete works of Martin Luther in both English and German mingle with The Basic Writings of Thomas Jefferson and biographies of Stonewall Jackson and Sir Thomas More.

The Rev. Charles Carroll, who at 82 has the intellectual vigor of a man 50 years his junior, has just about seen it all in his lifetime. But his years studying in Berlin in the shadow of Hitler have perhaps had the greatest effect in shaping him. Today, he has many things to say as our culture continues to wallow in abortion on demand and careens headlong toward physician-assisted suicide, euthanasia and even eugenics, the belief that we can "improve" the human race through science.

The Warning Signs
Carroll lived in Berlin during 1937 and 1938, renting a room from a Jewish family recommended to him by the American embassy. He describes a surreal scene as the husband showed him around the apartment.

"He took me over to the medicine cabinet, showed me the medications and said, ‘You can use any of these if needed, but never touch this,’ " Carroll says. "It was cyanide. When we went back in the hall, I looked at the entrance doors. They were typical of the period, framed with glass, and behind each pane was a plate of steel. He said, '‘t will give mother Lido [the daughter] and me enough time.’

"I thought him paranoid at the time," Carroll continues, "but he was right, and I was dreaming." (Because the wife was not Jewish, the family managed to survive the Holocaust.)

By that point Nazi Germany was already well down the path to the Holocaust. It was a journey that began with small steps

First came The Law for the Prevention of Congenitally Ill Progeny on July 14, 1933. This eugenics program had two aspects: The positive side that encourages the increase of "racially healthy" Aryans, the Nazis’ supposed master race of non-Jewish Caucasians, and the negative side that justified vernichtung lebensunwerten lebens, literally "destruction of life unworthy to be lived."

Although abortion was technically illegal in Germany at the time, a case arose where a woman in the late stages of pregnancy was brought to be forcibly sterilized because she was among the "undesirables," the result of which would kill the unborn child. As a result of this "problem," the law was amended in 1934 to say that eugenic considerations carried equal weight to medical considerations when it comes to abortion.

It Can’t Happen Here…
Lest we become complacent, Carroll warns that what happened to Nazi Germany was not unique to that society.

"Although you cannot identify a situation in the United States exactly like that of Nazi Germany," Carroll says, "you can point to some parallels."

He stresses the he does not believe we are headed inexorably toward Nazism, but he does believe that the seeds for its horrible crimes are present in all societies. Sweden sterilized about 60,000 people against their will between 1935 and 1976, and Norway, Denmark and Finland at one time had similar laws allowing compulsory sterilization under certain circumstances. Germany in the 1930s just happened to provide fertile soil for those seeds to sprout.

Carroll cites, for example, the International Congress for Questions of Population in August 1935, hosted in Berlin by the German government. Participants came from around the world, including several from the United States led by Harry Laughlin of the Eugenics Research Association. Laughlin was of the opinion that the entire world was in debt to Hitler for his views on eugenics.

At the conference Laughlin cited numerous U.S. laws supporting eugenics in one form or another. He claimed that as of Jan 1, 1935, more than 21,000 "eugenics sterilizations" had occurred in various states for reasons such as being "feeble-minded" (24 States), "mentally defective" (Delaware), "habitual criminals, moral degenerate persons" (Iowa), "inherited tendency to crime" (Connecticut) and "imbecility" (West Virginia). At least 13 States allowed involuntary sterilization of epileptics.

Indeed, in 1927 the Supreme Court had ruled in Buck v. Bell that involuntary sterilization was not unconstitutional.

"They were sterilizing people in Virginia who they felt were incompetent-a large number of blacks, some poor whites," Carroll says, and the Nazis often cited this legal case as they went forward with their eugenics agenda.

The German conference was also full of Darwinian "survival of the fittest" thinking and references to evolution. Indeed, Carroll remembers a post-war conversation he had with a Jewish physician, Leo Alexander, during which Alexander explained the ease with which some doctors could carry out abortion, forced sterilization and even murder.

"There is a difference," Alexander said, "between those who look upon their fellow human beings as common creatures of a common creator and those who look upon them as a conglomerate of biologicals and chemicals."

Forced Sterilization and abortion led inexorably to active euthanasia. As early as 1935, Hitler considered enacting some form of euthanasia, but his fear of what the church would say, as well as protests by Adolf Cardinal Bertram, chairman of the German Catholic conference, forced Hitler to put this program on hold, at least until the eve of World War II. As Germany moved against Poland in September 1939, Hitler enacted the euthanasia program, believing the distraction of war would give him cover.

The program, under the supervision of SS doctor Lt. Gen. Karl Brandt, led first to the killing of deformed or retarded children, carried out on an individual basis, and then the mass killing of adult "undesirables," which provided the first "practice" for the slaughter of the Holocaust. One lesson learned: Killing in carbon monoxide-filled buses (only of the means the Nazis used at the time) was inefficient, which led to the development of the quicker-killing Zyclon B of the gas chambers.

It is important to note that in no case was this killing done to sick or dying people or at the request of a patient. And with the exception of the first case, this killing was done without the knowledge of the families.

"If you can get a group of physicians to sterilize and abort and, as we say, euthanize, it isn’t very difficult to get them to do anything," Carroll warns. "There’s no doubt in my mind that sterilization, abortion and euthanasia were the first steps toward the Holocaust."

A Loss of Natural Law
Even though most people are not trained in the law, Carroll believes Christians today must understand basic issues of law if they are to stand against the growing culture of death.

In particular he refers to society’s loss of natural law, "one of the bulwarks of what we once called Western civilization," he says. Natural law is the belief that, just as the physical world functions under a series of laws that we ignore at our peril, so too does the moral world.

Thje opposite of natural law is positive law: The law is what the judge, legislature—or the Fuehrer—says it is. Carroll cites, for example, Hitler’s speech of July 13, 1934, during which he stated that he was the law in Germany.

While not as audacious as Hitler’s diktat, the modern judiciary’s tendency to rule by apparent fiat is a close approximation of the state overruling natural law-- Roe v. Wade, the 1973 Supreme court decision that legalized abortion, being the chief illustration.

Backbone of Resistance
Carroll believes that many Christians were fearless in their opposition to Hitler. And this, he stresses, required great moral and physical courage. "People minimize that today," he says.

Carroll cites a letter from Helmut von Moltke, great-grand nephew of the famous 19th-century field marshal of the same name, to his wife just before he was executed by the Nazis.

"I was not being tried because of an attempt on Hitler’s life, which I did not make, nor because I was a great land owner, nor because I was of the nobility, but because I was first and foremost a Christian," von Moltke wrote.

"I feel it can unequivocally stated that the church was the backbone of what resistance there was," Carroll says. Catholic bishop Clemens von Galen of Munster stood in his pulpit Aug 3, 1941, and denounced the euthanasia program at considerable risk to himself." After his speech, countless Catholic bishops and evangelical leaders joined forces and protested.

"Not that it stopped all the programs," Carroll admits, but it had some success. "The euthanasia program, by admission of Lt. Gen. Brandt, came to a slow end during the war, and he gave the churches credit for it."

"What Would I Do?"
What if you had been alive then? "that’s a question all of us have to ask," Carroll says.

"The thing that bothers me the most in the United States today is that the moral foundations of the republic are shattered," he says. "Our growing apathy disturbs me. One of the interesting things about the Nazi revolution is that Germany was in a moral vacuum [when Hitler came to power], and moral vacuums, like natural vacuums, seek to be filled."

A courageous church, unafraid to speak out, is the only hope to fill that void, he believes, citing the following statement from Albert Einstein:

"Being a lover of freedom, when the [Nazi] revolution came, I looked to the universities to defend [freedom], knowing that they had always boasted of their devotion to the cause of truth; but no the universities were immediately silenced. Then I looked to the great editors of the newspapers, whose flaming editorials in days gone by had proclaimed their love of freedom; but they, like the universities, were silenced.

"Only the church stood squarely across the path of Hitler’s campaign for suppressing the truth."



TOPICS: Culture/Society; Government; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: abortion; charlescarroll; cultureofdeath; eugenics; euthanasia; fotf; holocaust; sterilization; suicide
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To: joesnuffy

Why doesn't the Party of Death just adopt the right-bending symbol of luck and health for its official emblem. Sieg Heil!!


21 posted on 03/22/2005 11:28:02 AM PST by RightWhale (Please correct if cosmic balance requires.)
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To: Stand Watch Listen
I've been involved with pro-life folks for almost 15 years.

Quite often....too often....we would voice the question...

They can't do that, can they?....referring to activist judges and Clinton appointees with a murderous agenda.

Finally we ran out of being surprised.....and the question wasn't necessary.

We knew the answer.

22 posted on 03/22/2005 11:31:00 AM PST by Guenevere (Sola Gratia)
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To: Guenevere

bttt


23 posted on 03/22/2005 11:39:19 AM PST by expatguy (http://laotze.blogspot.com/)
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To: SweetPilotofCanuckistan

If ever there was a time for the CHURCH to stand up, it's NOW!! I'm not just referring to "talking" either. The more "talking" that goes on, the more confusing the entire issue becomes.


24 posted on 03/22/2005 12:44:03 PM PST by Canadian Outrage (All us Western Canuks belong South !)
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To: Canadian Outrage

Exactly. I've already stated here that I'd fly down to FL to take part in a storming of the hospice to remove her from there. But nothing's been organized.

Good to see another Canadian that thinks straight! Where are ya from?


25 posted on 03/22/2005 12:49:03 PM PST by SweetPilotofCanuckistan
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To: Smartass

Ping to article.


26 posted on 03/22/2005 12:53:48 PM PST by Ladysmith (Wisconsin Hunter Shootings: If you want on/off the WI Hunters ping list, please let me know.)
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To: Ladysmith
THANK YOU...
Good article. Like looking in a horrible shattered mirror.>
27 posted on 03/22/2005 3:20:09 PM PST by Smartass (BUSH & CHENEY to 2008 Si vis pacem, para bellum - Por el dedo de Dios se escribió)
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To: SweetPilotofCanuckistan

Kelowna, B.C. friend.


28 posted on 03/22/2005 6:11:06 PM PST by Canadian Outrage (All us Western Canuks belong South !)
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To: Stand Watch Listen

bttt


29 posted on 03/22/2005 6:14:25 PM PST by firewalk
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To: Canadian Outrage

Nice. White Rock, BC here! So, are you voting NDP or Liberal in May - or just obstaining because they're all crooks?


30 posted on 03/22/2005 6:31:58 PM PST by SweetPilotofCanuckistan
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To: SweetPilotofCanuckistan

NEVER NDP and I can't even hold my nose and vote Liberal. The only thing I will say about the B.C. Liberal Party is that it is actually a coalition party. There are quite a few Social Creditors there and I believe some former Conservatives who, in B.C. lost their voice when the Party was destroyed. My husband is a Business/Corporate type Lawyer in Kelowna and I am now his paralegal. Our business depends almost wholly on the economy. Truthfully, we almost lost it in the NDP years. A lot of our Corporate clients moved to Alberta. All our conveyancing business was way down, we sort of survived on Wills, Estates, selling of businesses, Powers of Attorney etc. It was very tough. Our business has been booming since the NDP left. They destroyed so much of the business atmosphere because they are simply in the Unions pockets. They are taxers and spenders. DOLTS. Gordon Campbell isn't my favorite guy but I think the more meetings he has with Ralph Klein the more he'll learn how to turn a Province around. All in all tho, I didn't vote last time because I knew they were getting in anyway because the NDP was so hated by then. So at least I didn't ruin my record, I could NEVER vote for a Liberal. I wished they had decided to call themselves something else since the Party is most certainly not all Liberals. B.C. as we Western Canadians know has pretty much had very volatile politics. Without a doubt, David's and my best years were under the Social Creditors. He's been practicing law for 34 years so has seen a lot of changes. Most Lawyers hate practicing now. It's a rough grind. btw. White Rock is beautiful!! I love it. Incidentally, I got my nursing degree from VGH!! Some world huh? CO


31 posted on 03/22/2005 9:26:20 PM PST by Canadian Outrage (All us Western Canuks belong South !)
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To: SweetPilotofCanuckistan
Hitler did all his dirty deeds through the courts too.

Uh, no he didn't. Hitler was given near dictatorial powers (known as the Enabeling Act) by the Reichstag following the fire that destroyed the building of the same name. (Most believe the Nazis were behind the fire, not the communists as Hitler claimed.) Hitler had little use for the courts except to have them put on show trials whenever it politically suited him.

32 posted on 03/22/2005 9:31:07 PM PST by COEXERJ145
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To: COEXERJ145

Hitler used the courts. Read from the links below.

http://www.history-of-the-holocaust.org/LIBARC/ARCHIVE/Chapters/Stabiliz/Racial/LawForPr.html

http://www.holocaust-trc.org/hndcp.htm


33 posted on 03/22/2005 9:38:12 PM PST by SweetPilotofCanuckistan
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To: SweetPilotofCanuckistan

I think we're looking at two different "uses" of the courts. I was talking how Hitler didn't use the courts to obtain power or create policy. You were talking about how he used them to carry out the policy he and his cronies had already put into place. So we were both right but on different parts of the same issue.


34 posted on 03/22/2005 9:43:48 PM PST by COEXERJ145
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