There is no method for dealing with (extremely mild) criticism as courageous as pointing to the guy next to you and saying 'but he's worse!'
I do not appreciate being dragged into your back and forth, but I suppose some clarification is in order.
I have never denied that the Holocaust happened. I do believe that it happened, and I think that there is plenty of evidence to support that belief. I have, however, questioned many of the common notions surrounding the event including its uniqueness in the historical record as compared to the actions of other nations, the German public's knowledge of it, the German military's knowledge and complicity in it, its size and scope in relation to other German priorities, and what I see as a Holocaust industry that perpetuates those myths.
In regard to the Nazis, 'sympathizer' has taken on a meaning that belies the word's definition. I sympathize with the German public in the 1920's and 30's and I understand why Nazism held the appeal that it did. I sympathize with the members of German military, including the SS, as I believe the vast majority were well intentioned professionals motivated by the same nationalism and desire to protect their families and their nation that drove Allied soldiers to enlist. I even sympathize with a great number of political Nazis. Their willingness to embrace empire-building militarism was no different than that which built the British, French, Russian, and American empires. I can even understand the twisted utilitarianism embraced by Hitler to justify many of his excesses. None of that means that I support Nazism or its policies.
In general, yes I do see the Second World War in shades of grey and I regard the idea that it was some kind of 'good war' as largely propaganda and a 'written by the victors' historical bias. I see the rise of the Nazis not as a singular event but as the culmination of century-long power struggle between established empires and aspiring ones. And yes, I see the way the Allied nations dealt with peoples they considered subhuman, sometimes only decades before the war, and wonder why the Germans are regarded as uniquely reprehensible. I believe that a lot of people content themselves in the superficial belief that Nazi Germany was some kind of uniquely evil 'other' because a deeper exploration of the state and the people that comprised it would reveal just how similar they were those of the Allies.
I stand by every position I've taken in regard to Germany during the Second World War over the years. I understand that such opinions are not popular, and I have taken plenty of criticism for expressing them. I have never been punished for them as I always source my claims appropriately. I do acknowledge that I come to such discussions with a unique perspective, but your above hack job does not accurately represent that perspective.
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