
President Barack Obama recently stated, “The Holocaust Must Make World Vigilant Against Hatred”
He gets it. He understands. To Deny The Holocaust is to hate.
President Obama continues to honor the victims of hate and human tragedy this month. He is set to visit the Buchenwald Concentration Camp in Germany.
Buchenwald was established in in July 1937. It was one of the first concentration camps on German soil. Camp prisoners worked primarily as forced labor in local armament factories. Over 50,000 Jews and political prisoners died at the camp before it was liberated by American troops in April 1945.
President Obama’s great-uncle, Charlie Payne, served in the 89th Infantry Division during World War II and took part in in the liberation of the Buchenwald sub camp at Ohrdruf in 1945.
OUR PREZ GETS IT!
POPE BENEDICT XVI GETS IT! He recently stated:
“Holocaust Denial Is Intolerable” and that any minimization of the Holocaust was unacceptable. The Pope gets it even in the face of criticism and internal dissent on the subject.
FRENCH PRIME MINISTER NICHOLAS SARKOZY GETS IT!
“It is shocking, ” said the French President, “and it is unacceptable that someone in the 21st century can deny the Shoah, the martyrdom of the Jews.”
GERMAN CHANCELLOR ANGELA MERKEL GETS IT!
“The mass murder of 6 million Jews, carried out in the name of Germany, has brought indescribable suffering to the Jewish people, Europe and the entire world.”
WORLD BUSINESS LEADERS GET IT!
In an interview done for Portfolio.com, Meg Whitman, then CEO of eBay, the worlds largest online site for the buying and selling of goods discussed the rational behind eBay’s decision to ban the sale of Nazi memorabilia.
Here is an excerpt from the extremely revealing interview discussing the decision.
Q. eBay has been criticized over the years for providing a platform for heinous commerce – whether its Nazi memorabilia or a serial killer’s shaved calluses.
A. “Murderabilia.”
Q. Thank you. What sort of soul-searching did this prompt in you?
A. ebay was originally founded with the notion that if the item was legal for sale in the country in which we were doing business, then it would be legal on eBay. And that’s pretty much how the company ran up until the first quarter of 1999. In the first quarter of 1999, there were a number of issues that caused me to say: is this something that we want? The very first categories of items we decided to ban were firearms, alcohol and tobacco. All were legal for sale over the Internet in the United States. But we made a decision that while they were perfectly legal, they were not something we wanted to be involved in. Frankly, it’s a judgment call. Our community of users pushed back on this, not because so many of them felt selling firearms was a great thing, but they were worried, well today firearms, next week maybe my category. There is now an eBay lookalike site that does nothing but sell firearms.
I said I understand that. But we are a big company. We are building a brand. We want to be admired and around for generations.
And it is the CEO who has to make those judgment calls. So over time, we’d make incremental calls – Nazi memorabilia was one. Perfectly legal for sale in the U.S. Not legal for sale in Germany or France. Ultimately we said: not a business we’re going to be in.
In the end, as Meg Whitman of Ebay stated, the decision to not allow the sale of Nazi memorabilia on eBay was ” a judgment call.” It was good judgment!
MEG GETS IT!
FACEBOOK’S OWN CHIEF PRIVACY OFFICER CHRIS KELLY SEEMED TO GET IT WHEN HE STATED:
“Holocaust Denial Is Motivated By Hate”
TENS OF THOUSANDS OF FACEBOOK MEMBERS GET IT!
Over 40k alone in the groups United Against Holocaust Denial On Facebook and Fight Holocaust Denial.
The decision of Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg to allow or not allow Holocaust Denial groups on Facebook is again a judgment call. Meg Whitman thought she was using good judgment when she banned the sale of all items “insensitive to the victims of human tragedy”. You could substitute Facebook at pretty much every spot Meg Whitman was referring to eBay and the argument would still make sense.
I get it. Do you get it?
The only ones who do not seem to get it are Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg and Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Not very distinguished company for you Mark. Maybe it’s time for a good judgment call? Get it??











June 2nd, 2009 at 10:42 pm
You could not have said it better. Short and on target. Hate is a disease one that the consumes and infects the entire person.
June 3rd, 2009 at 2:54 am
A little repetitive, but I agree whole heartedly.
June 3rd, 2009 at 12:23 pm
Insightful, well written post! I'll be following your posts!
June 3rd, 2009 at 2:25 pm
So the world's foremost curator of information online, Google – do they get it?
If I can find information about holocaust denial groups and philosophies by doing a simple search on Google, does it mean they don't get it too?
http://www.google.com/search?q=holocaust+didn...
Is there ever a point when we say, freedom of speech and information flow is more important than "getting it"?