With the establishment of Alligator Auschwitz and the appropriation of 100 billion dollars by Congress to establish concentration camps in Trump’s Big Beautiful Bill, the United States is heading to a future that most of us have never imagined just a year ago. It is dystopian nightmare in which most Americans not just suffer, but because they did not resist, will end up being willing participants in the largest crimes against humanity since Hitler’s Holocaust. Thus, it is important to remember what our end will be.
In his book They Thought They Were Free, American professor, Milton Mayer discussed a German university colleague’s thoughts about how supposedly decent and moral people could follow a dictator who diametrically opposed the beliefs that once defined them. Mayer noted the words of his German colleague:
“How is this to be avoided, among ordinary men, even highly educated ordinary men? Frankly, I do not know. I do not see, even now. Many, many times since it all happened I have pondered that pair of great maxims, Principiis obsta and Finem respice—‘Resist the beginnings’ and ‘Consider the end.’ But one must foresee the end in order to resist, or even see, the beginnings. One must foresee the end clearly and certainly and how is this to be done, by ordinary men or even by extraordinary men? Things might have. And everyone counts on that might.”
While most non-Nazi Germans during the Nazi era failed to resist, often because they were unaware of the real consequences. Nothing they could imagined prepared them for Hitler’s Regime. Nor did they expect when those things happened that few people would protest. Mayer’s friend understood that he should have known better but didn’t recognize the warning signs of the gradual nature of how life was changing with each new law or dictate from the Führer. Americans will not have that excuse. Generations of Americans have seen the results of genocide in too many places since the Nazis atrocities and genocide. They have been broadcast across the airwaves ever since, the only excuse not to know is to be willingly ignorant.
So instead of writing much, I am posting a video compiled by American and British personnel as they liberated Nazi Concentration Camps in Germany. The images even though shot in black and white are still nearly 75 years after it was shown in the Nuremberg Palace of Justice on 29 November 1945, just a week into the trial the Allied Prosecutors led by Associate U.S. Supreme Court Justice, Robert H. Jackson introduced it into evidence.
The UPI report of the day’s testimony and the film described the scene:
NUREMBERG, Nov. 29, 1945 (UP) – A tense audience at the war crimes trial watched for 52 horror-packed minutes today a 6,000-foot American Army film baring conditions at Nazi concentration camps. The prosecution charged that the camps were an instrument of policy of German leaders, including the 20 men on trial in the courtroom, in their drive for power.
In an almost deathlike silence the defendants, silhouetted in the dark courtroom by fluorescent lamps so that their guards could watch them, stared fascinated, bowed their heads low or mopped their faces as the show proceeded.
One, Hjalmar Schacht, kept his back turned throughout. Another, Polish Overlord Hans Frank, one of the most infamous mass murderers in world history, got sick.
American Sidney S. Alderman had closed the case on the German seizure of Austria, denouncing Reichsmarshal Hermann Goering, Austrian traitor Arthur Seyss-Inquart, Baron Franz von Papen and former Foreign Minister Baron Constantin von Neurath as the arch-plotters – “sly bullies wearing sanctimonious masks to cover their duplicity.”
High spots included a telephone talk in which Goering dictated to Seyss-Inquart a request which Seyss-Inquart was to make that German troops be sent into Austria; a telephone talk in which Adolf Hitler said he would “never, never forget” Benito Mussolini for co-operating and a 41-minute call by Goering to former Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop, then Ambassador in London, describing how “the birds are twittering here” in Berchtesgaden the day after the German invasion.
Court recessed at 3:15 so the movie screen could be made ready. At 3:35 the lights suddenly went out. At the same instant lights set around the prisoners’ dock rail flashed on to light the defendants. Reinforcements of American M.P.’s filed silently into the room to join the white-helmeted guards around the dock.
American Prosecutor Thomas Dodd rose.
“We will now show what concentration camps mean,” he said. “… the camps were not an end in themselves but an integral part of the Nazi system of government. We intend to prove that each defendant knew of the camps and that the camps were instruments by which the defendants retained power. They used the camps to prepare aggressive war.”
At 3:50 the film started grinding. The 6,000 feet shown were selected from 80,000 feet.
First came Leipzig – shots of bodies, burned to a crisp, of men and women who had tried to flee barracks the Nazis set afire and were mowed down by machine-gun fire. Goering leaned forward in his seat, staring. Rudolf Hess snapped upright, betraying intelligent interest for the first time since the trial started, and whispered to Goering on his right and Ribbentrop on his left.
The camera eye moved slowly over the heaps of burned bodies. War correspondents had seen them before they were piled up – fingers dug into the earth in agony.
Col. Gen. Alfred Jodi put on dark glasses. Field Marshal Wilhelm Keitel bent stiffly forward.
The film flashed to Hamadar, which the Germans called the shudder house.
Papen lowered his head and covered his face with a handkerchief.
The film went on to Northausen, which the American 3rd Armored and 104th Infantry divisions liberated. It showed 2,500 bodies stacked beside a bombed building.
Schacht, his owl-like glasses reflecting the light in the prisoners’ dock, remained rigidly facing the audience, turned away from the screen.
German civilians, carrying bodies to mass graves under the guns of American troops, passed on the screen.
Grand-Adm. Karl Doenitz leaned heavily over the side of the dock as if he had taken all he could. Keitel took off his glasses, mopped his sweating face and lowered his head.
Next came Buchenwald, one of the worst of all. The film showed German civilians marching past a display of lamp shades, picture frames, plaques and bookmarks made of the skin of murdered men. The wife of the S.S. camp commandant had selected the victims.
Hess still watched, intensified. Julius Streicher stared with a deadpan face. Ribbentrop still had his eyes to the floor.
Then came Mauthausen, notorious Dachau, one of the earliest, greatest and most dreadful, and Belsen, where bodies were piled so high British bulldozers had to push them int o mass graves.
The film ended and the lights went on. For long moments the entire audience sat as if transfixed. Goering did not move his eyes from the screen until court adjourned one minute later. Schacht stood up and his lawyer said that he had nothing to do with the camps – in fact, would tell the court that he spent seven months at Dachau himself.
The film is real, and there was much more like it; in fact the Soviets would show a film from the death camps they liberated just two months later. But for now I will leave you with the film that shocked the world, and forever turned the tide against the Nazi War Criminals
Please don’t believe that such events could happen in Trump’s America. Please watch all of the film, even if it sickens you as it should. Likewise, don’t believe anything Trump says regarding race, ethnicity, religion, political opponents, the free press, and his deliberate falsification or anything that might embarrass him, because in each case he is telling his alternate version of the truth which acquits him and blames his victims. Unlike his first term, his new Regime is stocked with true believers and sycophants. People like Stephen Miller, Tom Homan, Pam Bondi, and Kristi Noem believe in what they are doing, while numerous others have sold their souls to obey their Führer.
How many people do you know that when push comes to shove won’t obey or remain silent in the face of evil?
Until tomorrow, be safe and watch your six, but never stop resisting.
Very powerful. I shared on social media and Substack. You've moved from strong resistance to dissent! Keep it up. The US needs you. Democracies need you.
I am not going to share this until I am able to complete watching the horrifying video. I made it through 10 minutes, and had to stop. Once again, you are doing God's work, showing the frightening parallels to what is happening in the United States in 2025 to what happened in Germany 80+ years ago.