LizzieMaine
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I think the most interesting point made by the researcher in the linked interview is that so many of the relevant records that would clear up some of the questions raised seem to have been conveniently destroyed, so in many cases the truth can never be known. But yes, I do agree Finland was in a unique position among the nations caught up in the war. One can make a case that they don't bear the same degree of collaborationist guilt as does Vichy France -- but one can also make a case that their hands are not as squeaky clean as they'd prefer to believe.
I think it's also important to remember that anti-Semitism was not an exclusively German thing -- most of Europe in the 1930s was marinating in it, and it was likewise epidemic in the US, as the slightest review of Fr. Coughlin's literature and broadcasts will document. There were a great many people in the US between 1939 and 1941 who wanted to push the US into the Axis camp, and the Lindbergh/America First crowd did their best to accomplish that. During this period you could walk down streets in Irish and German ethnic neighborhoods in the Northeast and see the swastika flag openly flown.
I think it's also important to remember that anti-Semitism was not an exclusively German thing -- most of Europe in the 1930s was marinating in it, and it was likewise epidemic in the US, as the slightest review of Fr. Coughlin's literature and broadcasts will document. There were a great many people in the US between 1939 and 1941 who wanted to push the US into the Axis camp, and the Lindbergh/America First crowd did their best to accomplish that. During this period you could walk down streets in Irish and German ethnic neighborhoods in the Northeast and see the swastika flag openly flown.