• deadlyduplicate@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      The Waffen-SS were war criminals but the 1st Galacian were cleared of any charges. Which is why this guy was allowed to live in Canada in the first place.

      • davel [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        That’s neither here nor there. The Canadian government’s complicity only implicates Canada and clears no one.

        • deadlyduplicate@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          So judgements provided by the judicial process is immaterial and instead we should care about the ravings of politicians and pundits 80 years after the fact?

          • davel [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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            1 year ago

            Just as there are such things as political prisoners, there are such things as political pardons. Judicial my ass; it was political.

            And just as before, whatever the politicians & pundits are raving is neither here nor there. The guy voluntarily joined the Waffen-SS Galicia Division.

            • deadlyduplicate@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              Yeah he volunteered to to be solider, so what? Being a solider is not the same thing as being a war criminal and the burden of proof still applies. War is messy and it is entirely possible that this division committed atrocities that haven’t been proven but the mere possibility is not sufficient reason to label him a war criminal. You are de-meaning the term by doing so.

              Either you have specific evidence to support your charge or realize you are participating in sensationalism.

              • davel [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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                1 year ago

                He didn’t volunteer to join the regular army and be a regular soldier, he volunteered to be a Waffen-SS paramilitary Nazi soldier, which is quite another thing.

    • ToxicWaste@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      You are painting an overly simplified picture. Look up Günter Grass if you don’t believe me.

      TLDR: He non forcefully signed up for the SS, although disagreeing with the Nazis. Later he became a nobel prize winning author and member of the famous Group 47. In his publications he tries to get people to think for themselves - not exactly nazi doctrine.

      • davel [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        Nazi apologia. It doesn’t matter how many books he wrote or how good they were.

        Here’s how I read it: His Nazi past wasn’t discovered until after receiving literary awards, which was embarrassing to the literati, so they tried to whitewash him.

        • ToxicWaste@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          Go and actually read about him! He was never proud of being an SS member, but never made a secret about it (hard to do as a POW of the Americans).

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        1 year ago

        That smells like heey out of the 750.000 killing psychopaths, there were that one not absolutely bad person so let’s not judge them too hastily.

        SS scum should rot in a damp prison cell for 1.000 years and then another 1.000.

        • Kühe sind toll@feddit.de
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          1 year ago

          Rotting away in a cell isnt harsh enough. Google what the us Soldiers found in Dachau after freeing the Camp. That shit is disgusting.

        • ToxicWaste@lemm.ee
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          If people only would read history books and actually think about what they read… Instead it seems, most people around here just take their education from inglorious bastards.

      • Comment105@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        No.

        We should judge the ones who are left with extreme prejudice and they should desperately be explaining themselves and proving that they actually sabotaged the SS and Nazi empire from within, if they are to regain any humanity.

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          1 year ago

          We shouldn’t judge anyone with prejudice; that’s in the word. We must treat all people as humans; not doing that is a Nazi idea. We should treat signing up with the Nazis as evidence, and act accordingly to prevent Nazis from running around doing and saying Nazi things.

    • PeriodicallyPedantic@lemmy.ca
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      Someone in the govt got a old Ukranian dude to speak to the parlement, and they all applauded him for fighting Russia in WW2, forgetting that the people who faught Russia in WW2 were the Nazis.

      They had accidentally invited a literal Nazi to speak, and applauded him for it.

      • spankinspinach@sh.itjust.works
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        Canadian here. Minor correction: he didn’t speak, but he was invited as a Ukrainian “hero” by the speaker of the house (a member of the sitting elected party). He was applauded - twice - for his “service”. Including by Ukrainian president zelensky.

        The only ‘defense’ I can offer is that our prime minister had no input on the matter, and Hunka’s Nazi service came out after the fact. Canada does not support fascism or Nazism…

        But it’s a bad look, no matter how you cut it…

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            I agree that silence is complicity, but that only applies if you know there’s something worth being silent about, no?

            In this case, the PM had no input because the speaker doesn’t have to ask permission to invite people from his constituency. So it falls to the speaker to validate his invitees. As such, PM has no input, but also no more fault than anyone else told to clap for the “Ukrainian hero” in this scenario… Is my understanding

            • tryptaminev 🇵🇸 🇺🇦 🇪🇺@feddit.de
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              1 year ago

              so is the Canadian House and PM office that incompetent that noone knows how WWII went?

              It is a disgrace for the House and the PM ehose office did not care to inform themselves, when clearly doing something with a foreign policy context.

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                1 year ago

                That’s not how our parliament works. The amount of people calling for an end to the speaker’s independence is concerning.

                The speaker’s job is to uphold decorum of parliament. This one spectacularly failed to do that, and resigned as he should. That doesn’t mean we should make it a partisan position.

                • tryptaminev 🇵🇸 🇺🇦 🇪🇺@feddit.de
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                  I never talked about parisan positions or whatever. I expect both the house and the presidents office to have staff looking into some more details about things and raising the issue with the respective position, if it could be in violation of values of the respective institution or the country in general.

                  That does not involve any change of authority and i struggle to imagine that there weren’t staff people raising these issues beforehand. So i think it to be more plausible that their voice was ignored by the speaker and president, or the information was deliberately not passed on to them.

                  Either reason, lack of background check, ignorance by the political leaders or holes in the communications chain, speak of general problems in the organization that need to be adressed. These issues are specific to organizations and it doesnt matter whether it is a political party, a governmental institution, private business or NGO.

          • Double_A@discuss.tchncs.de
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            1 year ago

            “Sir we invited an Ukranian war hero, is that ok?”

            What was he supposed to do, order a quick background check on that old dude before applauding?

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              1 year ago

              I can’t tell if this is tongue in cheek, but the opposition is staying that this is exactly what should have happened before allowing the Nazi entry.

              My read on this situation is that it all seems obvious after the fact, but that’s cuz now we know. I believe the vetting process is being reviewed because of this event. Definitely a gaffe on the part of the speaker, if this info is truly so readily accessible

            • FrostyCaveman@lemm.ee
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              1 year ago

              Yes probably they should’ve thought of that beforehand. It’s literally politicians’ jobs… lazy twats

          • Funderpants @lemmy.ca
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            No, that’s not it, in Canadian Parliament it is the speaker of the house who has ths sole responsibility for both inviting guests to the gallery and for recognizing them in the official remarks. Other members of the house and government weren’t even given notice the guy would be there. The speakers office arranges guest vetting, but it is only a security vetting not a political one. That is the PPS and RCMP decide if the 98 year old, legal Canadian immigrant is likely to put the house and guesses physical danger, they don’t consider at all if the guest will cause a political headache.

            So the fallout is that the speaker (who in fact was solely responsible for what happened) has resigned, and the PM has offerd an official apology on behalf of all Canadians. There could be more political fallout domestically, as the opposition parties are misleading Canadians and stoking ignorance of our procedures to paint the government as responsible , which I emphasize again, they were not.

              • Funderpants @lemmy.ca
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                I can’t explain why governments around the world, including Canada, made a decision 60-80 years ago to allow former Nazi soldiers to relocate. I’m not an expert in that area, if you are asking a serious question may I reccomend you try books instead of random internet strangers.

            • Comment105@lemm.ee
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              No, the Russians were the good guys in WWII, everyone who fought them were bad and Nazis or Nazi-adjacent. This is basic Hexbear 101.

              The Russians were just spreading worker solidarity.

              • OutlierBlue@lemmy.ca
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                No, the Russians were the good guys in WWII,

                The Russians were definitely not the good guys in WW2. They happened to end up fighting the same guys the Allies were, but that’s it.

              • Kühe sind toll@feddit.de
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                The Russians weren’t exactly the food guys. They helped with the invasion of Poland and split it with the Nazis. After Hitler marched into Russia they turned into “the good guys” but weren’t from the beginning.

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                  They didn’t turn into any kind of “good guy”. They took all of eastern Europe from the Nazis and kept it for themselves, ruling it just as brutally until the dissolution of the USSR. They were entirely out for themselves and didn’t do anything for justice or the good of the conquered nations.

        • PolandIsAStateOfMind@lemmy.ml
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          The only ‘defense’ I can offer is that our prime minister had no input on the matter, and Hunka’s Nazi service came out after the fact.

          Hunka granddaughter posted that he met Zelensky and Trudeau before.

      • RaivoKulli@sopuli.xyz
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        the people who faught Russia in WW2 were the Nazis.

        Not all of them though. Division of Poland and Winter War come to mind.

        • OurToothbrush@lemmy.ml
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          They said he was ukrainian who fought the Russians in ww2, that meant he fought as a nazi.

      • PolandIsAStateOfMind@lemmy.ml
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        It wasn’t acidental btw. His own granddaughter posted that he met with Zelensky and Trudeau before. Also he lived in Canada for long, all of them were one short inquiry of getting to know who he is, and that’s why they have assistants etc. Sure, the western politicians have mostly shit for brains, but not one of 300 people even said “wait a minute”.

      • Valmond@lemmy.mindoki.com
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        1 year ago

        “Man who caught for a nazi unit”

        Let me fix that for you:

        “A Nazi who fought for Adolp Hitler”

        Why are facho news like reverse clickbaity so often?

        • Thrillhouse@lemmy.world
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          That’s not the context though and misrepresents the situation.

          The Speaker of the House invited this guy because he knew of him from his riding. Without doing research or looking further into the circumstances of this individual’s service, the speaker made the decision to recognize this individual.

          This has nothing to do with the PM. It’s the speaker and he resigned.

          It’s pretty disgusting that people try to twist this into a partisan issue so they can dig at the PM. It’s disingenuous and kind of shitty to misrepresent this situation tbh.

          • atocci@kbin.social
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            Oh man I didn’t realize he resigned over this. I guess it’s the kind of egg on your face mistake a political career can’t really recover from though…

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              It’s a brutal mistake. As far as speakers go, they’re supposed to be apolitical - putting the decorum and honour of the house above all else - though they’re elected officials. They really shouldn’t be anything of interest ever, it’s literally a protocol role. So this guy… Even IF he was really good at his job as a member of parliament, and well liked among all parties, his career is over

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            I’m wondering if somebody influenced that speaker. Russian propaganda is now using this that Zelensky (who was present at the time) was clapping when that Nazi was honored.

            • Thrillhouse@lemmy.world
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              Could just be an honest mistake, but it doesn’t mean he shouldn’t be held accountable and I’m glad he has been. If I read the headline correctly I think the PM has also made a formal apology on behalf of the Canadian government as well but someone feel free to correct me on that because I didn’t quite get to reading the article.

              I think the Speaker’s riding is North Bay? The way a lot of small towns / northern cities work is someone tells you “oh I know him he’s a good guy” and you just kind of take it at face value until you find out otherwise.

              Now that’s not the way international protocol should work, obviously, and of course the Russians are going to use it.

              I don’t necessarily believe he was “put up to it” because the simplest explanation is just Northern Ontario word of mouth gone awry and applied to an international diplomatic event where it absolutely should have been fact checked. If I recall correctly, the Speaker said it was a last minute decision.

              I have a contact in the house so I can update if I hear any whisperings. My question is: is the Chief of Protocol responsible for reviewing the Speaker’s remarks. The answer could quite conceivably be no, and if so I think that process should be reviewed.

          • Kiosfriend@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            so the conext is that they don’t do some basic research? pretty sure that’s worse than a single one time oopsie.

                • charliespider@lemmy.world
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                  The speaker of the house is the defacto boss of the parliament and that’s who invited the nazi. Even if they knew the history of everyone who enters the building, the PM couldn’t have prevented the speaker from inviting this guy. Had ANYONE known this guy’s history, this wouldn’t have happened.

          • Aria@lemmygrad.ml
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            1 year ago

            “We have here in the chamber today [a] Ukrainian Canadian world [war] veteran from the second world war who fought [for] the Ukrainian Independence against the Russians and continues to support the troops today even at his age of 98.” The Canadian Prime Minister heard this man was a Nazi and then started clapping. I don’t understand how much more black and white this could be.

            • Thrillhouse@lemmy.world
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              Yes let everyone, despite everything else going on at the time, pause in the moment to recall the finer points of WW2 geopolitics because everyone obviously has all those facts at the forefront of their mind at all times.

              List of people who clapped: literally everyone.

              I watched at home and didn’t clue in and I didn’t have cameras pointing at me documenting an internationally significant diplomatic event.

              This is not the own you think it is.

              • Aria@lemmygrad.ml
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                Yes let everyone, despite everything else going on at the time, pause in the moment to recall the finer points of WW2 geopolitics because everyone obviously has all those facts at the forefront of their mind at all times.

                Bruv, bruv, this is the bare minimum, I swear. If you cannot recall that WWII was Nazi Germany vs the Soviet Union, you aren’t prepared enough to have opinions on the modern conflict or any aspect of geopolitics. This isn’t the finer points.

                List of people who clapped: literally everyone.

                Mhm.

                • Thrillhouse@lemmy.world
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                  I don’t think you’re arguing in good faith. There were more countries involved in WW2 than Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union but, as I said, I’m not an expert and I don’t expect people to be.

                  It was a mistake on the part of the speaker, he owned it, and then the government apologized. Case closed. Don’t be a partisan hack.

  • rzz@lemm.ee
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    Can anybody explain to me what is up with Canada and a Nazi, I have been quite enjoying my rock for a couple of months.

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    This shouldn’t be surprising given:

    https://www.jta.org/1997/06/05/global/canada-knowingly-admitted-ss-members-after-world-war-ii

    One of the ways of getting into Canada during the postwar period “was by showing the SS tattoo,” Canadian historian Irving Abella told “60 Minutes” interviewer Mike Wallace. “This proved that you were an anti-Communist.”

    The Canadian government hasn’t really changed. Some high up government officials are the children and grandchildren of Nazi war criminals: https://www.google.com/amp/s/ottawacitizen.com/news/national/defence-watch/chrystia-freelands-granddad-was-indeed-a-nazi-collaborator-so-much-for-russian-disinformation/wcm/11196169-fd23-4643-94b4-08039235c595/amp/

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    As a Canadian this is totally embarrassing but atleast we don’t consider him a national hero like some nazis in America…

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      He wasn’t introduced as a nazi, none of those MP’s knew the truth about who they were standing for, and they wouldn’t have if they did. Somebody didn’t do background research, and old nazi never should have been anywhere near parliament. It’s incompetence all around.

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        He was introduced as having fought the Russians during WW2, there’s literally only one option as to what side that leaves him on. Either parliament is completely devoid of the most basic history education, or they knew damn well what they were applauding.

        • Blackmist@feddit.uk
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          So did Finland though, and they ended WW2 fighting the Germans.

          Although Finland was significantly less “gas the Jews” than Ukraine was.

        • WhipTheLlama@lemmy.world
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          IIRC, he fought the Russians to protect Ukraine from their invasion. He had no other allegiance to Germany or Nazis. It was a “the enemy of my enemy is my ally” situation.

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            He volunteered to be part of the waffen ss, they mostly terrorized the civilian population and helped with extermination, they weren’t involved in actual warfighting that much and when they did fight they lost badly because they weren’t meant to be military, they were meant to terrorize civilians and help with extermination.

          • SMT42@lemmy.world
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            Yeah he wasn’t a nazi, he was a nazi ally

            Not… much better, but could be worse?

            • OurToothbrush@lemmy.ml
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              Most Ukrainians fought for their country as part of the red army. Something like 28:1. The nazi collaborators of the waffen SS like the fascist who was celebrated by the Canadian parliament mostly did “antipartisan activities” which involved killing a bunch of Jewish people.

  • Aria@lemmygrad.ml
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    But don’t you know, talking about this is Russian propaganda. Look, listen to Trudeau, he says you shouldn’t talk about this and instead fight back against Russian propaganda without missing a beat in the same sentence as he’s apologising. https://youtu.be/ApEx_UOwJR8

    • Squorlple@lemmy.worldOP
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      Look, listen to Trudeau, he says you shouldn’t talk about this

      Was the video you linked to supposed to substantiate this claim?

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        What do you feel the implication is when he says it’s important to push back against Russian propaganda when asked about applauding Nazis?

        • Honytawk@lemmy.zip
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          That they didn’t know it was a Nazi, and that applauding him doesn’t change the fact that Russia is a terrorist state that is trying to invade the west through wars and propaganda.

          • Aria@lemmygrad.ml
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            Sounds like what I said. “Stop talking about this, it’s helping the enemy. Did you forget how bad the enemy is? We’re not bad, the enemy is bad” and so on. He was introduced as a Nazi, of course they knew, how could they not.

            If they really felt sorry they’d make it known and clearly signal that Nazis aren’t tolerated, not try to minimise reporting.

            • Honytawk@lemmy.zip
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              No it is more: “Stop talking about this because it is disingenuous and misrepresents the situation”

              He was not introduced as a Nazi, but as a WW2 veteran that fought against Russia. Because you know, Russia is a much bigger threat to western freedom at the moment than Fascism.

              If they really felt sorry they’d make it known and clearly signal that Nazis aren’t tolerated, not try to minimise reporting.

              You mean like this:

              https://www.reuters.com/world/canada-house-speaker-apologizes-recognition-veteran-who-fought-nazis-2023-09-24/

              And this:

              https://www.dw.com/en/canadas-trudeau-apologizes-after-ex-nazi-mistakenly-honored/a-66943803

              And the hundreds of other articles that talk about how profusely they apologised after they found out he was a Nazi?

              Almost like, gasp Fascism isn’t tolerated in Canada and the rest of the west. (Including Ukraine)

              • Aria@lemmygrad.ml
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                He was not introduced as a Nazi, but as a WW2 veteran that fought against Russia.

                ??? Is this an especially poor attempt at ‘Never Play Defence’ alt-right play book stuff? That’s the same sentence twice with some words changed. It’s not sneaky and it doesn’t go unnoticed. This isn’t euphemism with plausible deniability. “I didn’t paint my house a dark colour, I painted it a black colour.”

                You mean like this:

                Okay, so in this article, there’s a short explanation of the situation. They explain that a Jewish rights group wants an apology, which means it’s not necessarily also a demand from everyone else in the country and the publication. Then there explicitly is not an apology. “I have subsequently become aware of more information which causes me to regret my decision,” This means he does not apologise. This is not an apology, profuse or otherwise. This is a justification and deflection. This is a bold faced lie designed to construct the narrative that this situation was not deliberate, and that the media is misreporting it. Which is also what you did. This man was intentionally brought out because he was a Nazi and honoured because he was a Nazi. This deflection does not apologise for honouring Nazis. Then somewhere later he apologises, using the words “deepest apologies”, but without the connecting tissue present, we can assume it came right after the deflection, voiding the apology, because he has not acknowledged his mistake. “My deepest apologies that you felt that way.” “My deepest apologies that I am being misrepresented”, “My deepest apologies that I was unwittingly part of a misstep.”

                Then the article goes on to quote a special interest group, which means it’s not necessarily also the opinion of everyone else in the country and the publication. Then that group says they’re willing to accept an explanation that diverts guilt if adequate, softening their language.

                Afterwards, they quote the Russian embassy to strengthen the connection with the news story, even though this really should be treated as a domestic story. The rest of the article is basically saying Russia is doing war and that’s bad and that should be the focus, not the thing the article is about.

                So let’s look at the other article. Oh wait, this is DW. Now this is different, because DW actually has to take an anti-Nazi stand because their readers are often vocal in their criticism of Nazi ideology. But let’s see if they try to soften it anyway. They’re incentivised to soften it, because they are German propaganda in the literal sense, their job is to spread the world-view of the German government, and Canada is a German ally. But surely there’s no way to report this in a way that is sufficiently anti-Nazi without painting their ally in a bad light, unless the Canadian government really properly apologised. So they must’ve apologised profusely like you said. Let’s read.

                Immediately it says he apologised, that’s good. But I’ve heard one of his apologies, and he didn’t apologise, he just went through the motions and then blamed Russian disinformation. DW isn’t quoting him. Is this because they want to imply he apologised when he really hasn’t?

                “Yaroslav Hunka, a 98-year-old Ukrainian World War II veteran, received two standing ovations. However, it emerged later that Hunka had served in the Waffen-SS Galicia Division,”

                Look at this wording. It emerged later that he served in the Waffen-SS. This is true, this is information that was given to the MPs after they clapped. But it sorta sounds a lot like “It emerged later that he was a Nazi”. So they’re using factual reporting to imply something extremely misleading which would completely change the story. This story completely hides the actual fact that he was introduced as a Nazi. Wow, now that’s some proper misinformation propaganda!

                Then they quote some lines from the apology. These are good lines, they sound like a proper apology. Though what I notice is that they’re still mostly worried about optics, even in this choice quote. But let’s keep reading. Oh wait, now he’s deflecting responsibility. “even though we did so unaware of the context”. Well that didn’t last long. But there’s no way the informed DW reader would accept that apology! What gives? Right, and this is why they had the wording they did earlier, specifically so that the DW reader isn’t informed. This article is a deliberate misinformation cover piece designed to give the false sense of being informed to readers so that they don’t need to research more, and reading only this, it sounds like a blunder was made and apologised for sufficiently for something that was a small misunderstanding or something else that could possibly not be deliberate. And then it ends with Trudeau saying “Stop talking about this” or “If you hear a different version of events, that’s Russian misinformation”.

                how profusely they apologised after they found out he was a Nazi

                They did nothing of the sort and these two articles point to nothing of the sort. Not even a little bit. No one single person was jailed. Not one single person was executed. Not one single person was exiled. They didn’t even fire the cabinet. Nobody even acknowledged their actual wrongdoing. These are not apologies. Nothing happened. One rich guy retired.

                Russia is a much bigger threat to western freedom at the moment than Fascism.
                Fascism isn’t tolerated in Canada and the rest of the west.

                This is not true. Especially for the indigenous population but also for settlers, the primary threat has been and remains fascisms. https://globalnews.ca/news/9985761/food-insecurity-poverty-report-canada/
                Even if Russia was a substantial threat to people living in Canada, that shouldn’t have any bearing on this story or it’s coverage. Replace the government first, then go back to publishing stories about the need to stay vigilant against Russia. A society unfriendly to Nazis who have been properly informed about what happened would have no problem coming together in a time of crisis like this and help organise and vote in a new government.

              • OurToothbrush@lemmy.ml
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                1 year ago

                He was not introduced as a Nazi, but as a WW2 veteran that fought against Russia.

                So he was introduced as a nazi then? He was introduced as a ukrainian ww2 veteran who fought against Russia. Aka a soldier of the third Reich.

                Is your issue that “oh but they framed it in a good way, how can you blame him for clapping for a nazi when the nazi was introduced in a favorable light.”? Do you expect the prime Minister of a country not to know basic facts about the largest war of the last century?

                • Aria@lemmygrad.ml
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                  1 year ago

                  Do you expect the prime Minister of a country not to know basic facts about the largest war of the last century?

                  Two comments above someone called it “the finer points of WW2”…