Dragon Ball Fan wrote: ↑Mon Jul 08, 2019 11:59 amfrom my experience, it is more or less, all or nothing. again, I can see certain circumstances that would drive someone to immoral behavior but outright genocide can only be done by a psychopath. and that's another thing, I am not really using the clinical term but the colloquial team.
Your experience is clearly very limited. All it takes to make a perfectly reasonable and nice person into a murderer, is giving them a good enough reason. And this has nothing to do with psychopathy or mental illness, it's a question of conviction and sometimes upbringing. I'm willing to bet, that if I would send you back in time to before Hitler's rise to power, you'd happily declare that you'd murder him. Funnily enough, almost everyone would say so without even considering that they'd become a murderer then, who killed someone who has not done anything wrong so far. You need to point that out to people in the first place, which is usually done by creating the baby-condition ("Would you kill baby Hitler?"), as if it would make any difference whether you kill an (as of yet) innocent man or an innocent baby. That most people actually need that distinction to even consider their potential murder wrong, should give you a clear point about how wrong your assumption is.
As for Hitler, to our knowledge, he never killed a single person in his life. He only ever ordered killings or signed death warrants, but not once in his life did he fire a gun at someone or put the torch to a living human being. Ever. That guy appears to me as a complete wuss and a very empathetic person by nature and the only thing that made him what he was, was his fanatic love of his twisted image of Germany and the German People. This is what allowed him to become the monster he ended up being.
As for Stalin, he was a brutal, uncompromising, power-hungry shitstain, but he was not born that way. Those were traits he learned due to the brutal opression of the tsarist regime and as far as we can tell, he absolutely believed in communism. But he also believed that he was the only one who could deliver it and he was willing to "walk over corpses" (as we say in Germany, closest translation in spirit is "to stop for nothing", afaik) in order to achieve a goal he considered truely transcendant. He was willing to do a thousand wrongs, to achieve the one single thing he considered the ultimate good.
Looks familiar? For good reason, because it's the same story over and over again, across all of history and it nicely returns to my first paragraph. The difference between a decent person and a monster is a goal the decent person considers worth killing for.
"If you get shot up by an A6M Reisen and your plane splits into pieces - does that mean it's divided by Zero?
- xoxSAUERKRAUTxox