I think we need more Nazi/Hitler-Threads
So here is mine - do you see the attempt to assasinate Hitler as treason or as an act of resistance? Of course for Nazis it was treason, for Stauffenberg, who placed the bomb in Hitler´s HQ in July 1944 it was not.
Or do you make a difference between what this action done by a German colonel was "technically" (one could say treason, because Hitler was the leader of the state/government and also the military leader) and what it means morally (a try to end the rule of terror done by Hitler´s regime) for you?
And when is it justified to resist, even with violence? Are assasinations of political leaders legitimate forms of resistance in totalitarian states?

So here is mine - do you see the attempt to assasinate Hitler as treason or as an act of resistance? Of course for Nazis it was treason, for Stauffenberg, who placed the bomb in Hitler´s HQ in July 1944 it was not.
Or do you make a difference between what this action done by a German colonel was "technically" (one could say treason, because Hitler was the leader of the state/government and also the military leader) and what it means morally (a try to end the rule of terror done by Hitler´s regime) for you?
And when is it justified to resist, even with violence? Are assasinations of political leaders legitimate forms of resistance in totalitarian states?
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