Stanford student reported for reading Hitler’s ‘Mein Kampf’ - Student reported to campus officials over Snapchat photo of them with the book

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Reported to the university following a social media post

A Stanford University student has been reported to campus officials for reading Adolf Hitler’s “Mein Kampf” book.

“A Protected Identity Harm report has been filed after the circulation of a Snapchat screenshot,” of the student, according to The Stanford Daily.

The reporting system “is the University’s process to address incidents where a community member experiences harm because of who they are and how they show up in the world,” according to Stanford.

“The photo of the student reading the book was posted to another student’s Snapchat story Friday evening, according to a screenshot of the image obtained by The Daily,” the campus newspaper reported. It did not provide a copy of the image nor any further context that would explain how the student harmed anyone.
“Swift action was taken by the leadership in the residential community where both the individuals who posted and the one pictured are members,” campus rabbis Jessica Kirschner and Laurie Tapper wrote in an email to Jewish students.

The Fix emailed Kirschner and asked if there should be punishments for the student and for more information on the Snapchat and the email the rabbis sent out. The Fix also asked if there should be a removal or other action taken against the 76 copies of “Mein Kampf” that the university has.

“I do not believe we should ban books, or punish the reading of books, even books whose content is as offensive as Mein Kampf,” she said via email. “This is antithetical to the purpose of the university and the spirit of free inquiry.”

“As a residential community as well as a learning community, it is important for students to have space and support to work through how individuals interpret things differently, and the distance that can emerge between intent and impact,” the rabbi said on Monday evening.

She did not respond to a follow-up question that asked for clarification on Hillel’s involvement in the report.

University officials are “working with the leaders of the residence that the students belong to address the social media post and its impact on the community,” the paper reported, based on comments that spokesperson Dee Mostofi provided it.

Mostofi and the campus media team did not respond to a Monday morning email from The Fix that asked for more information on what specifically the student did to harm others and if the university would remove or restrict access to its own copies of the book.

A Jewish student argued that whether the book was read as part of a distasteful joke, as rumored, or for a class, it should be allowed.

“Though Mein Kampf carries a hateful, genocidal message packed with poor writing, this should not disqualify the book from being read,” Julia Steinberg wrote in the Stanford Review. “In fact, Mein Kampf is worth reading because it exposes the mind of one of the most consequential men of the 20th century, and allows readers to comprehend the kind of thinking that, when given power, leads to violence.”

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Reading isnt the same as approving it. Its a dogmatic notion to believe that one shouldnt even learn of the thoughts and ideals of evil people or else they become like them. Its a very simplistic and, like I said, nearly dogmatic way of being.
What's the line, "It's the mark of a superior intellect to be able to entertain an idea without adopting it?"

It's almost like these people are worried, deep down, that Hitler was right.

I have no such worry and I trust the bulk of my fellow citizenry to be immune to the wiles of Hitler's philosophy, whether through superior intellect or just the gut reaction that that was one crazy-ass motherfucker.
 
Look, if Hitler had done a flip off the Reichstag to spite the Russians I'd say you might have a point, but eating a gun barrel in a basement like a pussy is just sad.

I've just always found it absurd to take potshots at him. Shitty writer, art-school reject. And the movies, like Chaplin, Tarantino and others.

Assume for the sake of argument he was as bad as we've been told. Then boy, they really put him in his place! Killed millions, allegedly, but shaming him posthumously somehow makes it all better.

Suppose I hated someone the way they hate him, it would make me feel like an impotent retard to obsess over and try to find ways to mock that person for trivial shit.

Also I gotta disagree that committing suicide after losing a war is inherently cowardly.
 
One of the reasons I keep physical books is because digital media is irresistible to the gremlins that constantly want to rewrite history.

I have a collection of old out of print books that were written in the 1930s that are not specifically about Hitler or the Nazis. Like, travelogues about Europe or discussing economics.

It’s pretty fascinating how much attitudes ranged from Hitler as just another politician to “he’s an asshole but so are the Jews”.

It will be even easier to edit history going forward, I don’t know if I will be able to make my kids understand the history I myself lived through.
 
Also I gotta disagree that committing suicide after losing a war is inherently cowardly.
Its one thing to off yourself when an aggressor comes for you. Its another thing to off yourself when you're the aggressor and things haven't gone as planned.

As to the man, its only fair to mock the man he claimed to be, even if he wasn't actually that.
What's the line, "It's the mark of a superior intellect to be able to entertain an idea without adopting it?"

It's almost like these people are worried, deep down, that Hitler was right.

I have no such worry and I trust the bulk of my fellow citizenry to be immune to the wiles of Hitler's philosophy, whether through superior intellect or just the gut reaction that that was one crazy-ass motherfucker.
The guy spent most of WW2 drugged to the gills by his quack physician. One look at his prescription list is enough to convince me he was a madman. Meth, belladonna, strychnine, cocaine, and cow testosterone. Guy made Charlie Sheen look sober, especially since that list is incomplete and was put together by reading the daily notes of his physician and may exclude things he gave on days we don't have journal pages for, not any sort of definitive list written down by him.
 
I think that people that say Mein Kampf is a boring slog are just dissapointed the book wasnt a Francis E Dec rant about Jews that goes 1000 pages that pop culture has hyped it up to be.
When I read it for the first time, I was expecting really intense "hate speech", and someone I've known for a long time told me there's "a lot of extreme stuff in there", but that wasn't the case. Mein Kampf is actually pretty TAME compared to something like The Rape of Nanking, which in contrast actually made me feel like I needed to take a shower after just 100 pages of reading it. Mein Kampf is nothing compared to discussions about Jews on /pol/. It's laughable that people think that book is the most horrendous thing ever written. It's nothing.
One of the reasons I keep physical books is because digital media is irresistible to the gremlins that constantly want to rewrite history.

I have a collection of old out of print books that were written in the 1930s that are not specifically about Hitler or the Nazis. Like, travelogues about Europe or discussing economics.

It’s pretty fascinating how much attitudes ranged from Hitler as just another politician to “he’s an asshole but so are the Jews”.

It will be even easier to edit history going forward, I don’t know if I will be able to make my kids understand the history I myself lived through.
This Kiwi gets it.
 
It will be even easier to edit history going forward, I don’t know if I will be able to make my kids understand the history I myself lived through.
One of the things that bugs me about kids not being able to read cursive is like, you can't even read your grandpa's letters home from the war.

"The girls here are really pretty, but it's $75 if you're caught with one. Then again, what's $75 to a solder?"
 
When I read it for the first time, I was expecting really intense "hate speech", and someone I've known for a long time told me there's "a lot of extreme stuff in there", but that wasn't the case. Mein Kampf is actually pretty TAME compared to something like The Rape of Nanking, which in contrast actually made me feel like I needed to take a shower after just 100 pages of reading it. Mein Kampf is nothing compared to discussions about Jews on /pol/. It's laughable that people think that book is the most horrendous thing ever written. It's nothing.

This Kiwi gets it.
Therein lies one of the reasons Jews go so ape shit about anyone reading it. Their narrative requires people to think that Hitler, and anyone who questions the Jewish hegemony are foaming at the mouth lunatics. If people actually read it, they find a very rational and down to earth combination of an autobiography and political manifesto.
 
One of the things that bugs me about kids not being able to read cursive is like, you can't even read your grandpa's letters home from the war.

"The girls here are really pretty, but it's $75 if you're caught with one. Then again, what's $75 to a solder?"
Grandpa was a bigot who was born amd raised before humans developed a moral compass and thus cannot attain good humanhood.
It is best forgotten as we as (good) humans progress into utopia
 
Imagine you're writing a paper on Adolf Hitler or Nazi Germany and you have to read primary sources to develop your essay. And as you're slogging through a truly boring and overwrought book, some asshole gender studies major takes a covert picture of it and tries to report you for reading a book.

When even Jewish student representatives say this is too far, you know it's fucked.
 
I read Mein Kampf many years ago. I wanted some insight into the mind of a man at the centre of a global shitstorm, whose legacy kept the History Channel in the black before they pivoted into shows about aliens and secret races of giants.

My feeling, having finished the book, is that Hitler should have stuck with painting. Even Saddam Hussein managed a successful career as a novelist.

I refuse to believe that anyone who has read Mein Kampf from beginning to end could come away from it radicalised. It is really tedious. Maybe the audiobook version was better, but I doubt it.
 
It's almost like these people are worried, deep down, that Hitler was right.
Funnily enough, many years ago, one of my history profs talked about Mein Kamph and how is actuallehhhh has a few...cogent points.

And, YES, he said something back then about how some people/institutions freak out about anyone looking at it because

Pointity
Point
Point
 
My feeling, having finished the book, is that Hitler should have stuck with painting. Even Saddam Hussein managed a successful career as a novelist.
He's actually not a terrible artist. I mean, the art is German (read: autistic) as hell considering how anal the man was about perspective lines to the point it all comes across as a bit artificial, but aside from that the overall quality is rather good. If Hitler had been convinced to take up the draftsman's right angle instead of a paintbrush he'd likely have gone to his grave a world-famous architect.

I mean, shit, the Nazis did a lot of bad things but nobody can say they had shitty architecture considering the Olympic stadium they built in Berlin is still in use today.
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I'm actually proud of the Germans for keeping it around since that's a nice-looking stadium.
 
He's actually not a terrible artist. I mean, the art is German (read: autistic) as hell considering how anal the man was about perspective lines to the point it all comes across as a bit artificial, but aside from that the overall quality is rather good. If Hitler had been convinced to take up the draftsman's right angle instead of a paintbrush he'd likely have gone to his grave a world-famous architect.
So basically, you're saying that Hitler should have been in Albert Speer's line of work instead.
 
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