Professor Bernadotte Schmitt (1886 - 1969), President of
the American Historical
Association, won a Pulitzer Prize for his 1930
book The Coming of the War: 1914,
in which he laid the blame for World War
One squarely on German shoulders.
Schmitt's hatred of Germans is outlined in James J.
Martin's 1984 book:
... University of Chicago
Germanophobe, Bernadotte Schmitt,
whose suggestion for the starvation
of 30,000,000 Germans had been made
before an audience of approving
educators in 1941. With a couple of
years to think things over, Schmitt
went a little beyond his earlier
suggestion in a University of
Chicago Public Policy Pamphlet (No.
38) which began to get around in the
early summer of 1943, What Shall We
Do with Germany? Schmitt got right
down to business, urging as severe a
treatment as could be applied. He
declared his program was "based on
the conviction that the Germans are
not like Frenchmen or Britishers or
Americans but possess certain
national traits which make them
impervious to reason, generosity or
even fair play," a discovery which
should have been quite a surprise to
the scores of millions of Americans
of German descent, though none of
them were known to have protested
this vicious slur. Schmitt urged the
utter military wrecking of Germany
by armies meeting in Berlin from all
directions, the dismemberment and
carrying away of the entire industry
in the country, followed by intense
punitive actions on a vast scale,
"in the hope that the sadistic
traits of the Germans may be
restrained"; "Let us make life
difficult and unpleasant for them,"
Schmitt cooed in conclusion.
The Man Who Invented
Genocide:
The Public Career &
Consequence of Raphael Lemkin (1984)
chapter II, page 70
James J. Martin
"based on the conviction that the Germans are not like Frenchmen or Britishers or Americans but possess certain national traits which make them impervious to reason, generosity or even fair play," That is the slaverbitchboy's trait alrighty, projected out in degenerate Freud stylee.
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