Julius Ceasar, Alexander the Great, Genghis Khan and many more…

These people had beliefs and worldviews that were so horribly, by today’s standards, that calling them fascist would be huge understatement. And they followed through by committing a lot of evil.

Aren’t we basically glorifying the Hitlers of centuries past?

I know, historians always say that one should not judge historical figures by contemporary moral standards. But there’s a difference between objectively studying history and actually glorifying these figures.

  • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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    1 month ago

    No leader in that period is a good example of the ends justifying the means, all being self-serving feudal lords, but if that’s the lesson you draw, I actually do agree with the concept. That’s how every military action is justified, unless you’re a pacifist.

    I chimed in because OP was replying to support what I said, so I figured it was all the same discussion. I suppose I wouldn’t go as far as saying you can’t judge Genghis Khan, but I would say it’s not very useful to use modern standards when that basically makes any historical figure dead by 1950 a bastard one way or the other.