• @NOT_RICK@lemmy.world
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      454 months ago

      I don’t really see an issue with this position. Replacing book bans with de facto bans by refusing to stock them could also become a problem. I’ve read Mein Kampf and I’d still gladly slug a Nazi.

          • It is very bad. It is absolutely not a book that is so dangerous that just reading it will turn you into a Nazi. The content is of course atrocious, but the writing is so, so bad that you won’t even notice the content because you just can’t read the crap. Actually, I would be very wary of anyone who claims to have read the whole thing outside of uni, because there is something very wrong with them.

            • Mimilli
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              134 months ago

              TLDR: “Mein Kampf” was never actually banned in Germany but its complicated.

              I am from Germany and the fate of the book after WWII is pretty wierd, this is just written from memory and its way more complicated as history always is.

              First you need to understand in nazi germany nearly everyone had a copy of “Mein Kampf” , it was given out like candy and not accepting/buying it would be pretty suspicious to the secret police. (had lots of talk about it with my 90 year old grandma, you needed to fly the swastika at every occasion and be able to produce shit like the flag and the book in case you were ever under suspicion or else… ) After the War most people got rid of the stuff or put it in the back of the attic because of ongoing denazification and to forget ( my guess is because the book is an afront to literary sensibilities).

              Hitler seems to have bequeathed everything he owned to the German State, including the Copyright of “Mein Kampf”. That meant the exclusive publishing rights went to the Bavarian State, because he had his official residence in Munich. Now the Bavarian Government decided to just dont print the book and nobody could legally produce and sell new copies. This worked pretty much as a defacto ban because for obvious reasons, including it’s just unbelievably bad not only in content but in language as well, only (neo-) nazis or historians (who could just get it in Archives/University libraries or from that one wierd grandpa who likes showing of his medals and rants about the jews) would even want that book in post war Germany. Basically everyone was fine with the status quo and it went ignored.

              Fast forward to ~2010 and Historians realise a Dilemma. They decided to start producing “Mein Kampf” as a heavily annotated “critical edition” because the German Copyright will run out at the end of 2015, and the defacto ban would be lifted. At the time that was quite controversial, discussions about banning it completely or even making it a mandatory read in history lessons, so teachers could put it in context, were ongoing.

              Right after the copyright ran out the book was published, again to much controversy. I am pretty sure it actually sold well, atleast at first. Today its a nonissue again and there are still people in Germany who think its illegal to own a copy because why would you even want to read that shit, its worse than Atlas Shrugged.

            • @fidodo@lemmy.world
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              4 months ago

              Looking it up, it was never banned, it was just prevented from being reprinted due to the government holding the copyright and not making it available. It’s now in public domain.

              https://www.pbs.org/newshour/arts/hitlers-mein-kampf-to-go-on-sale-in-germany

              The German state of Bavaria has held the copyright for Adolf Hitler’s autobiography since 1945 and has withheld publishing the book, preventing any reprints in Germany. But in 2016, the book becomes available in the public domain, which will make it widely available in Germany for the first time since World War II.

              That means it was perfectly legal to have it, it just couldn’t be printed in Germany.

            • Cethin
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              64 months ago

              There are Germans outside of Germany and there are also ways to access information anyway. Also, I have no knowledge of this but I’m sure there are legal ways to access it as well, for studying History or Hitler’s life or whatever else. Rarely are bans total for anything. There’s almost always exceptions.

        • No it is amazing. It is so amazing to read, that a Turkish origined comedian took it up on him to read it to Germans, to show them just how great it was.

          Resulting in even some hardcore Nazis to end up laughing, because the book is just completely utter horseshit.

      • @funkless_eck@sh.itjust.works
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        104 months ago

        bookshops can’t stock every book. Just because they don’t stock Georges Perec’s Species of Spaces or Italo Calvino’s If On A Winter’s Night A Traveller or Marcia Citron’s 1988 biography of 19th century composer Camille Chaminade doesn’t mean those books are banned - they’re niche.

        It seems more likely that current, contentious, right-leaning polemic is in a lot of stockist warehouses due to the political machine and the supply chain software is just presenting the inventory without comment.

  • @FinishingDutch@lemmy.world
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    404 months ago

    I imagine that’s a common pitfall for most online bookstores that have any sort of volume. Unless you want to proofread and curate every single thing that gets sold, there’s bound to be things that slip through. The article even mentions they sell 10 million books… just not possible to curate properly.

    And personally, I’d rather have a bookstore that occasionally sells a questionable title, rather than one that actively censors itself. There’s plenty of titles out there that someone would deem offensive, while others consider it essential works.

    Heck, there have been many scholarly annotated versions of Mein Kampf as the article mentions. It’s a historically significant work, penned by a madman. Not everyone who’d read it is by definition a Nazi. In fact, I’d go so far as to say that it could cure some of them if they did read it. It’s a terrible book. Even when it was first published it got shitty reviews.

    • @echo64@lemmy.world
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      434 months ago

      This is just a drop shipping operation. It’s not “some things slip through.” Rupaul had just attached their name to a drop shipper that serves the broadest audience possible. There’s no curation. There’s no safety.

  • Kushan
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    344 months ago

    RuPaul had come under fire previously for being anti-trans, but it’s okay because they apologized on Twitter by posting the wrong flag (literally a flag for trains - and I’m not making that up).

    Regardless of your stance on the issue of a bookstore with a no-banning-books mission not banning books, RuPaul clearly is not an ally and this isn’t surprising.

    • @RGB3x3@lemmy.world
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      224 months ago

      How the fuck is someone who is so well-known for drag, not a trans ally?

      What synapses have collapsed in his brain to allow for this cognitive dissonance?

      • @GlitterInfection@lemmy.world
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        204 months ago

        The person you’re replying to is being a typical internet person.

        Rupaul’s Drag Race used to not allow trans contestants. It does now. We’ve had more than one trans Winner.

        Ru got some backlash for implying that being trans would be an unfair advantage on Drag Race, comparing it to taking performance enhancing drugs for the Olympics. She later apologized for it.

        The show also had some vernacular that was very common in its early days which the trans community pointed out weren’t OK and it changed overtime.

        Ru is a fairly old gay man who has done a pretty good job of changing with the times comparatively.

  • capital
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    214 months ago

    We censoring books or not? I vote not. Is it so hard to be consistent?

    • @FlickOfTheBean@lemmy.world
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      164 months ago

      You can’t seriously be against all censorship in books, right? Where are your actual boundaries? I don’t think you’d be ok with something obviously evil like a book of cp… Right?

      Edgecases are why it’s hard to be consistent.

      • capital
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        144 months ago

        That’s illegal and for good reason.

        Yet somehow the US functions with freedom of speech even with some restrictions.

        But we’re not talking about CP are we? We’re taking about how we are still dealing with rightoids censoring books and now the left wants certain ones censored.

        I argued against the right censoring books and I’ll continue to argue the same way, regardless of who the next shitty group trying it is.

        • @FlickOfTheBean@lemmy.world
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          94 months ago

          That’s my point though. If you don’t ban (aka censor) illegal things as a foundation, you end up living in a hellscape. I’m saying your argument isn’t thorough enough. It’s not going far enough. It’s scratching the surface and saying “good enough” when it doesn’t actually appear to be.

          I am talking about illegal things because it’s an obvious hole in your argument. What are you talking about about? Because it sounds like you’re being short sighted to me, sticking to a happy path, but I could be wrong. What do you think?

        • @yetAnotherUser@feddit.de
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          54 months ago

          Yeah, let’s put “Der Giftpilz”, meaning “The poisonous mushroom” - a German children’s book from 1938 - up for sale everywhere.

          Children should learn how Jews are the poisonous mushrooms of humanity because they rape German girls, killed Jesus and doom humanity if we don’t find a solution to the Jewish Question.

          This book can be legally sold in the US.

          • @Rodeo@lemmy.ca
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            44 months ago

            It almost as if education and critical thinking about what one is reading is important.

            That book can be read to children in the context of it being wrong. It can be explained to children why it is wrong and that just because they read something in a book doesn’t mean it’s right.

            What’s better, educating people to think critically, or banning things so they don’t have to think at all?

            • @yetAnotherUser@feddit.de
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              14 months ago

              I’m sure this will be the reason anyone purchases this book.

              Besides you don’t expose children to Polio to strengthen their immune system, you give them a weakened version. The beautifully illustrated book with arguments which sound logical to children, tons of non-verbal messaging and countless hateful stereotypes is not how you educate children.

          • capital
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            24 months ago

            A conservative could say the same thing with a different book.

            Stop trying to ban books.

            • @yetAnotherUser@feddit.de
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              14 months ago

              They will ban books regardless of whether harmful books are banned.

              Freedom of speech doesn’t extend to incitement of hatred. If it does, your laws don’t protect freedom of speech as much as they protect the freedom to call for, and eventually cause, genocide.

              • capital
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                4 months ago

                Free speech DOES extend to hatred, though.

                Did y’all forget the ACLU once defended the National Socialist Party of America’s right to free speech?

                If you expect your right to say “fuck the police” or wear a shirt emblazoned with the same, you can’t go around saying the law should keep someone from wearing a swastika. BOTH are protected by the right to free speech, as much as you and much of the left don’t want to admit it.

                I stand for the PRINCIPLE of free speech rather than wheeling it out to defend speech I like but then pretending like it doesn’t exist to suppress speech I don’t.

                In order to preempt some of the more predictable responses to this, no, private companies cannot violate your right to free speech - only the government can. So if the book company in the OP decides to stop selling some books, I would not consider it to be violating free speech. But I think the conversation has strayed from that specific instance at this point.

    • @CaptainProton@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      It’s not censorship if it’s words by people you dislike, silly! Everyone with a real education knows that!

      (Edit: /s because I guess someone might say this unironically?)

    • @fidodo@lemmy.world
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      44 months ago

      Twitter people pointed out that Mein Kampf is sold there, but it’s a historic book and valuable to read to understand the roots of fascism to fight it.

      • Mein Kampf is a pretty poor source to understand the roots of fascism. People have this idea, that Hitler was some elaborate writer, who laid out a comprehensive and enchanting piece of work, that was then surrounded by mysticism.

        You don’t understand the roots of fascism from books written by fascists. You understand it from looking at fascists in action, both on the side of agitators and those following the agitation. And the roots are pretty simple: Combine fear with hatred and an inferiority complex, mix it with simple solutions and by elevating individuals of the in-group by terrorizing the out-group.

    • @CptEnder@lemmy.world
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      34 months ago

      Yeah people should have access to the nutjob right wing shit as a learning tool. Can’t defeat your enemy unless you understand them.

  • @gAlienLifeform@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    The criticism comes after users on X (formerly Twitter) exposed the site for listing books by authors known for their anti-LGBTQ+ stances, including titles by Riley Gaines, Robby Starbuck, Kirk Cameron, and other books from the conservative publisher Brave Books

    So, like, thank you for pointing out a legitimate problem here and inspiring RuPaul’s team to try to do better, but complaining about people allowing fascists to get financial support on twitter of all places feels a bit inconsistent