Follow Slashdot stories on Twitter

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
The Internet Canada Your Rights Online

Mike Godwin Interviewed 89

theshowmecanuck writes CBC Radio in Canada has just posted an interview with Mike Godwin, the originator of the famous Godwin's Law. Unbelievably it comes after a week where Canadian politicians started flinging the H word at each other. Part of the interview reads: "I really wanted people not to make silly or glib comparisons that really show no awareness of history... and I think that to that extent Godwin's Law has succeeded."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Mike Godwin Interviewed

Comments Filter:
  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 14, 2015 @06:14PM (#49258069)

    But the guy doesn't have to be a nazi about it.

  • OK, but... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Brett Buck ( 811747 ) on Saturday March 14, 2015 @06:16PM (#49258075)

    In fact, many cases of Hitler references trivialize the almost inconceivable magnitude of the evil of the 3rd reich. But some cases - the Khmer Rouge or ISIS, for example - it really is appropriate. Yet Godwin is used to stifle the discussion. I think in that sense it has been a disservice.

    • Re:OK, but... (Score:4, Insightful)

      by khasim ( 1285 ) <brandioch.conner@gmail.com> on Saturday March 14, 2015 @06:33PM (#49258131)

      No. If X (not Hitler) is doing Y and Y is very bad then you should be able to explain how come Y is very bad WITHOUT BRINGING HITLER INTO THE DISCUSSION.

      Dragging Hitler/Nazis into a discussion is a lazy way to try to claim some moral high ground.

      • by OzPeter ( 195038 ) on Saturday March 14, 2015 @06:48PM (#49258195)

        Dragging Hitler/Nazis into a discussion is a lazy way to try to claim some moral high ground.

        Says you, whose entire argument is based around mentioning Hitler.

        • This is called a "meta-Godwin", where Hitler is brought up as a sensible argument.

          Can we go deeper?

      • by waynemcdougall ( 631415 ) <slashdot@codeworks.gen.nz> on Saturday March 14, 2015 @06:53PM (#49258221) Homepage

        No. If X (not Hitler) is doing Y and Y is very bad then you should be able to explain how come Y is very bad WITHOUT BRINGING HITLER INTO THE DISCUSSION.

        Dragging Hitler/Nazis into a discussion is a lazy way to try to claim some moral high ground.

        That's just the sort of thing Hitler would say.

      • X11 is doing all things bad.

        • by doom ( 14564 )

          X11 is doing all things bad.

          But that is the price of Freedom!

          Note that I did not close by saying "what are you, some kind of Nazi?" (going for the true meta-Godwin).

      • Fortunately, for that purpose, we have Pol Pot, Staline, Mao, Leopold II of Belgium, Ismail Enver, Kim Il Sung and few others. It is about time racism cease, Germans are not the only one who have perform massive killings in the 20th century.
        • by mc6809e ( 214243 )

          Fortunately, for that purpose, we have Pol Pot, Staline, Mao, Leopold II of Belgium, Ismail Enver, Kim Il Sung and few others. It is about time racism cease, Germans are not the only one who have perform massive killings in the 20th century.

          Introducing other names doesn't help much IMO because it ignores the source of their power: great numbers of people looking for some kind of messiah to step in and solve all their problems -- the 'total' in 'totalitarianism' as Hitchens pointed out.

          Hitler with his silly

          • Perhaps you are sarcasm-proof.
          • Stalin (3 times as many victims), Mao (2 times as many) and Kim Il Sung do have worshippers to this day.

          • That works in any time with any people, as long as the prerequisites are in. Hitler is only the proof that it neither takes an intelligent nor an organized person to pull it off. Only someone full of himself with enough misplaced self esteem.

            What it takes is a faltering economy, a population that used to think their country is big and strong only to be internationally humiliated, fear of enemies abroad and domestic and politicians or other leaders that are obviously or at least perceived as ineffectual, bum

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Um, no.

        Take gun control for example. The current debate surrounding cites several statistics for and against that do more to obfuscate the issue than a clear example, as sharply put by Ben Shapiro, of a worse case scenario that transpired in Nazi Germany. Slippery slope arguments aside (although given how much civil liberties have fallen, I'm not certain that counts as a fallacy anymore), it puts the context in order.

        Too often the opposite is true, where someone cites Godwin's Law as a shorthand in lieu of

        • Nazi Germany serves as a well-known historical example of how certain policies can have disastrous effects, .... the onus is on those who advocate for such policies to explain clearly what immutable safeguards will be in place to prevent such a state from occurring.

          History shows that nothing ever occurs the same way twice. There are just too many factors (both random and non-random) involved. I think the onus is on those who advocate ANY policy to try to show that it will not go pear shaped. Just saying it is the opposite of what Hitler would have done is not good enough.

      • Re:OK, but... (Score:5, Insightful)

        by theshowmecanuck ( 703852 ) on Saturday March 14, 2015 @09:47PM (#49259159) Journal
        And Godwin says you are wrong. If it is appropriate to make the comparison, then it is appropriate. He does not believe that a comparison should never be made. Neither do I and never have. Your position is horribly dogmatic and is akin to people who believe goto statements in programming should never be used no matter what. This is in fact complete bunk.
        • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

          by ZeRu ( 1486391 )
          And yet that's exactly how most Godwin invokers act. It's enough for you to mention Hitler, no matter the context, and they'll immediately scream "Godwin's law, you lose the argument" like little spoiled brats.
      • What do you mean "you should be able to explain"?

        That's absurd. If you're talking to somebody who shares NONE of your cultural values, you can never convince them of anything. You have to start your argument from some point of agreement.

        Hitler is used because he is the ONLY universally shared cultural value.

    • stifle the discussion

      Just like the nazis did!

    • by dbIII ( 701233 )
      True, I was astonished by how many people compared Saddam to Hitler when the man himself liked to be compared with Stalin, who was probably worse by most measures.
  • by Yaztromo ( 655250 ) on Saturday March 14, 2015 @06:38PM (#49258153) Homepage Journal

    For those who aren't aware of what was said, in the case of Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau's comments, I don't think Godwin is being appropriately applied.

    Mr. Trudeau didn't compare the government to that of the Nazis. He didn't compare it to Hitler. He didn't claim that a government policy was as bad as the Holocaust.

    What he did say is that current anti-Muslim government policies are akin to the Canadian policy just after World War II of "none is too many" when it came to Jewish immigrants to Canada, which the Government of Canada has since admitted was wrong.

    In essence, it compared a current policy to a previous policy that the Government had admitted was wrong. I don't see why everyone is so upset, other than that the government would like to try to make this into a Godwin-like comparison in order to score cheap political points. For the record, according to the interview (for anyone who doesn't RTFA), Mr. Godwin agrees with this analysis.

    Minister Blaney, however, seems in my mind to have skirted the line much more closely, specifically bringing up the Holocaust as an example to try to prop up support for an unpopular bill. His specific statement, that the Holocaust didn't begin with the gas chambers, but with words is correct -- however I have to agree with MP Randall Garrison (FWIW, he represents my riding, although admittedly I didn't vote for him in the last election) who said that this was "over-inflated rhetoric".

    So in essence we have one instance worthy of invoking Godwin against, and another that had nothing directly to do with the Holocaust, but instead a Canadian policy that happened around the same time, and affected the same people, which mirrors in some respects what the current Government is attempting to do with a different population, for which Godwin shouldn't apply (but which is being brought out in some corners in an attempt to score political hay).

    Yaz

  • by Anonymous Coward

    No one with a brain adheres to silly arbitrary internet "laws".

    This is all utter bullshit.

    Now, go ahead and mod me down, you brainless cock-gobbling retards.

    • by ZeRu ( 1486391 )
      Knowing average Slashdot user's intelligence today, it's far more likely your post will be modded as funny (or perhaps Slashdot trolls with mod points are doing that on purpose).
  • by Bing Tsher E ( 943915 ) on Saturday March 14, 2015 @07:24PM (#49258341) Journal

    Godwin's law is a usenet phenomenon, intended to describe the period when a usenet thread could go on and on for weeks. So a thread woud be 'officially ended' by Godwin's Law when someone invoked the hitler mentioning.

    On today's modern web, i.e. on Slashdot, theads never last more than a few days because blog site operators close down the comments after a few days or a week has passed. The agenda of discussions is driven by the operators by means of throwing up new 'articles' all the time.

    Essentially, Godwin's Law is obsolete and doesn't pertain. Certainly not in the context that it was created to operate within.

    It's just a meaningless meme now that people use to shut down discussions even more prematurely than blog operators like Slashdot do by shutting closing off comments and adding new topics.

  • Just listen to the first 30 seconds of this [youtube.com] from Alan Watts (nearly half a century ago).
    • Thanks for the link, this is why I participate in Slashdot, to discover interesting nuggets I was not aware of previously.

      I was not aware of Alan Watts prior to 15 minutes ago (I'm now listening to How to Make it Out of the Trap).

      Thank you.

  • The problem with Godwin's Law is that nazism is on the rise and people are afraid to point it out because of Godwin's Law.

    http://www.vice.com/read/white... [vice.com]

    (fun fact: the nazis' internet clubhouse is 8chan, because birds of a feather...)

  • "since the law came into effect"

    Oh, please. It's not a law in the prescriptive sense, it's a law in the descriptive sense. It's like the law of gravity, not the law against murder.

  • Godwin's Law is true, but apparently even Godwin doesn't understand why.

    People inevitably make Hitler comparisons because it's the only moral bedrock we have left. There is no other issue upon which we can all be expected to agree.

    Here's how Internet discussions work:

    I say "X is bad". Somebody disagrees, so I say "X is bad because Y is bad". Somebody says "but Y isn't bad", so I have to say "Y is bad because Z is bad". Given the vast diversity of the Internet, there's going to be somebody who says "but

news: gotcha

Working...