Gransnet forums

Ask a gran

Does Age excuse Everything?

(34 Posts)
Blossoming Fri 12-Mar-21 16:41:34

I’m reading a great deal about Nazi Germany at the moment and I’ve noticed a couple of stories in the press in the last few weeks about elderly people being prosecuted for war crimes. This is one example I’ve been following. It’s in the Guardian, which I know many Grans find anathema, but it is in other media too if preferred.

I’m interested to know people’s opinions on this. Do you think it’s pointless? Do you think old people shouldn’t have to answer for their acts? Do you think justice should be done for the sake of the victims and their families? Do you think it’s important the world should know this is not now, and never was, acceptable?

I have skin in the game due to family history and that may colour my view.

www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/feb/20/us-deports-former-concentration-camp-guard-95-germany

Pantglas2 Fri 12-Mar-21 16:48:28

I’ve pondered this question since watching the 2 night programme on James Bolger finishing last night and I still haven’t come to conclusion.

I appreciate its at the other end of the age scale but no less relevant surely?

Chestnut Fri 12-Mar-21 16:51:35

As we all know on here, you are still the same person even though many things about you will change as you age. If you have committed a serious crime and never been caught or punished then of course you should pay whatever your age. If that means you die in a cell then so be it. You have had a life, and maybe many years of life, that which was denied your victim or victims.
We've seen the Yorkshire Ripper, Hindley, Brady and others die in prison. They were not released because they were old and neither should they be. So a Nazi criminal should also pay for the rest of their life, however short that may be.

lemongrove Fri 12-Mar-21 16:53:42

What Chestnut says.

NellG Fri 12-Mar-21 16:55:11

When it comes to crime age shouldn't be a free pass and people should be held to account whatever their age.

When it comes to attitudes and behaviour age is also not an excuse to continue unacceptable behaviour - ie racism, sexism etc. No one is too old to learn if they are still in possession of their faculties.

AGAA4 Fri 12-Mar-21 17:00:52

Those war criminals were monsters and should be brought to justice whenever they are caught and whatever their age.

Chestnut Fri 12-Mar-21 17:17:55

There was a very complex and interesting programme on PBS America called 'Radical Evil' about the Nazi death squads, who gunned down about 2 million Jews. These were young men ordered to shoot large groups of helpless men, women and children, over and over again. The programme asked how this could happen, that ordinary young men could do such a thing. They committed mass murder but were they responsible when you consider the complexity of the offence? They could not refuse the orders, they were brain washed into believing it was the right thing to do, and the human brain learns how to adapt into acceptance of what is required when it has no choice. Very complex issue.

Emily49 Fri 12-Mar-21 17:22:18

The programme asked how this could happen, that ordinary young men could do such a thing. One imagines they were terrified, as well as brainwashed

EllanVannin Fri 12-Mar-21 17:35:10

Well said Chestnut. I still cried at the film not long ago---"The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas ". Age didn't come into it then !

Blossoming Fri 12-Mar-21 17:37:19

Not quite the case in point Chestnut but also an interesting question. I’m currently reading about the Buchenwald medical experiments, absolutely sickening acts carried out by those who had given an oath to preserve life. Primum non nocere indeed.

Grandmabatty Fri 12-Mar-21 17:46:27

Age should not be a defence, in my opinion.

Jaxjacky Fri 12-Mar-21 17:48:58

I honestly don’t know, if someone has dementia, or a severe mental illness would they know why they were being punished, or even that they were?

Lexisgranny Fri 12-Mar-21 17:51:19

I don’t think it excuses it but feel that it gives the reason for it. Just a small but subtle difference.

M0nica Fri 12-Mar-21 18:00:24

Someone with dementia or severe mental illness is already in many ways dead to this world, and obviously should not be imprisoned, but they should be incarcerated, whether in a care home or mental health unit.

However you cannot be tried if you are incapable of defending yourself or instructing a lawyer, this was why the late Grenville Janner was never tried on the charges he faced. We can never know whether he was innocent or guilty because he was not mentally able to stand trial.

Otherwise I am in total agreement with chestnut

Blossoming Fri 12-Mar-21 18:05:51

We have wondered a good distance away from my question, but that is the nature of online discussions. I feel it’s important for these things to be dragged out into the light. Lest we forget.

suziewoozie Fri 12-Mar-21 18:08:39

I think this is an interesting and incredibly complex question which has to be context dependent. I don’t feel able to generalise from the case in the link. I think the most important issue is where was the person in the chain of command, how much were they contributing to decision making? I don’t think age comes into it at all if justice is being pursued. The US ( don’t know about other countries) have statute of limitations for what seem to me some very serious crimes. I don’t agree with that at all. You should never be too old or the crime too long ago for prosecution to be possible. However, the person needs to be fit to plead.

timetogo2016 Fri 12-Mar-21 18:11:50

Spot on chestnut.

Lucca Fri 12-Mar-21 18:14:17

That’s a hard question, I think on balance my reaction is yes, they should not go unpunished even though all it can do for the victims/or rather their families is presumably to provide closure . Is it just punishment or vengeance .?
Lest we forget is absolutely correct.
I read Primo Levi’s book “if this is a man” and many of the things he said have stayed with me. Chilling.

Blossoming Fri 12-Mar-21 22:23:36

Thank you everyone for your thoughts, really interesting!

AmberSpyglass Fri 12-Mar-21 22:30:13

Absolutely fine with the idea of Nazis dying in jail. 100%

vampirequeen Sat 13-Mar-21 08:52:32

Nazis were adults. They knew what they were doing. They may have been indoctrinated but they didn't care about the age of the people they killed or worked to death. Some SS men who had undergone the same indoctrination were so horrified by what they saw that they asked to be transferred to the frontlines on the Eastern Front. They preferred to risk death than be that evil. Simon Wiesenthal's life was saved by an SS guard. So it was possible to not take part/alleviate some of the suffering. Why should we care how old these torturers and murderers are? They may have had no choice were they were posted but some of them enjoyed their power. Lock those ones up and throw away the key.

On the other hand, children who commit crimes aren't able to comprehend the horrors of what they do in the same way as adults and each should be judged on their own merits. Mary Bell committed murder when she was 11 but after a few years was released and has gone on to live a normal life. It was a mistake (albeit a massive one) of childhood. The Bulger killers are another case in point. Both were released. One has gone on to be a decent person. The other committed further crimes as an adult and has been dealt with accordingly.

I think this is why justice must always be objective. I know families and victims want retribution and I totally understand it. I would be the same. But not all crimes are the same and each should be judged impartially.

suziewoozie Sat 13-Mar-21 09:07:49

I don’t think it’s true to say all German soldiers were Nazis. And certainly as the war progresses to its bitter end, younger and younger German conscripts were used.

Antonia Sat 13-Mar-21 09:41:15

I don't believe that age should be an excuse to avoid punishment. But, the peer pressure to commit offences is tremendous, to the point of being impossible to overcome. A soldier in the army, for instance, is not completely free to decide whether or not to obey an order. It would take more moral courage than the average person possesses, to refuse to obey because of a moral objection.
We are social animals and not programmed to act entirety on an individual level.

suziewoozie Sat 13-Mar-21 09:51:53

Antonia

I don't believe that age should be an excuse to avoid punishment. But, the peer pressure to commit offences is tremendous, to the point of being impossible to overcome. A soldier in the army, for instance, is not completely free to decide whether or not to obey an order. It would take more moral courage than the average person possesses, to refuse to obey because of a moral objection.
We are social animals and not programmed to act entirety on an individual level.

I agree - there are examples of British soldiers accused of committing war crimes /crimes throughout history. It’s as ever context dependent. The man in the link was I think only a teenager at the end of the war and from what I’ve read 16 year olds were conscripted in the last two years as there was such a shortage. Many conscripted by this time would have been hungry and in poor health with no options. As a pp said we have to differentiate between justice and vengeance

nanna8 Sat 13-Mar-21 10:39:01

Some of those nazi soldiers towards the end of the war were only 14 years old. They had been brainwashed throughout their lives. I wouldn’t hold that particular group responsible for any of it though they did need ‘re-education’ afterwards. What of the Cambodians in Khmer Rouge who were atrocious and got off totally scot free for all their war crimes? They should have been jailed for life, they were as bad as the nazis.