I never said he was a good guy? I just said that not everything he did was bad.
Are you disagreeing that his vision about the Autobahn or the founding of Volkswagen or the construction of things like the Olympiastadion are not good things despite the huge amount of horrible shit he did?
Are you not acknowledging that he was more charismatic in his speeches than many other people despite all the hateful things he fueled using that skill?
How is it so hard to see someone that's clearly an enemy of everything we stand for today as a human and not as some supernatural evil? I think doing this is just helping the populists divide their countries even faster. There needs to be an understanding of why people follow those kind of guys and which things they are doing are not inherently evil to see why people were drawn to those characters.
I'm not saying you should compromise with Nazis. I'm in fact politically active here in Germany to oppose the CDU making deals with the AfD on a local level. I'm only saying that even the Nazis didn't do things because they wanted to be evil - they did it because they had a different (horrible) vision of the world. I think it's important to not see anyone as 100% evil as that is just a very cheap way to not have to think about uncomfortable things
I'm not praising Hitler at all. I'm only saying that people are deliberately ignoring that he didn't do everything he did because he wanted to be evil, but because he had a (horrible) vision for the world. And not all aspects of that vision where inherently evil.
Humans just have the tendency to put everything into boxes of good or bad. It's uncomfortable if something is not fitting 100% into one of those boxes. And from my experiences people almost never fit 100% into those boxes.
Even serial killers sometimes have grandmas they lovingly took care of.
Even child-rapists have friends they support when they need help.
Sure they still are monsters - but they still are humans, too