
by Cybach » Sun Nov 01, 2009 4:14 am

by Dododecapod » Sun Nov 01, 2009 4:22 am

by South Lorenya » Sun Nov 01, 2009 5:11 am

by Skibereen » Sun Nov 01, 2009 5:19 am

by Dododecapod » Sun Nov 01, 2009 5:24 am
Skibereen wrote:Guilty of Treason absolutely yes. No Offering of Loyalty required, its automatic as a citizen. Did the Degulle make the right choice, yes. Dealing with a specific incident he accounted for all factors and used specific judgment...brilliant.

by Saxomercunia » Sun Nov 01, 2009 5:27 am

by Cybach » Sun Nov 01, 2009 5:32 am
Skibereen wrote:Guilty of Treason absolutely yes. No Offering of Loyalty required, its automatic as a citizen. Did the Degulle make the right choice, yes. Dealing with a specific incident he accounted for all factors and used specific judgment...brilliant.

by Post-Unity Terra » Sun Nov 01, 2009 5:35 am
Saxomercunia wrote:No. They were loyal to there race. Everyone sticks with there own kind in the end no matter what there passport says. Compare them with the cossacks who where not ethnic Germans but fought against there fellow slavs. They were real traitors.

by Skibereen » Sun Nov 01, 2009 5:37 am
Cybach wrote:Skibereen wrote:Guilty of Treason absolutely yes. No Offering of Loyalty required, its automatic as a citizen. Did the Degulle make the right choice, yes. Dealing with a specific incident he accounted for all factors and used specific judgment...brilliant.
Most were born citizens of Germany. When after Versaille Alsace-Lorraine was given to France, they were not given a choice in citizenship and "forced" to accept French citizenship. Even though they were ethnically, linguistically and culturally German. Not to mention many of them had a hatred of France stemming from anti-German policies in the region practiced by France in the 20-30s such as suppressing their language, culture and attempting to force them to converse in French and hold all their affairs in French. Thereby alienating any possible loyalty they might have felt towards the French State even more, as well as ironically leading to the invading Germans as being viewed as liberators instead of occupiers in that region.
De Gaulle followed his decision on the wish for peace as well. After all the French were war weary, opening up new local conflicts was not in his interests. Also he was afraid of the remote chance that the victorious powers such as the US and the UK might simply assign Alsace-Lorraine to the West German occupation zone in order to ensure a final peace settlement in the West, if there would have been eruptions of violence, revolution and civil war towards the French government in that region. Also it could have led to the UK/US deciding to disallow the French occupation of the Saarland on the basis that the French proved that they cannot sustain a peaceful occupation without revolts from the local population. Which probably would have followed had the French government decided to arrest every male who served in the German Army, which might have been a good 1/4th or 1/3rd of all adult men between 18-45 in the Alsace-Lorraine region.

by Dododecapod » Sun Nov 01, 2009 5:43 am
Skibereen wrote:If they were French Citizens then they committed treason- period. It doesnt matter how they got put in that position, i didnt say it was fair merely that it was so.

by Skibereen » Sun Nov 01, 2009 5:48 am

by Dododecapod » Sun Nov 01, 2009 5:55 am
Skibereen wrote:Under our own law, yes we would be. That answer should have been obvious, I am not debating the morality of the issue I am speaking on the reality of the charge. And it wasnt just "declared" a French territory, it was made French by a Treaty(if I am not mistaken).

by Bot-Hell » Sun Nov 01, 2009 6:01 am
Dododecapod wrote:Skibereen wrote:If they were French Citizens then they committed treason- period. It doesnt matter how they got put in that position, i didnt say it was fair merely that it was so.
So, if we declare Cuba to be US territory, are we then allowed to hang anyone who fights against it, as traitors?

by Benzei » Sun Nov 01, 2009 6:30 am
Dododecapod wrote:No, they were not traitors. A traitor is someone who changes his or her allegiance unlawfully, after it has been given; the Alsatians and Mosellans did not do that. Instead, they (like many people, in every war) found themselves faced with a choice of allegiances, and in such circumstance, one must make a choice. To choose one over the other is not to be disloyal; it is to be loyal to the greater allegiance. Merely being a citizen of a nation does not mean you have, or necessarily should have, your first loyalty to that country, particularly if it was not your choice to be a citizen of that nation.

by LOL ANARCHY NUBZ » Sun Nov 01, 2009 6:49 am
Bot-Hell wrote:Dododecapod wrote:Skibereen wrote:If they were French Citizens then they committed treason- period. It doesnt matter how they got put in that position, i didnt say it was fair merely that it was so.
So, if we declare Cuba to be US territory, are we then allowed to hang anyone who fights against it, as traitors?
There are always two sides to the concept of "traitors", and they are normally polar opposites. Take the founding fathers of the USA as a prime example. They are often held up as the paragon of patriotism in the US, but during their day and age they were the most vile of traitorous British citizens. Any time one group claims that a band of people are traitors another group will see them as patriots, almost without fail.
Since its typically the winners that write history, then the group in question here will go down in history as traitors. If Germany had won, they would be liberating patriots. Its all just a matter of perception.

by Cybach » Sun Nov 01, 2009 11:52 am
Dododecapod wrote:No, they were not traitors. A traitor is someone who changes his or her allegiance unlawfully, after it has been given; the Alsatians and Mosellans did not do that. Instead, they (like many people, in every war) found themselves faced with a choice of allegiances, and in such circumstance, one must make a choice. To choose one over the other is not to be disloyal; it is to be loyal to the greater allegiance. Merely being a citizen of a nation does not mean you have, or necessarily should have, your first loyalty to that country, particularly if it was not your choice to be a citizen of that nation.

by Mirkana » Sun Nov 01, 2009 2:33 pm

by Greed and Death » Sun Nov 01, 2009 2:35 pm

by Dododecapod » Sun Nov 01, 2009 8:11 pm
Cybach wrote:Dododecapod wrote:No, they were not traitors. A traitor is someone who changes his or her allegiance unlawfully, after it has been given; the Alsatians and Mosellans did not do that. Instead, they (like many people, in every war) found themselves faced with a choice of allegiances, and in such circumstance, one must make a choice. To choose one over the other is not to be disloyal; it is to be loyal to the greater allegiance. Merely being a citizen of a nation does not mean you have, or necessarily should have, your first loyalty to that country, particularly if it was not your choice to be a citizen of that nation.
More controversial were cases of men with one German and one French parent. They were treated more harshly for swearing their allegiance to their German lineage. Do you think they living in France and being half-French should be treated differently than full Germans in Alsace-Lorraine? Or if they identify with their German side more than their French, they should be seen the same as any full German Mosellan/Alsatian?

by Robarya » Sun Nov 01, 2009 8:34 pm
greed and death wrote:The area should have been given to Germany at the close of WWII.

by Skibereen » Sun Nov 01, 2009 9:23 pm
Dododecapod wrote:Skibereen wrote:Under our own law, yes we would be. That answer should have been obvious, I am not debating the morality of the issue I am speaking on the reality of the charge. And it wasnt just "declared" a French territory, it was made French by a Treaty(if I am not mistaken).
An imposed treaty (Versailles) that Germany, and most certainly the citizens involved, had no input into at all.
However, following your logic, these people STILL were not traitors, because Alsace/Lorraine was ceded BACK to Germany by the treaty of Compeigne prior to their service, making them GERMAN citizens. (Again, with no input by those affected.)

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