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(单词翻译:双击或拖选)
SCOTT SIMON, HOST:
Nazis2 don't always look like bad guys in funny helmets. The Nazis and other bigots in khaki slacks and bright polo shirts who marched in Charlottesville chanted racist3 and anti-Semitic slogans I'd rather not repeat on a Saturday - or at all. But it's discouraging to feel that you have to explain more than 70 years after Nazi1 Germany was defeated why Nazis are still the menace that embody4 evil.
The 20th century saw a lot of state-sanctioned mass murder - Stalin, Mao, Mengistu and Pol Pot, Armenia, Bosnia, Cambodia, Rwanda, Ethiopia's Red Terror, the Great Purge5, the Cultural Revolution and more. In America, there were lynchings and the cruelty of official segregation6, which followed the end of slavery and the massacre7 of so many Native Americans. To cite one or another doesn't excuse any, but Nazism8 was something extraordinary.
The laws on race and citizenship9 they began to impose on taking power in 1933, encoded in the Nuremberg Laws of 1935 invoked10 blood, soil and the twisted science of eugenics to make anti-Semitism and Aryan supremacy11 the law. They used those wicked decrees to begin to engineer the murder of millions. Much of the West was slow to believe they should worry about Nazism. Distinguished12 people, including George Bernard Shaw and Charles Lindbergh, said Germany's repression13 and race laws may be repellent but were Germany's business, that the U.S. and Britain committed equivalent crimes by segregation and colonialism.
It was Winston Churchill in June of 1940 who called the advance of Nazism a new dark age made more sinister14 and perhaps more protracted15 by the lights of perverted16 science. The fight to defeat that perverted science was bloody17, costly18 and came close to failing several times. But when the war was won, the U.S., Britain and Canada were forced to face their own most painful contradictions and began to turn themselves into better, freer and more diverse societies.
I've interviewed young Nazis and Ku Klux Klan members. They seem to be loveless, clueless clods who see only skin color and ethnicity or blood and soil, as the Nazis of the 1930s and 2017 call it. The world barely escaped from the death grip of Nazis 70 years ago. The men and women who won that battle gave us freedom, as much as those who served Washington, Lincoln and Harriet Tubman. It dishonors those who struggle against Nazis to forget the evil they were brave enough to confront and defeat.
1 Nazi | |
n.纳粹分子,adj.纳粹党的,纳粹的 | |
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2 Nazis | |
n.(德国的)纳粹党员( Nazi的名词复数 );纳粹主义 | |
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3 racist | |
n.种族主义者,种族主义分子 | |
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4 embody | |
vt.具体表达,使具体化;包含,收录 | |
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5 purge | |
n.整肃,清除,泻药,净化;vt.净化,清除,摆脱;vi.清除,通便,腹泻,变得清洁 | |
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6 segregation | |
n.隔离,种族隔离 | |
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7 massacre | |
n.残杀,大屠杀;v.残杀,集体屠杀 | |
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8 Nazism | |
n. 纳粹主义 | |
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9 citizenship | |
n.市民权,公民权,国民的义务(身份) | |
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10 invoked | |
v.援引( invoke的过去式和过去分词 );行使(权利等);祈求救助;恳求 | |
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11 supremacy | |
n.至上;至高权力 | |
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12 distinguished | |
adj.卓越的,杰出的,著名的 | |
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13 repression | |
n.镇压,抑制,抑压 | |
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14 sinister | |
adj.不吉利的,凶恶的,左边的 | |
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15 protracted | |
adj.拖延的;延长的v.拖延“protract”的过去式和过去分词 | |
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16 perverted | |
adj.不正当的v.滥用( pervert的过去式和过去分词 );腐蚀;败坏;使堕落 | |
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17 bloody | |
adj.非常的的;流血的;残忍的;adv.很;vt.血染 | |
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18 costly | |
adj.昂贵的,价值高的,豪华的 | |
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