Behind the Bastards - Part One: The Darkest Episode We Will Ever Do
Episode Date: May 14, 2024Robert weaves a hideous story for Margaret, about how post-war Germans started out trying to make Nazism impossible and wound up harming generations of poor children.See omnystudio.com/listener for pr...ivacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Call zone media.
What?
But not Robert.
Okay, so we're back.
Sophie proving surprisingly able to overpower me
and force me to delete the introduction
that I had written for this episode about German pedophiles,
which in retrospect, probably a good idea.
Our guest today, Margaret Killjoy,
do you think it was a good idea
that Sophie use such violence on me
to stop me from expressing myself
in a way that might have been harmful?
I think that this is a really good example
of why violence is often necessary.
Remember the org chart.
I think we can all agree on that. Remember the org chart. I think we can all agree on that.
Remember the org chart.
That's all I'll say.
Well, Sophie, when you make it about hierarchy,
I'm gonna now.
No, now you wanna overthrow me.
I'm conflicted now.
Before it was just on your side.
I get it, I get it.
Remember who's the nicest person you know?
Also me.
I mean, there are three of us
which makes this conversation a remarkably accurate
depiction of like the conversation the United States
is having right now about policing, you know?
And I, oh, Sophie just dropped.
We won the anarchist swan market.
Wow.
I got kicked out of the zoo.
I know, I know, Sophie.
That was incredible.
But I came back so fast to avenge myself.
Long live anarchy, that's all I'll say.
What did you say behind my back, you coward?
I took a victory lap.
Speaking of victory laps.
Speaking of victory laps, after 1945,
people who didn't like Nazis got to take a well-earned
victory lap.
Now as we discussed in our last episode, they also committed what I would say is a pretty
hard to forgive act of dereliction of duty in leaving most of those Nazis alive, which
is why folks like Joanna Herr, who we talked about last
week, continued to have an influence in society until the 1960s.
As we talked about, and there's a lot of scholarship on how the generation of Germans born during
the war and the generation of Germans born right after the war reacted and responded
to the Nazism of their parents and their grandparents.
And that is a complicated topic.
And we're going to be delving into kind of one facet of that today.
Because as we noted, you know, last week, one of the things that was complex about sort
of the reaction to Nazism in German society is that there had been this very long standing
series of attitudes inculcated
by child development experts, as well as just sort of widespread throughout other aspects
of society that children don't criticize their parents, right?
Except in therapy later.
Yeah, except in therapy later.
Well, that starts to be a thing in particularly in the 50s and 60s.
It's not really a thing in the late 40s immediately after the war, but once you get some distance,
it's like a dam breaks and people start to be more able to criticize the Nazi generation.
This is a big moment.
It's a shattering of glass moment.
Shattering glass can be necessary.
Sometimes you have to break a window
But also it's really easy to get cut and we are talking about the story that we will be talking about this week is
Unfortunately how a bunch of little kids got cut on the glass that was shattered here. This is a good metaphor
I mean, it's a terrible metaphor, but it's a well done. Thank you. Thank you
I have a question about yes how Germany handled all this
Well done. Thank you. Thank you. I have a question about yes how Germany handled all this
so like I actually know very little about how the generation immediately after
Because Germany presents this like we are so sorry. We are forever. Sorry. We will grovel for the rest of the world as compared to
Italy where you know my experience of talking with friends in Italy is that the fascists. There are Mussolini's in parliament.
Yeah, like the fascists weren't even taken out of power.
They were. Yeah.
They just had to change their party allegiance.
But the individual bureaucrats and stuff like that stayed in power.
It seems like Germany had more of a reckoning.
But then again, you have.
Yes. So I'm curious.
There was more as and as we're as we're watching with the fact that German police are now basically arresting a lot of
Jewish pro-Palestine protesters for anti-Semitism, you never want to be, and I was criticized
in the past because I have been supportive of, I think there are aspects of the German
reckoning with the Holocaust and with Nazism that have been supportive of, I think there are aspects of the German reckoning with the Holocaust
and with Nazism that have been really good.
If you go to, for example, Sachsenhausen, which is a concentration camp outside of Berlin,
that is an example of some of the stuff they've done right.
It's extremely well maintained.
The people who work there to show you around are very knowledgeable, not just about the
operation of the camp, but about the process of fascist takeover in the Holocaust.
And that does not mean that Germany on the whole
has done a good job of reckoning with its past,
because while there is this really big public contrition,
there were also like all of, a lot of the people
who were not the first tier Nazis,
most of those guys died or were imprisoned or executed,
but a lot of second and third
tier Nazis remained adjacent to or in power.
There were a lot of generals that became political figures after the war.
Like, it was not, Germany did, for example, a much better job of reckoning with their
history of fascism than Japan did because Japan just refused to and still does.
That is a valid criticism of Japanese society
that was recently made partly by a guy
with a homemade shotgun against one of the folks
who was a big part of denying that history, Shinzo Abe,
whose dad was like, we're getting very off topic.
But there have been some really good books written
by Germans whose whose parents were Nazis
or grandparents were Nazis.
There has been a lot of scholarship on the different ways in which German society has
tried to reckon with this.
And today we're going to be talking about one man's reckoning with his Nazi parents
and the Nazi past of his nation, Helmut Kintler.
As important as choosing the right destination when traveling is choosing the right travel partner.
Gene!
Gene Fodor!
Gene, what's going on?
But be careful, because the worst trips result
when two partners have two different agendas.
The CIA really need your help, Gene.
Freeze, Americano!
Gene, run!
Listen to Fodor's Guide to Espionage on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever
you get your podcasts.
Hi, guys.
Nancy Grace here, host of podcast Crime Stories with Nancy Grace.
I've dedicated my life to fighting crime and helping crime victims. For a decade, I prosecuted
violent felonies. Every day is a mission. Every day is a chance to stop crime and keep
one more person safe. Listen to Crime Stories with Nancy Grace on the iHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast. The Therapy for Black Girls podcast is your space to explore mental health, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
The Therapy for Black Girls podcast is your space
to explore mental health, personal development,
and all the small decisions we can make
to become the best possible versions of ourselves.
I'm your host, Dr. Joy Hardin Bradford,
a licensed psychologist in Atlanta, Georgia.
And I can't wait for you to join the conversation
every Wednesday.
Listen to The Therapy for Black Girls podcast on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or
wherever you get your podcasts.
Take good care and we'll see you there.
So regular listeners, basically, initially, the last week's episodes were like going to
be the introduction to this episode
explaining the backstory that was necessary
to understand Helmut Kintler.
We wound up writing,
I wound up writing 19 pages of backstory.
So like the degree of bastard this guy is,
is it took two episodes to set up his entry onto the scene.
He is a real mother of a fucker.
You did it, you did a Margaret, you did a context.
Yeah, you have to.
There's so much that's necessary for this guy
because what he does is so objectively nuts
that it just seems like,
I feel like it's irresponsible to not try
to really go hard on the context.
And I think now that we've talked about
some of these earlier figures in the history of
German attitudes towards how you teach and raise children that led into and were part
of the Nazi period, now we can actually talk about Kindler.
And we mentioned him in episode one, right?
He is one of those kids who is raised on Daniel Schreber's techniques.
His dads are fans of them, but yeah, I'm getting ahead of myself.
Kindler was born on July 2nd, 1928,
which was historically one of the worst times
to be born a German.
He picks the absolute shittiest time to be born German.
Although like if he was born two years earlier,
he'd probably be dead.
He probably have died, right?
And it's also fair to note that since Germany
was founded in 1870, roughly half the times
you could have been born German
were bad times to be born German.
So I don't know.
While it is true, again, as we noted in part one,
that people can overstate the degree to which
future Nazis were raised on Schreiber's techniques,
Helmut Kintler was specifically raised
on Dr. Schreiber's techniques.
And I'm gonna read again that quote
from Rachel Aviv's New Yorker article.
Kentler's career was framed by his belief in the damage wrought by dominant fathers.
An early memory was of walking in the forest on a spring day and running to keep up with
his father.
I had only one wish, that he should take my hand and hold it in his, Kentler wrote in
a parenting magazine in 1983.
But his father, a lieutenant in the First World War, believed in Rod and Bataan pedagogy,
as Kintler put it.
So we see both, that's some evidence of like, because his dad is specifically a fan of Schreiber,
it's also evidence that like, the kind of parenting advice that Herrera is giving during
the Nazi period predates her, right?
This attitude that like, no, we do not touch our children other than to hit them.
Right? that like, no, we do not touch our children other than to hit them, right?
And that's such like, that is such an evocative memory for him to have of like,
I desperately wanted my father to just hold my hand.
Just some sort of-
It makes me wanna empathize with him,
but I'm afraid to.
Yeah.
You'll remember what show I'm on.
You should be.
Although you have to,
cause like only by kind of empathizing.
Yeah, this is part of the difficulty, right?
You have to empathize with Kentler
to understand why he does the terrible things he does.
You have to understand,
you have to empathize with these generations
of abused German kids.
And you have to do that while not using that
to forgive or mitigate the Holocaust,
because it doesn't.
But you can't understand how people are in the position
where, well, they'll do that without understanding
how they're raised.
It does impact them.
It's like, you can't understand all of the horrible things
the American, like that our country has done and does
without understanding the degree to which Americans
are desensitized to violence, you know?
Like that's a factor.
It doesn't mitigate the bad things that we do,
but it does influence how they work out.
One day there's gonna be a,
if there's still podcasts a hundred years from now,
if so dear, a hundred years from now,
I feel terrible for you.
They're gonna be talking about America land of firearms.
Well, of course that happened.
Yeah, obviously.
Yeah, of course all of the horrible things that are about to happen, happened.
Maybe folks, maybe.
So as I stated, Kintler's parents were huge friends of Daniel Schreiber
to the extent that they didn't just read his books.
They bought the merch.
When Kintler dis misbehaved, his father bought a or threatened
to buy a contraption to like lock his shoulders into place.
One of those nightmare devices that we talked about.
When Kintler talked it of turn, his dad would hit the table and shout, when the father talks,
the children must be silent.
So he is very much raised the same way a lot of German children are during the pre and
immediately like the early Nazi era.
When he was 10, Helmut got to experience Kristallnacht from the perspective of a passive bystander.
Now his father is one of these military officers who is not an immediate Nazi because Hitler's,
I think he comes from that Prussian perspective of like, well, this is just some fucking corporal.
Like why are we going to listen to what he has to say?
So his dad is not out in the streets.
His dad is not a brown shirt.
And in fact, when Helmut is like woken up in the night by the sound of broken glass
and violence outside, he recalls seeing his father in a nightdress on the phone.
Quote, in his loud dominant voice, my father called for a police deployment because someone
had broken into our building.
It was a longer conversation during which my father became ever quieter.
And ultimately he timidly hung up the receiver. He stood there like he had collapsed and quietly
said to my mother, who had been standing next to him for some time, they're going after
the Jews." Now, that does not depict to me a man who is happy about Kristallnacht. But,
as we will cover, this is also not a man who was willing to do a goddamn thing about it. His dad is not a fervent Nazi, but he also, he doesn't seem, he seems to have found the
disorder distasteful, not to have had any sympathy with the Jews being victimized.
And this is evident in the fact that later that night, a Jewish family who lived in the
same building below the Kintlers came to the Kintler's door begging to stay in their apartment
for the
night, right? So that they would be protected from the mob. And Helmut's dad just said,
no, that will really not be possible here. And then close the door.
I can fucking hear it. You know, like, oh, I just, it's not going to work out.
Nope. That's just not, that's not how it's done.
Just not going to be possible. Not possible for us to shield you, right?
Yeah.
And so here, again, I think Helmut's both in kind of the sort of childhood that he has,
which is representative of older, like a lot of Prussian child rearing techniques and of
the stuff Herr is saying, and in this experience, this is more the norm than having a dad who
was one of the brown shirts, right?
Yeah.
And in some ways, kind of worse.
I almost feel like you're a worse person
for being this guy.
Or you're spineless.
Yeah, exactly.
Than one of the monsters in the streets.
It's not even that you're a worse or a better person.
It's that the monsters in the streets
are out in the streets.
They are wearing their evil openly.
You're hiding in your house
and trying to pretend that's not you.
Right.
And it's the conservative spineless
as compared to the liberal spineless.
The liberal spineless would have said the same thing.
Oh, you can't come in.
But they would have like cried about it later.
Yeah, it's just too dangerous for my family, right?
Yeah.
Yeah, it is.
So it is perhaps not surprising that this is the moment
in which little Helmut Kindler stopped respecting
and perhaps even loving his father.
He claims it was a mix of-
Oh, stop making me like him.
Oh, right, I've heard this show before.
He's not unreasonable up to a point, right?
Yeah.
And he claims it's not just what his father does.
It's seeing his dad, not just kind of powerless,
because his dad is powerless to stop the disorder
and his dad also refuses to help those people.
And at the same time, his dad's in a night shirt.
And so Helmut sees his father's skinny naked legs and quote,
my whole father suddenly seemed laughable to me.
You know, this is apparently a very searing moment for him.
Yeah, because you have this like strong, I'm, I'm Nazi dad.
I'm this military officer, not, not Nazi.
He was an imperial German officer.
He's going to end up a Nazi.
He does end up a Nazi.
Yeah.
Future Nazis of Germany.
You are right.
But that is, it's interesting to me getting these kind of, this kind of context,
because you read about Kristallnacht and you can read in a bigger history book about
the reactions of like
Families who are bystanders like Helmut's family was but you rarely get that little bit of detail
We're like no it's not just the horror of what was happening and my dad's refusal to do anything to protect people
It was also seeing his his like weird naked legs
That like made him human in this moment that made me no longer respect
him. That's such an interesting bit of context, I guess, that you don't really get about moments
of historic import like this. Yeah. Yeah. Things did not get better for Helmut on the
dad front from that point forward. Helmut Kintler's dad was recalled to active duty
when World War II, the big dub dubdub dose started, and he became a senior officer working at Army High Command in Berlin.
So he is, you are right, now fully a Nazi.
Like, Kintler later complained, quote, my father's authority was never based on his
own accomplishment, but based on the large institutions in which he snuck into.
That rubbed off on him. I also think that's an interesting way of like interpreting your father's life and work.
Yeah, because it's like apparatus.
I mean, I assume I know that a lot of European and Eastern European like the officer class
is sort of an almost an aristocratic class.
Yes.
Yes.
You know, and so it was basically stuck into by like virtue of birth and like went to the
schools and stuff.
Yeah.
And there was a good version and a bad version of this guy.
I just said that like a lot of these Prussians who hated the Nazis, you know, just did it
because Hitler was a corporal.
But like that former Hitler youth guy I talked about, his grandpa, who was one of these Prussian
officers died in a concentration
camp because he refused to ever embrace the Nazis. Yeah. So like Helmut's dad is not making the only
choice, right? He is making the worst choice. Yeah. No, and that their work, that's, that's a good
point that there were conservatives who genuinely were like, we, the Nazi thing is a step too far.
And you have a lot of like, like Catholic priests and stuff, a lot of them were very conservative,
but were entirely anti-Nazi and died for it.
And you also have, more common than that even, a lot of particularly conservative Catholics,
a decent number who supported the Nazis because they were afraid of the communists and then
during the Third Reich started taking risks to fight the Nazis, right?
That's also a kind of guy who exists and that is you know, that's a at least you wound up at the right place
Right, right not not soon enough to have averted the bigger problem
But that does happen for a lot of people not helmet though
His dad survives the war and is utterly broken by the Nazi defeat
He's just one of these guys who is never a functional person
again after Germany just gets smashed for this.
At this point, he has lost two world wars.
Yeah, yeah, totally.
Yeah, and was one of these guys who was raised,
he was raised in the post-Franco-Prussian war generation
of like Germany is going on its way
to being the great world power.
And he's just can't exist.
A decent number of guys.
This is kind of the death of a lot of Prussianism, right?
Yeah.
So yeah, Helmut is 17 when the war ends.
And again, as a 17 year old in Berlin,
he would have seen some shit.
When his dad came home, he later recalled,
I never again obeyed him and I felt terribly alone.
So it's both, he knows what his family's done was wrong.
He knows he does not for a second have any moral difficulty divorcing himself from his
father.
But this also is traumatic, right?
Cutting your family off, even when they are the not like very much Nazis meeting Hitler
on a regular basis, Nazis, is still traumatic because you're
still alone.
You have nothing and you have nothing in this country that has been completely flattened
by war.
Helmut's reaction was not uncommon for the children of the generation that voted Hitler
into power and largely waged his wars and committed his atrocities.
Helmut and his fellow countrymen starting in the late 40s would be the first of their
countrymen to wrestle with the issue of what it meant to be German in the post-Hitler era,
and what had that whole mad period revealed about the German psyche.
In short, everyone starts asking the question, this really kicks off in the 50s, what the
fuck was wrong with our parents, right?
Helmut grew into a scholar, becoming both an electrical engineer and a theologian.
And then after his father died, starting to study psychology, medicine, and philosophy.
He's a polymath.
He became an advocate of emancipatory youth work, a community support activity in which
young people were given opportunities to learn informally by doing different useful tasks
in their community.
This is going to break my heart.
Oh, it's so much worse.
Whenever there's an adult involved in youth liberation, I'm always a little like, I've
heard about this kind of guy.
Not every guy, but I've heard about this kind of guy.
He is one, yeah.
As he grows older and keeps stacking up degrees, his interest in child rearing deepened and
he began to see Nazism as the result of a sickness that had been spread initially
by Dr. Schreber, the focus of our first episode last week, right?
Because he's raised on Schreber, right?
This is where a lot of the idea that Schreber was the foundation of a lot of Nazi culture
comes from, is guys like Helmut who are raised on him.
And he is overextending his experiences
onto the whole nation, but also he's evidenced
that it's not an insignificant factor, right?
A great deal of Schreiber's exercises
had existed to prevent sexual immorality.
And this happened to coincide with the fact
that the Nazis, at least the ones who survived
the night of long knives, a lot of them were seen as prudes.
Now, this is not entirely accurate, right?
As we talked about in previous episodes, Nazis were actually like very pro-sex in ways that
made a lot of conservatism comfortable.
And the initial thing that happens after the Nazis fall is there is this wave of sexual
conservatism that sweeps German society because a lot of these religious conservatives
are kind of the people who are influential first after the Nazis fall.
And what you're going to see with Herzog's generation is reaction to that wave of sexual
conservatism after the war ended that gets kind of in some cases erroneously conflated
with Nazi sexual conservatism.
There are aspects of this that are historically valid, as in the gay rights movement starts
to take off in Germany with members of Helmut's generation, right?
And that is a reaction to the Nazi crackdown.
But there's also this belief that the Nazis were prudes about things like the female orgasm
and contraception that are not really accurate, right?
Historian Dagmar Herzog writes, there was more detailed discussion of the best techniques
for enhancing female orgasm under Nazism than there would be in the far more conservative
decade of the 1950s.
But this is something that historians can prize apart now.
It's not something that would have been immediately obvious to people like Helmut Kindler.
So there's this, again, this conflation
with the post-war conservatism and Nazi sexual conservatism
that manifests in a general reaction
against sexual conservatism, right?
This is actually one of the things
that makes historians so cool and interesting
is that a historian 40 years later
sometimes has a better way of understanding something
than someone who grew up in that space.
Yeah.
You have to think for Kintler, you're growing up, you're seeing these Nazis who are certainly
very much prudish about certain things.
And Kintler is homosexual, right?
He grows up to understand that about himself.
And the Nazis were very repressive about that.
And also the people who take over after the Nazis are super conservative.
And to a kid like Kindler, a teenager, a young adult, it's the same adults more or less who
are in power, right?
That were in power under the Nazis.
So it all kind of comes together for you.
Even though kind of what you're seeing is a lot of the conservatives who had been willing
to work with the Nazis get power after the Nazis are out.
And we're not just talking about like
leading the country, we're talking about like
on like neighborhood level, city level, whatnot.
Like a lot of those people who were, you know,
more religiously conservative than guys like Himmler
are able to kind of make their, like push their,
their attitudes towards sexuality.
It's more complicated than that.
So it's kind of Helmets's dad's style.
It's the non, it's not the first through the gate Nazis.
It's the generic conservatives who were good Nazis.
Yeah.
Therefore, their ideology became influential after the war because then the more radical
Nazis are all smashed.
Yeah, exactly.
Exactly.
And it's, it's interesting.
I want to read another quote about like the prudishness that kind of echoed in German society after
the Nazis are forced from power, written by Aviv and the New Yorker.
The post-war years in West Germany were marked by an intense preoccupation with sexual propriety
as if decorum could solve the nation's moral crisis and clinsic of guilt.
One's own offspring did penance for Auschwitz, the German poet Olaf Munzberg
wrote, with ethics and morality forcefully jammed into them. Women's reproductive rights
were severely restricted and the policing of homosexual encounters, a hallmark of Nazism,
persisted. In the two decades after the war, roughly 100,000 men were prosecuted for this
crime. Kintler was attracted to men and felt as if he always had one leg in prison because
of the risks involved in consummating his desires.
I'm sure a lot of people can empathize with that particular feeling.
He found Solis in the book Corridan by Andre Geid, a series of Socratic dialogues about
the naturalist-ness of queer love.
This book took away my fear of being a failure and of being rejected, of being a negative
biological variant, he wrote in a 1985 essay called
Our Homosexuality.
But nothing could be done to remedy his relationship with his parents.
They no longer loved me, he wrote.
So it's very frustrating how empathetic this guy is right now.
Yeah, no, exactly.
This is going to be heartbreaking.
I really am sorry.
No, I'm prepared for it.
I'm building my emotional wall where I don't care about Helmut.
So Helmut comes to the conclusion like a lot of leftists, and he is a leftist.
He is a leftist academic of his era, that sexual repression had been a large part of
what led to Nazism.
And if sexual repression led to Nazis, sexual liberation must be the antidote.
Now, this is going to bring us into a little bit
of a digression because you cannot understand popular left-wing
post-war attitudes towards sex and fascism in Germany
and elsewhere in the West.
Without understanding a fella,
I do like to talk about Wilhelm Reich.
Reich was, yeah, yeah, everybody loves Reich.
He's a fun guy.
Yeah.
I'm excited, because I actually don't know that much
about him and he comes up all the time.
We talked to his kid once for a cracked article
that was very fascinating.
Ryke was a psychoanalyst who developed fascinating
and increasingly obscure theories about sexual energy.
He's one of these guys who is both a serious
and respected academic and also a crank.
Those two things exist simultaneously within Reich.
In the wake of World War I,
he noticed that a great deal of his patients acted physically
in ways that seemed to mirror their closed off
and guarded emotions.
And this led him to the idea that people's past trauma
was not just present in their mind mind but locked in their body too.
I'm going to quote from an article on Reich and the Guardian here.
What Reich was seeing was not a hysterical symptom to be decoded, but rather a kind of
clenching and clamping that pervaded a person's entire being.
Attention so impenetrable, it reminded him of armor.
He thought it was a defense against feeling, especially anxiety, rage, and sexual excitement.
If experiences were too painful and distressing, if emotional expression was forbidden or sexual
desire prohibited, then the only alternative was to tense up and lock it away.
This process created a permanent physical shield around the vulnerable self, protecting
it from pain at the cost of numbing it to pleasure.
Over the next decade, he began to work with his patients' bodies, first verbally and
then by touching them, an act totally prohibited in psychoanalysis.
To his amazement, he found that when he worked on these regions of tension, the habitual
expressions of fright, the clenched fists or rigid bellies, the feelings lodged there
could be brought to the surface and released.
Patients remembered long ago incidents of shaming or unwanted invasion, experiencing
the fury or despair they'd been unable to feel at the time.
This emotional release was often accompanied
by a pleasurable rippling feeling,
Reich called streaming.
No, this is, I mean, this is what people,
people are into this kind of stuff now.
Yes, this is very real.
Yes. Yeah.
He's wildly ahead of his time.
He's a hundred years ahead of his time
on this kind of stuff.
Like that he has reached a powerfully important
understanding about how trauma and memory work, right?
Now, Reich is not an abusive grifter.
I wouldn't call him that,
but you could also see how an abusive grifter
could take advantage of this idea.
And many have in the generation sense
to traumatize people, right?
Especially since one of the things Reich's going to do
that may or may not kind of, it's a mistake one of the things Reich's going to do that may or may not kind of,
it's a mistake in some ways that he's going to do
is he ties that feeling of release to the orgasm,
which he feels is how the body naturally releases tension
in order to cleanse itself of that armor.
And again- That is like one of the ways.
It's one of the ways.
He does this thing that a lot of people do
is he does overextend the importance of specifically the orgasm
to these kinds of physical release
that can be a part of healing from trauma.
But he's not wrong that this can be a release
that helps you heal from trauma, right?
It's better than like Graham cracker man
who's like, you can't, like,
whenever people are like, why are men so angry all the time?
And I'm like, maybe it's because they never masturbate.
Maybe it's because they never masturbate
and they don't, you know, sex can be helpful
in dealing with trauma.
If it's not for you, that's also perfectly normal.
It isn't always helpful. Right?
Yeah.
And again, one of the issues here is not that Reich is,
because Reich is by kind of overextending this,
he's making some errors, but he's doing a thing that is normal, because Reich is by kind of overextending this, he's making some errors,
but he's doing a thing that is normal, right?
Where you realize something and then it takes you a while to kind of dial in the degree
to which that's actually part of the factor.
But he has made a real realization.
However, you can see how like, if you start teaching that you can heal your emotional
trauma with orgasm, a lot of very similar kinds of problematic dudes
are going to use this idea as ammunition
to make sex cults, right?
This is, I don't blame Reich for that.
I've met those people in real life now.
That's going to happen.
Yes, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yes, I have been to enough tantric retreats
that I have met like 17 of that guy.
Reich was among the first intellectuals
who came to the conclusion that sexual liberation
was a necessary precursor for improving mankind.
He coins the term sexual revolution in 1930
to describe the utopia that we could have
if people got over their poisonous old-timey ideas
about sex and embraced it without shame
as the healing method that it was.
1930 is where we get the term sexual.
That is how far ahead Reich is on some shit.
And he's German, right?
Yeah, he is extremely German.
He moved to Berlin in 1930.
Yeah.
They were, that's what's so,
the places where really bad stuff is about to happen
is sometimes the place where all of the most advanced
thinking about a lot of stuff is also happening.
And he moves to Berlin in 1930 because it is basically a paradise for sexual experimentation,
right?
Yeah.
It is also full of Nazi thugs and about to be fuller.
And of course, Reich is one of the people who has to flee the country when Hitler takes
power.
He spends the early Nazi years writing a book called The Mass Psychology of Fascism that
cites the patriarchal family
unit that had existed in mainstream German society as effectively a recruiting tactic
for the Nazis.
Reich who was a pretty obsessive guy does credit more to sex than it could realistically
achieve.
The Guardian's Olivia Leang points out that no less of mine than Michel Foucault critiqued
this in a 1976 book on the history of sexuality.
Quote.
Yeah, he's not a famously anti-sex guy, that Foucault.
He is not anti-sex, problematically pro-sex in some ways.
Yeah.
This is from The Guardian.
If the orgasm is so powerful, Foucault asks,
why is it that the vastly expanded sexual liberties
of the intervening years have failed to dissolve capitalism
or topple the patriarchy,
despite all Reich's ardent predictions to the contrary.
And that is one really good critique on the overextension of this that Reich does is like,
well, the actual sexual revolution generation are now the boomers.
And like, yeah, right.
You need a class analysis in order to have a successful revolution.
Like it can't be the only thing, but it's gotta be in there.
And orgasms certainly aren't enough on their own.
No.
Now at least part of the reason why we don't have this revolution that Reich presents is
that a lot of the dudes, Helmut Kintler Chief among them, who took Reich's theories about
the healing power of sex and necessity of sexual revolution, decided to apply it not
just to themselves and their
fellow adults, but to little kids.
This is where things get really bad.
What if before things get really bad, we have a little palate cleanser?
Little ad break?
Sure.
Yeah.
Just so we feel good about everything in the world, you know?
We can spend our money on stuff.
We'll move from our friend Wilhelmhelm Reich, to whatever these ads are,
which hopefully will sell you an Orgone generator.
Talk about that in a second.
I'm Scott Weinberger,
journalist and former deputy sheriff.
In my new podcast series, Cold-Blooded,
the Apollo Gym Murders,
I'm embedded in the cold case investigation into the death of firefighter Billy Halpert.
It's just a shame, you know, that they took him from us.
Experience this investigation in a truly unique way.
Knocking on doors, uncovering new evidence, including the DNA of a potential killer.
My name is Danny Smith.
I'm a detective with the Myanmar Police Department.
This is Scott Weinberger.
We're actually reopening an old case and your name came up.
Untangling secrets that may reveal the answers to not only one murder, but almost a dozen.
I thought they were going to kill me, so I kept my mouth shut and I didn't say anything
all these years.
I didn't say anything all these years I didn't say. Listen to cold blooded the apology murders on the I heart
radio app Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
If you love sports and true crime than there's a new
podcast from executive producer Dan Patrick and hosted by me
Jay Harris,
that you won't want to miss. Playing Dirty, Sports Scandals. Each week I'm squeezing
the juiciest details from some of the biggest sports scandals ever. I'm talking Marcus
Dixon, Olympic Gymnastics, Cain Velasquez, Salacious Super Bowl level scandals. Join
me on the dark side of sports by listening to Playing Dirty Sports Scandals on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hello acclaimed comics writer and notorious Scott Summers hater Rosie Knight.
Well hello Emmy-winning podcaster and totally unbiased Targaryen royal supporter, Jason Concepcion.
Rosie, somehow the X-Ray Vision podcast has returned. It feels so good.
It does. And like always, we'll be here every week covering the wide world of TV, movies,
comics, and geek culture.
That's right. We'll be talking about Batman, heroes of that stature, and of course, we'll
be inviting our friends in the industry to come geek out with us and share stories. We'll be talking about Batman, heroes of that stature. And of course, we'll be inviting our friends
in the industry to come geek out with us and share stories.
We'll hear from TV writers, actors, comics,
creators, pop culture critics, and more.
Nothing is off the table, because geek culture
is pop culture.
And we can't wait to share our love of it all with you
every single week.
Listen to X-Ray Vision on the iHeart radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
We're back.
So, Ryke is, you know, an interesting fellow.
His post-war career is going to yield to him
increasingly getting into pseudoscience.
He builds these things called,
he comes up with this idea of like this,
like sexual energy basically that you can solidify
out of the atmosphere called orgone
and he builds these accumulators that like you sit in,
all sorts of wacky stuff.
He's not a bastard, but anyway,
he dies in a prison cell.
I learned about that from Kate Bush.
Yeah.
Oh, good.
A Kate Bush song, Cloud Busting, I think. Isn't that about what I'm writing? Cloud Busting, yeah, in a prison cell. I learned about that from Kate Bush. Oh good!
Kate Bush song, Cloud Busting I think.
Isn't that about Willem Rey?
Yeah, Cloud Busting. That's something Rey did.
One of the most awkward first dates I've ever been on in my life, this guy was like,
come on over and let's watch a movie.
And then I get to his place and he's like,
I don't have a couch, I only have my bed.
But I picked a movie out and it was this black and white movie that was like a hippie sex cult doing a like pornographic fiction movie about Willem Reich.
Oh boy.
I kind of want to see that.
I know in any other context.
Not in that way.
Yeah.
Anyway.
Folks, if you want to show a new friend a weird hippie sex cult movie, do it in like separate chairs, you know?
Like strive to create a comfortable environment
for that kind of thing.
Yeah, that guy, if you're listening, I forgive you.
We're still friends.
As I said, Reich dies in a prison cell.
His books are burned in the US
in the only federal government sanctioned book burning
in US history.
Specifically, Reich's books.
What does he get in prison for?
Smut peddling, basically.
I keep forgetting that's illegal.
Yeah, yeah.
It's about to be again.
Yeah, it's about to be again.
So Helmut Kintler found Reich's work on fascism resonant because it is.
In 1960, he got his degree in psychology.
He expressed excitement that he could now work, quote, as an engineer in the realm of
the manipulatable soul. And this is where we should start getting our sinking, that
sinking feeling in the pit of our stomach about Kintler. That is not what you should
see yourself as as a psychologist. That's a bad thing to want to be, manipulating souls.
No, and I'm generally pro robe and cloak, but if you were a psychologist, that's actually
the only job where you're not allowed to wear cloaks and robes.
Yeah. So, out of a desire, in his words, to turn his passions into a profession, he gets
a degree in social education.
His dissertation is titled Parents Learn Sex Education, and it is essentially an application
of Reich's ideas about sexual energy to child rearing.
Some of this was reasonable.
Kintler begged parents to tell their children they should not be ashamed of feeling sexual
desire.
Right?
Quote, once the first feelings of shame exist, they multiply easily and expand into all areas
of life.
This is responsible advice.
And in giving it, Kintler fits right in with this new generation of post-war German left-wing
liberals who see deep sexual roots in the evil of the Nazis.
Rachel Aviv writes, In 1977, the sociologist Klaus Thewell-White published Male Fantasies,
a two volume book that drew on the diaries of German paramilitary fighters and concluded
that their inhibited drives, along with the fear of anything gooey, gushing or smelly,
had been channeled into a new outlet, destruction.
Kintler argued that ideas like Schreber's had poisoned three generations of Germans,
creating authoritarian personalities
who have to identify with a great man around them to feel great themselves.
Kittler's goal was to develop a child-rearing philosophy for a new kind of German man.
Sexual liberation, he wrote, was the, quote, best way to prevent another Auschwitz.
Now, this is not just problematic.
It's very common on the left, right?
Historian Dagmar Herzog, who wrote that book, Sex After Fascism, that again, if you're
going to read one book on sex and Nazism, that's the one, describes how absolutely widespread
this thinking is among post-war leftists.
Members of the West German-
We both, on our own shows, had to about leftists who are like otherwise somewhat interesting,
who had some real wrong ideas, whether or not they acted on them around this kind of
stuff.
Yes.
Yes, indeed.
And this is like the heartbeat at the center of like that problem.
Yeah.
Here's Herzog.
Members of the West German New Left Student Movement, along with many of their liberal
elders defended activism on behalf of sexual emancipation on the grounds that sexual repression
was not merely a characteristic of fascism, but its very cause.
As one author put it, it would be wrong to hold the view that all of what happened in
Auschwitz was typically German.
It was typical for a society that suppresses sexuality.
Another argued that brutality and the lust for destruction become substitutes
for bodily pleasure. This is how the seemingly incredible contradiction that the butchers
of Auschwitz were and would become again, respectable harmless citizens is resolved.
Or as another phrased it even more succinctly, in the fascist rebellion, the energies of
inhibited sexuality formed into genocide.
I think it was anti-Semitism.
I think it was anti-Semitism.
I think it was a lotSemitism. I think it was anti-Semitism. I think it was a lot of things, nationalism,
these fears of like the memories of the famine
in World War I that led to,
that provided fertile ground for this belief
about like useless eaters that have to be pruned away, right?
A lot of things actually went into the Holocaust.
This is, I think what's happening here,
part of what's happening here, right?
This conclusion that Auschwitz was a result of sexual repression is a result of like two
inner woven really problematic things that we all still deal with today. One of them
is that belief that like, whatever it is that you are personally into insulates you from
the worst possible things in society, right?
Because I am sexually liberated. I can't become a Nazi.
And the other, the most dangerous thing in the world, is the belief that
whatever you are currently doing because you like it is the solution to saving the world, right?
I enjoy having sex with my friends. Having sex with my friends will solve Nazism, right?
Totally.
Yeah.
Podcasting, however, that's true.
That is the only thing that can save us.
We will successfully, yeah.
Yeah.
Now you see, Margaret, I base my conclusion
that podcasting will save us purely on the fact
that having read my Hitler,
I know the only thing that can convince people of anything
is the human voice, right?
So podcasting, great method for changing society.
Well, that's what's so interesting about this.
Fallacy is you can always justify whatever it is.
Yeah. You know, like we could pick a thing and be like, this is why
it's inherently anti-fascist to do model train collecting closely to Robert's
statement.
Where were you going there?
And then you got there.
Congrats.
I always get that.
This is dangerous for everyone, right?
For example, property destruction, breaking windows, that kind of shit can and have been
part of successful liberatory movements, but also some people who like breaking windows
convince themselves that's
the sum of what is necessary to achieve their political goals. On the same token, you have a
lot of liberals who feel very comfortable going out and voting and donating money to the DNC who
have convinced themselves that's all that's necessary to solve our fascism problem. It's
the most dangerous idea that you can convince yourself of is that whatever you're doing is the thing
that everyone needs to be doing
to solve our biggest problems, right?
The thing that you're currently comfortable doing
is the solution.
And if people who aren't doing that are wrong
is a big part of it.
Cause if you find out how to make the thing
that you're already doing work
towards an emancipatory society, great.
Yeah, and I'm a believer that both voting and breaking windows probably contain parts of solutions
that are, that could potentially be parts of solutions.
Right.
And also both famously part of the rise of Hitler because-
Both part of the rise of Hitler and part of the success of the civil rights movement,
you know?
Right, exactly.
Yeah.
Anyway, sexual mores and repression
in pre-World War II German society
are worth studying as they relate to the Nazis.
I hope I'm not, I think it's very worth studying,
but Kindler and his colleagues,
there's a desperation in their desire
to apply this kind of unified, cum-based theory
to the war crimes of their fathers, right?
They weren't getting off enough, and if I get off enough,
I don't have to worry about being a Nazi like my dad, right?
And Kintler's work is partly a refutation of his own father.
One of his first published articles
is a study on adultery that described it,
weirdly in ways the Nazis wouldn't totally disagreed with
as positive, right?
Right.
Again, Kintler's probably not up
on some of the obscure Himmler-esque attitudes,
some of the shit in the SS Magazine
about how adultery is healthy,
but he comes to the same conclusion, which is interesting.
Fucking Freud would have loved this guy.
Oh my God.
Because he's obsessed with his father and fucking kids.
We haven't gotten to the fucking kids part,
but you sort of spoiled it.
You know it's coming, you know it's,
God, that was not.
That was unintentional. That was really seriously not intentional it wasn't you know it's
genuine like yeah yeah genuine reaction yeah near the end of the 1960s when
Hitler was growing an influence and a lot of these discussion or when Kentler, sorry. I was like, wait, he's back? He just have to be this guy?
Could your name be closer to Hitler?
It's okay, every time you say Herzog,
I'm imagining Werner Herzog doing whatever it is you're saying.
So am I.
So am I.
My head canon is that Dagmar and Werner had a fling.
I know very little about her,
but I feel like she and Werner
would have been into each other.
And then we could get a documentary about it
called Herzog on Herzog, which I think
does exist, but in a different form.
Now near the end of the 1960s, when Kintler was growing an influence in the German new
left and a lot of these discussions are going around, German educators are also creating
experimental daycares.
This started in 30 some towns and cities and these experimental daycares. This started in 30 some towns and cities, and these experimental daycares are both,
there's some good ideas going around, and they are also as fucking problematic as it
is possible to be.
Aviv writes, quote, children were encouraged to be naked and explore one another's bodies.
In 1976, the magazine Das Blatt argued that forbidden sexual desire such as that for children
was the revolutionary event that turns our everyday life on its head, that lets feelings
break out and shatter the basis of our thinking.
So you see, we've made the jump here from the initial idea, children should not be shamed
if they're curious about their own bodies or about sex, which is fine, to children should
be encouraged to get naked and touch each other
at daycare, which is a bad idea.
And from there we go to, it's okay if adults are attracted to kids because having any sexual
taboos is counter-revolutionary.
Now what has happened here, what's hinted at by that, and what is actually happening
here is that a chunk of pedophiles have gotten into the
German left and have injected their fetishes, draped in revolutionary and scientific terms,
into the ideological bloodstream of the German new left.
Now that doesn't mean that these pedophiles don't legitimately have some left-wing ideas.
I say legitimately that they really believe them.
It means they are purposefully taking their attraction to children and trying
to turn it into something political. This happens from people who are not pedophiles
as someone who's like polyamorous. I have seen some poly people who've tried to make
the argument that like it's an inherently revolutionary activity. No, it's not. There
are polyamorous cops out there, right? Like it's, it's, it's fine, but it's not, like being gay is not inherently revolutionary.
You know?
Like it can be if your society is inherently like repressive of homosexuality, but as we
have seen with cop pride parades, space can be made within an authoritarian regime for
that sort of thing.
They're pretty good at that.
That's kind of capitalism's thing is figuring out how to incorporate all of the things that
are trying to fight it.
Yeah, that's what makes it so much stronger than straight up fascism, right?
That's the honestly, that's why it's got the lasting power.
Fascism is an idea that will always come back.
Yeah, but like, yeah, capitalism is a overall stuck around a little bit more sturdily.
It's this like married to this kind of neoliberal idea about like, yeah, privatizing, you know,
everything public.
And it's this, the thing that always frustrates me is when like, folks on the left will talk
as if like the crumbling of this system is inevitable.
I much prefer to look at it as like, well, no, we are trying to defeat like a fucking Kaiju. And so far we have like fucking pellet guns. It's tough.
It's a challenge.
Well, I mean, that's because like, I mean, like, so Christianity started off as sort
of this almost anti-capitalist thing of its time. And then they were like, oh, but the
second coming is like right around the corner. And then thousands of years later, people
are like, oh, the second coming is right around the corner. And then thousands of years later, people are like, oh, the second coming is right around the corner.
Yeah. And the collapse of capitalism was predicted by Marx and because they thought it was going to come in like 10, 20 years.
Yeah. It has been 150 years.
Like the millennial millenarian thing.
The millenarian thing. The millenarians, yeah. It's anyone who tells you success is inevitable
for reasons other than like a pragmatic plan to achieve it
you should take with a grain of salt.
So anyway, back to the pedophiles.
So you've got this- I keep trying
to distract us from the pedophiles.
I'm like, oh, let's cut down this other rabbit hole.
That's what the pedophiles want, Margaret.
Yeah.
All right. Let's hear the pedophiles want, Margaret. Yeah. All right. All right.
Let's hear about the nightmare daycare.
I do want to note this problem of pedophiles injecting their pedophilia into weird leftist
discourse is not unique to Germany.
You and I did episodes on the Illuminati where we discussed how Discordian Kerry Thornley,
an influential leftist and possible Kennedy assassin, once molested a child not because he was attracted to that child, but because he felt politically that
radical free love meant that he was not a good revolutionary if he didn't do it.
And I don't say he wasn't attracted to the kid to mitigate it.
I think what he did is worse.
Again, it's one of those like we were talking about earlier, I don't know, better and worse
when it's something so bad or maybe meaningless terms, but I find it more personally disturbing
that someone would convince themselves that this is politically necessary.
The idea that pedophilia, specifically the breaking of the taboo against sex with a child
by an adult was a kind of revolutionary act that could free someone of their social indoctrination
was somewhat foundational to the new German
Green Party, which still exists today and mixed activists from every major left-wing
movement of the day.
And unfortunately, that lumped the oppression of children's sexuality in with the oppression
of gay people.
As a result, it was not uncommon for prominent Green Party members to recommend abolishing
the age of consent.
We see this with libertarians. And by the way, Christian conservatives have been the
most successful at this, which is why you can marry children as young as 14 in most
US states.
Yeah, as long as it's heterosexual, it's all fine by Christian conservatism.
But I would describe it actually, if I'm going to be fair, what you have there is the same
thing you have with these pedophiles
in like cloaking their desire to fuck kids in left wing.
These are pedophiles cloaking their desire to fuck kids in Christian trapping.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
It is the same kind of thing.
And this is why like you have to be on guard for this sort of shit for the bad actors among
your own number.
Otherwise horrible things like the story we're continuing to tell will happen.
Now everything here is bad, but it is also not all the result of actual pedophiles because
a decent number of, we might say dumb, definitely naive German progressives went along with
this because these arguments for what effectively is pedophilia were published in respected
left-wing journals and magazines.
Around the time Kintler was doing his study on adultery, Hans Geiss, a respected sexologist
in Hamburg, argued that seeing sex was not inherently bad for children, likely true.
Through most of human history, you all lived in the same room, right?
It wouldn't have been weird to have been present for that.
But then went on to argue that pornography, quote, presented without prejudices as a pleasure-filled
social activity should be given to children, which is a problem, right?
Yeah, no, yeah.
The idea that like, yeah, if your kids walk in on you and your wife having sex, that should
not be seen as traumatic to the kids does not inherently lead to, thus we should show
porn movies to kids in the park.
Right.
Oh, God.
This is all pretty interesting stuff.
It's easy to see how like some of the roots of this
started in reasonable things and were twisted.
Eventually Helmut was asked to lead the Department
of Social Education at the Pedagogical Center in Berlin,
a research institute run
partly by future Chancellor and Nobel Prize winner Willy Brandt.
That's right, baby!
The institute had been funded with international backing to reform the way that educational
systems functioned.
Kindler, comfortable in the counterculture, found himself drawn in this new role to a
chunk of the populace who are much in need of help.
Drug addicts,
child prostitutes, and poor children who often wound up exploited in one chunk of the underworld
or another." Again, there are a lot of these kids. There are a lot of poor orphan kids
in West Germany for one reason or another. There's a lot of these child prostitutes
who are addicted to drugs, living alone on the street. This is a subset of the populace who desperately needed attention.
But Kentler's open-
Different kind of attention.
Yeah.
Because Kentler's open-minded nature is going to lead him to accept certain terrible things,
as Aziz writes.
Kentler befriended a 13-year-old named Ulrich, whom he described as one of the most sought-after
prostitutes in the station scene. When Kentler asked Ulrich where he wanted to stay at night, Ulrich told him
about a man he called Mother Winter, who fed boys from the zoo station and did their laundry.
In exchange, they slept with him. I said to myself, if the prostitutes call this man mother,
he can't be bad, Kintler wrote.
The logic there. I know and it's like I get why like people are like trust kids and you're like that is there's there's that's true to a degree.
To it. It's one of those things too.
There are people who get angry when you like use the term child prostitute and they prefer child sex trafficking victim.
I don't think that's accurate here because these kids are, a lot of them,
living alone independently on the street.
This is how they make money, right?
I had friends, when I was a teenager,
I had friends who were homeless squatter sex workers.
And I don't know who you would say is trafficking them
because there's not a pimp in most or every instance, right?
This is, if you, like I agree, any adult having sex with these kids is raping instance, right? This is, if you, like, I agree,
any adult having sex with these kids is raping them, right?
They are living alone, right?
They are not necessarily being trafficked.
So I don't know what else you call them
but a child prostitute.
Like, this is a really ugly thing to talk about,
which is why people don't often enough,
but it is a thing, right?
But yeah, this is probably a bad way
to lead into an ad break, but here you go.
I'm Scott Weinberger, journalist
and former deputy sheriff.
In my new podcast series, Cold-Blooded,
the Apollo Jim Murders, I'm embedded
in the cold case investigation
into the death of firefighter Billy Halpert.
It's just a shame, you know, that they took him from us.
Experience this investigation in a truly unique way.
Knocking on doors, uncovering new evidence, including the DNA of a potential killer.
My name is Danny Smith. I'm a detective with the Myanmar Police Department.
This is Scott Weinberger.
We're actually reopening an old case and your name came up.
Untangling secrets that may reveal the answers to not only one murder, but almost a dozen.
I thought they were going to kill me.
So I kept my mouth shut and I didn't say anything all these years.
I didn't say anything.
Listen to Cold-Blooded, the Apologin Mured the apology murders on the I heart radio app Apple podcasts
or whatever you get your podcasts.
If you love sports and true crime than there's a new
podcast from executive producer Dan Patrick and hosted by me
Jay Harris that you won't want to miss. Playing Dirty, Sports Scandals.
Each week I'm squeezing the juiciest details
from some of the biggest sports scandals ever.
I'm talking Marcus Dixon, Olympic Gymnastics,
Cain Velasquez, Salacious Super Bowl level scandals.
Join me on the dark side of sports
by listening to Playing Dirty, Sports Scandals.
On the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hello, acclaimed comics writer
and notorious Scott Summers hater Rosie Knight.
Well, hello, Emmy-winning podcaster
and totally unbiased Targaryen royal supporter
Jason Concepcion.
Rosie, somehow the X-Ray Vision podcast has returned.
It feels so good.
It does.
And like always, we'll be here every week
covering the wide world of TV, movies, comics,
and geek culture.
That's right.
We'll be talking about Batman, heroes of that stature.
And of course, we'll be inviting our friends
in the industry to come geek out with us and share stories.
We'll hear from TV writers, actors,
comics creators, pop culture critics, and more.
Nothing is off the table,
because geek culture is pop culture.
And we can't wait to share our love of it all with you
every single week.
Listen to X-Ray Vision on the iHeart radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
We're back. I hope, I don't know, the Toyota Motor Corporation
or whatever was happy about that lead-in.
Better things to spend your money on.
Nope, nope, never on. Nope. Yeah.
Nevermind.
Oh, fuck.
So, Kintler took from this idea, right?
These kids like Ulrich who are in a desperate situation are choosing to be molested by this
person Mother Winter because they get food and their laundry done, right?
Rather than seeing that as like, wow, that is a more desperate situation than I
can conceive of being in, where like you might see that as you're like a choice that you
should make, right?
Because there's absolutely no support for you in the system.
Rather than seeing it that way and seeing what Mother Winter is doing as deeply, profoundly
evil and exploitative, Kintler concludes that what Mother Winter is doing is the best case scenario for a child
like Ulrich.
He noted, quote, Ulrich's advantage was that he was handsome and that he enjoyed sex so
he could give something back to pedophile men who looked after him.
Now Kintler takes from-
You could have non-pedophile men look after them.
You could just feed and clothe and put up children who are homeless without the sex.
The state has the capacity for this.
I know, but then every single time there's any group, illegal or legal, that does this.
The Catholic Church is a perfect example of this, where it's like, oh, take people in
and care for them.
And then, oh, you've created an institution that allows for people to take advantage of that.
As we saw both with Catholic priest abuse of often like marginalized kids and with stuff
like the Magdalene laundries in Ireland, right? Like, yes, this is a thing that happens all
over the place. Yeah.
Kentler's conclusion from the case of mother and Winter and Ulrich is that he should seek
to normalize situations of abuse like this through a, like to make that something the
state actually supports.
And in fact, he gets a member of the Berlin Senate, which ran his Institute to approve
making the situation permanent.
And basically Ulrich is set up as a foster child with Mother Winter. Like
the state formally endorses this relationship. Ulrich, as far as we know, I haven't found
anything where we can get Ulrich expressing themselves here, right? And Ulrich is obviously
a profoundly abused and traumatized child. It's possible that Ulrich did see this as
a better option than other situations he'd lived in. That does not excuse what Mother Winter is doing or Dr. Kintler's behavior or what the
Berlin Senate approves.
It was Dr. Kintler's job and his human duty to see that this situation was unacceptable
and to use his influence to find a situation for Ulrich that kept him safe and fed without
being molested.
But a key belief held by Kintler and an unfortunate number of sexually progressive
Germans was that children could consent. And as long as the sex was not violent or physically
coercive, there was nothing wrong with it. This inspired him to write an essay, Borrowed
Fathers, Children Need Fathers, where he bragged about placing Ulrich with his abuser. And
he used this as a case study to get the Berlin Senate to approve and fund a program
to place abandoned children with pedophiles.
Oh my God.
I want to be very clear about something.
This is not a case where Kintler tricks them into letting him match children with pedophile
foster parents or a situation where they felt these men would avoid raping these children
and become responsible guardians.
The entire idea here was that pedophiles would be paid with sex to take care of homeless
children, right?
That is the understanding.
Many of these boys are disabled and a lot of them were addicted to substances and Kentler's
argument, this is what he wrote, quote,
these people, meaning the pedophiles,
only put up with these feeble minded boys
because they were in love with them.
It's funny is like basic feminism
that was going around at this time
could have easily, you know, being like,
oh, because a lot of women
in a traditional heterosexual patriarchal
marriage are forced by financial necessity to live with their abusers.
And like that was also an available analysis that was going around at the time.
You could have used that analysis instead.
I hate to hand it to second wave feminism, but at least they had that part fucking figured
out. I hate to hand it to second wave feminism, but at least they had that part fucking figured out And in fact that is what punctures this wave of pedophile stuff
Eventually it takes so much longer than it should have yeah, but yes that is like where this goes
And I should state if somebody ever expresses to you that like they think children
Abandoned children should be fostered with pedophiles because no one else will love them, it's okay to kill that person.
I thought on a moral level, I can't speak legally, right?
But the second Kintler wrote this,
I think it would have been okay to beat him to death
with a candelabra.
So that's my opinion.
The Berlin city Senate felt differently.
Kintler wrote that they supported his vision
because they wanted to maintain the city's reputation as a bastion of freedom and humanity.
Kintler used his contact with Mother Winter to meet members of the Berlin pedophile scene
and set them up as foster parents, building a network that was to become the center of
years of research.
We don't know much about the process by which the government approved of all of this,
aside from the fact that they did, because, as a spoiler, Margaret,
all of the documentation on this
was deliberately destroyed afterwards.
Can you imagine why anyone would wanna destroy
the documentation about the pedophile fostering program?
Weird.
It's almost like they knew what they were doing was wrong.
Yeah, they certainly did at some point.
Now, Kintler himself later in life would claim to have explored this idea in only three homes.
Now, this is untrue according to a 2020 report by the Berlin Senate, which concluded that the Senate ran foster homes or shared flats for kids and pedophiles in multiple parts of West Germany.
What years are we talking about?
We are talking about like the late 60s, I think, up through, or the early 70s up through
the 1980s.
Yep.
Okay.
Yeah.
Here's from the Berlin Senate report.
These foster homes were run by sometimes powerful men who lived alone and who were given this
power by academia, research institutions, and other pedagogical environments that accepted,
supported, and even lived other pedagogical environments that accepted, supported
and even lived out pedophile stances.
So this is going on from like the 1970s through the late 1980s.
Like by the time all of this stuff cut, like some of this is going on through the 90s.
Some of these kids are still in these foster situations.
Like this lasts so much longer than it should have.
That 2020 report by the Berlin Senate notes, these foster homes were run by sometimes powerful
men who lived alone and who were given this power by academia, research institutions,
and other pedagogical environments that accepted, supported, or even lived out pedophile stances.
It's important to note that the Senate was not merely hoodwinked by Kintler himself.
Some members of the Senate are, essentially some of people in the Senate were part of
this network of foster parents, right?
There were people in local government who were doing this, right?
And most people who may have had issues with it or questions kept quiet, right?
Because icons in the field of education reforms said this was a good idea and who were they to argue.
There's this thing where like,
sometimes you try to, people work backwards around this.
They're like, what is the ideological reason
to be against pedophilia?
No, my ideology works the other way.
I start from the point of view of don't fuck kids.
Yeah, exactly.
And it turns out there's a really good anarchist argument for that, right?
Like if you have issues with a hierarchy because it's abusive inherently.
Right.
But if it was completely incompatible to be against that and have my ideology, I would
change my ideology. I would change my ideology.
If you run the math and it leads to put homeless kids
in places with pedophiles, start, change your math system.
If your reaction to finding out that homeless kids
are sleeping with pedophiles because it's the only way
that they can get food
and clean laundry.
And you are in a position
to actually change government policy.
And you don't both go after that pedophile
and use the resources you have
to feed and clothe those children.
You have just engaged in like Nazi level evil.
Yeah, totally.
Like there's no other way to describe what Kentler's doing.
You have systemized the abuse of children. Yeah
Yeah, yes, exactly exactly
That's actually the thing that is really interesting me about this episode is I was sort of expecting to just gonna get like here's a
Pedophile who individually did this thing? Nope
the systemization of it
Actually is what ties it into all the stuff you brought up as context in the beginning.
Is like, cause you were taking even the like,
stern, be shitty to your kids as a stern guy.
And then it was systematized.
And that is when it became even more evil.
And the same thing is happening here.
It's interesting.
It's bad.
It's very interesting.
And I think we'll close part one by, you know,
the question, you have to ask the question
when you hear about this program,
well, what happened to these kids, right?
And you know, probably not going to have a happy ending
in most cases, but it is still worth hearing anyway.
In the case of Ulrich, Kintler gives, again,
this is part of how he's a bad academic, right?
All he gives us about this kid is that after four years
of living with this pedophile,
Ulrich felt he had been quote, taught to survive.
He got sober, which Kintler noted as a victory,
but remained quote, a suffering person.
Wonder why?
It's hard to imagine.
And it says a lot that this was considered,
Kintler's like, well, this is a win.
He's no longer doing drugs or committing property crime.
Right?
He got molested with the support of the state,
but he's not doing drugs or committing property crime.
So we got a win here.
Chalk him this up and call him dub.
Yeah.
I am far more okay with drugs and property crime
than I am with the state or pedophilia.
Yeah. If the kid had stayed on drugs
and just been given a flat, you know?
Like, God. Maybe he would have gotten clean. Yeah, if the kid had stayed on drugs and just been given a flat, you know, like,
yeah, God, maybe would have gotten clean. I mean, I'm pro people getting clean, but I am pro, but I'm not an anti drug user.
You know, yeah, I'm certainly not.
God, this is just so comprehensively vile.
Yeah, no, I keep trying to come up with ways to talk about everything except the worst part of it,
because my brain is like trying to anyway, because it's Because it's almost hard to fathom, right?
Yeah, exactly.
Kintler concluded that his experiment was a success.
He stated that his goal with this program
was that these boys be taught to live
proper unremarkable lives
and that these men would do so much to help their boys
because they had a sexual relationship with them, right?
And I find something,
it's next to like the evil of like endorsing this system
of pedophile abuse of foster children,
but like it's so evil that his goal is like,
these kids are so broken,
anything horrible we have to accept is worth it
if it leads to them leading unremarkable lives, right?
That's all they can hope for, these poor kids, is to have unremarkable lives. Yeah, right. That's all they can hope for these poor kids is to have
Unremarkable sober lives and maybe getting repeatedly raped by pedophiles will get them to that and that'll be a win, you know, yeah like
Anyway Margaret, that's the end of part one. How are we feeling? How are we doing?
You really set me up to plug my young adult book.
I wrote a book that doesn't have any of that stuff.
It's weird, but yet there are caretaking adults who take care of teenagers in it in ways that
are unrelated to that entirely.
I have a book called, I just went straight into my plugs.
I feel like that was-
Yes, please.
I have a book called The Sapling Cage
that will be kickstarted starting June 10th.
And you can sign up for an alert about that
by going to Kickstarter and searching The Sapling Cage
or Margaret Killjoy.
And I have a history podcast where I kind of do an inverse of this.
Although it's funny because I'm like,
oh, I do an inverse where I talk about cool,
cool people did cool stuff.
That's the name of the show.
But usually it's the people fighting against the bad stuff
and we don't always win,
but we do have fun along the way
when we fight the bad things.
Yeah. This is true.
Yeah, yeah.
So fight the bad things.
And Robert, don't we have a new podcast, a weekly podcast on Cool Zone Media?
Do we?
Have we ever done a weekly podcast?
Sophie, that seems groundbreaking.
It is just us.
It is just us.
Yeah, no one else has ever come up with this idea, right?
This is correct. It is called 16th Minute of Fame,
and it's hosted by one Jamie Loftus ever heard of her.
Yeah, the Jamie Loftus.
The same Jamie Loftus who may have committed
a series of murders in Grand Rapids, Michigan.
So they haven't proved.
New York Times bestselling author Jamie Loftus.
Yeah, impossible murderer.
Just like Malcolm Gladwell.
Wow. Are we expanding the... This really got, this got... Oh no like Malcolm Gladwell. Wow.
Are we expanding the-
This really got, this got-
Oh no, Malcolm Gladwell did kill a guy.
Look it up, people.
Anyway, check out Jamie's podcast.
Yeah, check out Jamie's podcast, 16th Minute of Fame.
By the time this episode's out,
there should be three episodes for you to enjoy.
So check them out now.
And sign my petition to finally hold Malcolm Gladwell accountable for his crimes.
Wow.
Wow.
Behind the Bastards is a production of Cool Zone Media.
For more from Cool Zone Media, visit our website, coolzonemedia.com, or check us out on the
iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
As important as choosing the right destination when traveling is choosing the right travel partner. Gene!
Eugene Fodor!
Gene, what's going on?
But be careful because the worst trips result when two partners have two different agendas.
The CIA really need your help, Jane.
Freeze, Americano!
Oh!
Jane, run!
Listen to Fodor's Guide to Espionage
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
The Therapy for Black Girls podcast
is your space to explore mental health,
personal development, and all the small decisions we
can make to become the best possible versions of ourselves.
I'm your host, Dr. Joy Hardin Bradford, a licensed psychologist in Atlanta, Georgia.
And I can't wait for you to join the conversation every Wednesday.
Listen to the Therapy for Black Girls podcast on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or
wherever you get your podcasts.
Take good care and we'll see you there.
Hi guys, Nancy Grace here, host of podcast Crime Stories with Nancy Grace.
I've dedicated my life to fighting crime and helping crime victims.
For a decade, I prosecuted violent felonies.
Every day is a mission. Every day is a chance to stop crime
and keep one more person safe. Listen to Crime Stories with Nancy Grace on the iHeart Radio
app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.