You know whats a fun fact for such trolls ? Hitler is accused of killing 14-20 million people during war time, in other words Hitler wasn't killing anyone before 1939. Meanwhile Stalin brutally murdered up to 30 million of his own people before Jun 22, 1941 (the date Soviet Union was officially in WW2), and after WW2 ended, Stalin murdered millions more. That's excluding the number of people Lenin and his chums killed during the early days of the Soviet regime.
Now does that mean that Hitler was innocent because he wasn't killing before 1939??, of course not. All it means is that Hitler was killing in war time, just like all of the participants of WW2 were doing in a WAR (that is what war is, after all). Therefore, Hitler is guilty then so are Roosevelt, Truman, Churchill, and Stalin.
Hitler was killing way before 1939 when war broke out.
1. The German concentration camp system predates the war by some 6 years.
The first concentration camps in Germany were established soon after Hitler's appointment as chancellor in January 1933. By the time the Germans invaded Poland in September 1939, unleashing World War II, there were six concentration camps in the so-called Greater German Reich:
Dachau (founded 1933),
Sachsenhausen (1936),
Buchenwald (1937),
Flossenbürg in northeastern Bavaria near the 1937 Czech border (1938),
Mauthausen, near Linz, Austria (1938), and
Ravensbrück, the women's camp, established in Brandenburg Province, southeast of Berlin (1939), after the dissolution of Lichtenburg.
Concentration Camps, 1933–1939
http://history1900s.about.com/library/holocaust/blchart.htm
The pre-war system was quite unlike the wartime one, with far fewer camps, prisoners and deaths; almost all inmates were German and economic exploitation still took a backseat. And yet, the prewar camps left a crucial legacy for the infernal camps of the Second World War.
Before the Holocaust: Concentration Camps in Nazi Germany, 1933-1939 | European History Primary Sources
When the Nazis launched the Second World War on 1 September 1939 with the invasion of Poland, 21,000 men, including a small number of women, were detained in the concentration camps. This figure was seven times the number when Himmler had seized control of the camps in 1934/5.53 Prisoner numbers shot up from thousands to hundreds of thousands and murder became the norm. In September 1939, following the outbreak of the Second World War, the Nazis gradually transformed the camps from places of brutal abuse and torture into sites of mass murder. In new camps such as Auschwitz, opened in 1940, the SS could build on years of their experience abuse, murder and domination.
http://www.camps.bbk.ac.uk/history/History Introduction.pdf
To facilitate the"Final Solution" (the genocide or mass destruction of the Jews), the Nazis established killing centers in Poland, the country with the largest Jewish population. The killing centers were designed for efficient mass murder. Chelmno, the first killing center, opened in December 1941.
Nazi Camps
2.
Child Euthanasia (
German:
Kinder-Euthanasie) was the name given to the organised murder of severely mentally and physically handicapped children and young people up to 16 years old during the
Nazi era in over 30 so-called special children's wards. At least 5,000 children were victims of this programme, which was a precursor to the subsequent murder of children in the
concentration camps.
Child euthanasia in Nazi Germany - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Euthanasia in Nazi Germany - The T4 Programme | The Life Resources Charitable Trust
3. The
Night of the Long Knives (
German:
Nacht der langen Messer (
help·
info)), sometimes called
Operation Hummingbird or, in Germany, the
Röhm Putsch (German spelling:
Röhm-Putsch), or sometimes mockingly
Reichsmordwoche,
[1] was a
purge that took place in
Nazi Germany from June 30 to July 2, 1934, when the
Nazi regime carried out a series of political murders. Leading figures of the left-wing
Strasserist faction of the Nazi Party, along with its figurehead,
Gregor Strasser, were murdered, as were prominent conservative anti-Nazis (such as former Chancellor
Kurt von Schleicher and
Gustav Ritter von Kahr, who had suppressed Hitler's
Beer Hall Putsch in 1923). Many of those killed were leaders of the
Sturmabteilung (SA), the
paramilitary Brownshirts.
At least 85 people died during the purge, although the final death toll may have been in the hundreds
Night of the Long Knives - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Newspaper Article - GRAVE OUTBREAK OF POLITICAL MURDERS IN GERMANY.