No, the USA did not have the power to prevent the Holocaust.
During WWII, Germany was a powerful nation with its own laws and customs. The USA, which did not get involved in the European theatre of WWII until almost three years of fighting had occurred, probably had no more than 15% of the military power projected against Germany.....the remaining 85% being Russian, British, and lesser powers.
Additionally there was only scant evidence that a Holocaust was even occurring in Europe. Being at war, there was not a lot of communication between Europe and the USA. Nonetheless some American Jews did suspect it was occurring and tried to influence America's entry into the war. To some extent President Roosevelt's political decisions were influenced in this manner.
Before the actual Holocaust, Germany had already been treating Jews terribly - putting them in ghettos, adding taxes, general harassment, restrictions on travel and occupations. Although the USA also had some societal discrimination against Jews, it was no where near the level of Germany's (although many of these type restrictions WERE placed on America's Negro population). Thus America's Jews were already anxious to destroy Germany even before the Holocaust was uncovered.
The actual Holocaust did not start until well into the war, after most the continent of Europe was in German control. No outside power could have stopped the Holocaust at that point.
An alternative is that Yes the US absolutely could have prevented the Holocaust.
The US had only just put limits on the number of immigrants that that were allowed in each year. They had decided that Jews and Eastern Europeans (and for that matter Southern Europeans) were undesirable and they severely restricted the numbers that could emigrate. Had the US allowed the fleeing Jews entry then the Holocaust would not have happened.
It has to be acknowledged that the US had its own economic problems in the thirties, but it went from a country that was the refuge of people fleeing European persecution for over four hundred years to a country that could have saved millions of lives but instead turned their backs.
One needs to answer this question carefully, as there are multiple issues it raises.
Firstly, on the subject as to whether the US could have prevented Nazi Germany from initiating the systematic extermination of Jews (and certain other ethnic groups) during WW2, the answer there is an unequivocal NO. As the Holocaust did not actually start until well after the 1939 beginning of WW2, and it was carried out in areas that the Nazis had under military control, there was no military, political, or other method that the United States (or any other nation for that matter) could have prevented the Nazis from initiating their extermination attempts.
A related note is whether or not the US could have reduced the actual number of victims that the Nazis managed to kill in the Holocaust, once the US became aware that the Holocaust was happening. Here, the answer is that YES, the United States and other nations could certainly have taken some actions which would have reduced the numbers which the Nazis could kill. The Western Allies first became aware that something sinister was happening around late 1942, and, by late 1943, there was ample evidence that the Nazis were enacting some sort of targeted killing program. Unfortunately, by mid-1943, at least 40% of all Holocaust victims had been already killed. There were several options available to the Western Allies, which would have had various effects on the Nazis ability to round up and then transport Jews to the death camps:
Note that there were many reasons NOT to do any of the aforementioned - some reasons very valid, others not so much (they ranged from concerns over redirection of critically-needed military resources to non-military ends, to doubt that the Holocaust was actually happening in any large factor, to problems with coordinating SOE actions, to not wanting to reveal classified intelligence sources, to basic apathy). The sad fact is that, assuming a concentrated effort by the Allies to stop the Holocaust, I'd estimate no more than half (at the very, very, very best) of those killed in from late 1943 to 1945 could have been saved. This amounts to no more than 30% of the total (or about 2 million out of 6) being saved, in a truly best-case (and highly unlikely) scenario.
Finally, the issue of whether or not a more "open-door" policy of Immigration for Jews to the United States would have reduced the Holocaust's body count before the Holocaust began. Overall, given that the vast majority (over 85%) of Jews killed during the Holocaust were Eastern European or Russian, poorer, and less educated than their Western European (including German) Jewish compatriots, the likelihood of more than a more few of these people being willing and able to immigrate is slight. Given that the large majority of any people are unlikely to uproot themselves and move to Another Country unless there is a truly obvious immediate danger, means that virtually no Eastern European Jews would have moved to the US, and likely only a slightly larger percentage from Western European countries. At the very best, assuming a completely open US immigration policy, and a concerted effort by the US Jewish organizations to encourage and help immigration (none of which was forthcoming in any shape), a good estimate would have been a 50% increase in US Jewish immigration during the 1930s. Which means, that maybe a few 10s of thousands could have been moved out of Hitler's grasp. Which translates into an even fewer 10s of thousands being spared the Holocaust. Figure 30-40,000 would have been saved (or, less than 0.7 % ). That's insignificant enough to discount that any change in US immigration policy would have been meaningful.
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Between 1933 and 1941 the US admitted about 250,000 refugees from Nazi Germany (and from 1938 onwards also from Austria). Obviously, some of these refugees were not Jews, but a 50% higherl number of refugees would not have been insignifcant. As for willingess to migrate and so on, there were plenty of German and Austrian Jews clamouring for admission to the US. (See the Voyage of the St Louis, for example).
The Allies (not just the U.S.) were reasonably well informed about what was going on (though not about all the details) and could have done much more. In particular, they could have:Obviously, none of this would have prevented or stopped the Holocaust, but it might have have reduced the death toll.
See the links.
Yes something like that could happen and it already did.( not to the extreme level of Hitlers Germany .) Look at the Americans treatment of the native Americans. They took their land and gave it away! Overall due to horrible conditions in the past and extreme use of force against native Americans we've indirectly killed approximately 10million native Americans. Read a book on the "trail of tears" it is an example of how this happened. Nowadays the conditions are much better. This does not mean Americans are evil because it was 1.5 centuries ago and it wasn't a deliberate attempt but there were many unfairly imposed hardships that the native Americans had to suffer.
not sure how this works but I wanted to put my 2 cents in here. Yes, the makings of another Holocaust type cleansing is well on its way in the US. It is happening with Christians. I am a Christian myself so I want to put in a caveat that I am not bashing the Bible, on the contrary, we all need to look toward The Bible to see how to behave. There is a growing sect of Christianity that is in the Calvanism belief system and one cannot readily identify if a church asribes to this belief unless you ask very specific questions. The belief is that God chooses people to be his own and if a person is not chosen, it can be detected by how ones life is going. These "christians" are looking at people ongoing, judging them and then deciding whether or not they are saved or "chosen by God". If a person is determined to not be "chosen" then the belief is that they will burn in hell when they die. Therefore, the person's goods, their help, their jobs and anything they own including their reputation is all up for grabs. The belief is a kind of pride and arrogance that I have not seen exibited by anyone but when the holocaust began. If this "sect" of Christianity takes ahold in different areas of our society, there will be euthanasia, and ongoing persecution of those determined to not be "chosen" The chosen are a sort of Arian group who are by definition successful and their life is going well. I have experienced this in a school setting in prayer groups where the prayer group is made up of people with this Calvanistic belief and they actively push people out by gossiping and persecuting those they don't think are chosen by God. They are very self righteous and sadly are very very mislead. Unknowingly, they are training their children to avoid people they feel are "weak" and if they have been victimized in their life, that is a sign that they are "not chosen" Those peoples children who are being trained up to be the same way will be the future of the second "Holocaust".
if an event similar to the Holocaust were to happen, then they would give it it's own name, like they did with the Holocaust.
I wonder whether you mean something like 'Did World War 2 [not 1] hide the Holocaust?,
I don't really think that question can be answered, because nobody counted how many of a certain profession died in the holocaust, that's like saying "How many Doctors died during the holocaust?", there isn't really an answer to the question but it could of been many due to the fact that many adults died during the holocaust and some of them could of been clowns...
The truth must be told and it must be known. Considering how immensely tragic the Holocaust was, the least we can do is to speak the truth about it and remember it, so that we can learn something from it and avoid having something like that happen again. Those who have first-hand knowledge must share their knowledge while they still can. The Holocaust ended in 1945, which is now 64 years ago, so there are relatively few witnesses left.
From the Jews point of view it was probably something like 13 people huddled together in their attic eating their Jew crackers drinking the blood of Christ
There was no 'Holocaust flag'. I wonder if you are confusing the Holocaust with something else?
if an event similar to the Holocaust were to happen, then they would give it it's own name, like they did with the Holocaust.
There have been many things like the Holocaust, but none over such a long period, across so many countries and in the West.
because people haven't changed.
it seemed like a good idea at the time. the political climate was such that extremeism was common and that people found it easy to blame others for their woes.
No. The Holocost was a horrible thing. Christians, true Christians understand how important the Jews are to God and that something like that should never happen to any people regardless of their religious beliefs. No one in their right mind could condone what happened.
You could make a lightsaber,but it we'll probably take many years or it couldn't even happen.
I wonder whether you mean something like 'Did World War 2 [not 1] hide the Holocaust?,
who can ever really say, its not like we would ever even have a clue if it did really exsist, whos to say it doesn't?
It's the responsibility of us all.
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he took part in many efforts to stop something like this again he was a good man