The Washington PostDemocracy Dies in Darkness

Yes, you can call the border centers ‘concentration camps,’ but apply the history with care

They're not Auschwitz, but they're not summer camps, either.

Perspective by
Waitman Wade Beorn, a combat veteran of Iraq, is a Holocaust and genocide studies historian, a senior lecturer in history at Northumbria University in Newcastle, England, and the author of “Marching Into Darkness: The Wehrmacht and the Holocaust in Belarus.” He is currently completing a book on the Holocaust in Lviv, Ukraine.
June 20, 2018 at 10:38 a.m. EDT

If Godwin has a law clerk, she is working overtime this week. I refer to the truism Godwin’s Law: that all arguments eventually end with Hitler and the Holocaust. Everyone, it seems, is hurling comparisons between the American detention centers housing refugee children at the Mexican border and Nazi concentration camps. Former CIA director Michael Hayden tweeted an image of Auschwitz-Birkenau with the message, “Other governments have separated mothers and children.”