

The World War Two Series: Episode 11-16 w/ Thomas777 - 3/4
Oct 18, 2025
Thomas777, a revisionist historian and fiction writer, dives deep into the Nuremberg Trials, uncovering their political foundations and the dichotomy between Allied visions for postwar Germany. He explores the contrasting approaches of Morgenthau and Stimson while tracing key figures like Rudolf Hess and the intricacies of wartime diplomacy. Thomas analyzes Hess's rise within the Nazi hierarchy and his peace overtures, all while unraveling the complex interplay of international law and morality surrounding war crimes. Expect a riveting examination of history's aftermath!
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Nuremberg As A New Legal Order
- Thomas777 explains that Nuremberg replaced the old European nomos with a new juridical order imposing victor-led enforcement.
- He argues this broke centuries of consensual international law and centralized coercive enforcement under superpowers.
Grotius And The Fragile Nomos
- Hugo Grotius framed states like persons, legitimizing war as a remedy absent higher authority.
- Thomas777 notes that this model relied on mutual moral consensus that eroded with global power shifts and non‑European states rising.
Why ‘Equality Of States’ Hides Power
- Declaring equality of states and outlawing aggressive war still requires an enforcement mechanism, which creates status disparities.
- Thomas777 stresses that supranational law necessarily imports coercion and power politics.