HERE "It was a matter of making a correlation between something most people find so morally repugnant they would not want to associate with it because they cannot seem to be able to grasp the reaction of those who do not want to associate with the republican party because of how heinous they view the republican partiy's behavior."
I am not repulsed by the analogy and it wasn't effective at illustrating anything (except your intense dislike of the Republican party - which I happen to share, BTW).
HERE you (1) implied that working in the Republican party is morally equivalent to working in the Nazi party and (2) chided other people for "casting judgement."
THEN I pointed out that you were being hypocritical (because you yourself were "casting judgement" by using the Nazi analogy - while telling other people not to cast judgement).
THEN you claimed that you had not implied what I said you had implied.
THEN I pointed out (1) that you *had* implied it, whether you realized it or not, and (2) that you *still* hadn't adressed my original point (about hypocrisy).
So I am not clear on what "weeds" you think I have gotten into.
Who said anything about not feeling repulsed?
Oskar Schindler was a well-connected, influence-wielding member of the Nazi party. He was disgusted & horrified by what the Nazis were doing. And it is *precisely* because of the fact that he *was* a member of the Nazi party that he was able to use his connections & influence to save the lives of over a thousand Jews.
Do you dismiss the lives of over 1,000 human beings as nothing more than "a few crumbs?" If you are really serious about what you said above, then you must.
Do you think that Schindler should have given in to his feelings of repulsion, and that he should have quit (or never have joined) the Nazi party - thereby dooming over 1,000 men, women & children to horrible deaths? If you are really serious about what you said above, then you must.
If your moral compass tells you that Oskar Schindler ought to have refused to have anything at all to do with the Nazi party once he realized just how evil it was - well, then, I guess you're right: your moral compass is so far off from mine that we are virtually on seperate planets.
Running away from evil because you are repulsed by it is not moral - it's cowardly.