There is. Rare as this creature may be, Georg Konrad Morgen was an example of it. A young lawyer, Mr. Morgen joined the Nazi party in 1933, not out of conviction but because his parents suggested it may be good for his career. He remained fiercely independent of thought, and incredibly brave in speaking his mind even at great personal risk.

Morgen eventually came to serve the SS as a judge. And in this position, he went after high-ranking Nazis within the concentration camp system. Realizing he could not persecute mass murder, as it was “state policy” and therefore legalized, he went after other Nazis under the guise of corruption. If they stole the teeth and wedding rings of Jewish prisoners, he’d charge them with corruption. If they raped a Jewish girl, he would charge them with “sexual immorality” because it was illegal to have intercourse with non-Aryans. Morgen was resourceful, and frequently dismissed from his position by angered officials only to be recalled by others to go after their rivals…

Georg Konrad Morgen testified against the Nazi regime after the end of the war. His testimony was instrumental in putting many of them in jail for life, or six feet under. It is a brave man who stands up against an inhumane system… but it is an even braver, more brilliant man who does so within the system by using its own rules against it.

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