mistermack wrote:He didn't give a toss about the jews then.
Correct. He did not. Nor was he even vaguely cognisant of the role of women in society. I don't see what you are driving at.
mistermack wrote:There is no evidence that "speaking out" has the desired effect. It's usually too late, by the time people are aware of what's going on.
Martin Luther King and Nelson Mandela - among others - were wasting their breath?
mistermack wrote:And where's the evidence that the communists, socialists and trade unionists would have "spoken out" for him anyway?
There is none. Yet, people speak out and strive for a higher codified concept that encompasses, but is not limited to equality before the law, precisely in the hope that this will protect them - each individually - because it applies to all.
Of course major failures have happened, and more of them will occur. For example, I mentioned Edmund Barton's defence of the White Australia Policy elsewhere: "The doctrine of the equality of man was never intended to apply to the equality of the Englishman and the Chinaman."
You might think it's all futile, but humanity keeps muddling along trying to find better ways of governing, and progress has been made. I definitely prefer to live in today's democracies rather than yesterday's feudalism. I also think that somewhere beyond my lifetime democratic socialism may be more pervasive, successful, popular and common than democratic capitalism is now.