He was not born with hatred in his veins or violence in his hands. He was born into a world that rewarded obedience and punished hesitation, where the safest answer was agreement and the greatest sin was defiance. Over time, he learned that keeping his head down earned security, that following orders brought praise, and that asking questions only invited trouble. The transformation came not from a single decision, but from thousands of small silences.
By the time his actions terrified the world, he no longer recognized himself as cruel. He saw only tasks, objectives, and expectations to meet. The tragedy is not only what he did, but how unremarkable each step toward it seemed. His story warns us that evil rarely announces itself; it seeps in when people stop resisting. Vigilance begins in the smallest choices: to speak, to doubt, to refuse.