The Trailer for the Movie "Nuremberg"
The movie "Nuremberg," based on Jack El-Hai's book The Nazi and the Psychiatrist, is the story of how American psychiatrist Douglas Kelley studied the imprisoned Nazi leaders who were brought before the Nuremberg war crimes tribunal in 1945-1946, and how Kelley became particularly fascinated by Reichsmarschall Hermann Goering, who had been Hitler's designated successor until he fell from Hitler's grace near the end of the war. The movie stars Russell Crowe as Goering and Rami Malek as Kelley. All of the acting is superb, and it's a powerfully moving and intellectually stimulating movie.
The movie and the book have made me wonder how Goering would fit into the evolutionary psychology of political leadership that I have developed in this blog and in my books. I have written about psychopaths in this blog and in Darwinian Natural Right. And I can see that Goering and the other Nazi war leaders had some psychopathic traits. But Goering was not a pure psychopath. Goering was a grandiose narcissist who was driven by a natural desire for alpha-male dominance as described by Arnold Ludwig.
Donald Trump shares those same traits, but his political situation differs from Goering's. Goering pursued dominance in a totalitarian dictatorship that did not allow anyone to challenge Nazi Party rule. Trump's desire for dominance has led him to establish a competitive authoritarianism in his second term, in which there is some weak countervailance to his dominance coming from the threat of electoral defeat. If Trump were to cancel the midterm elections next year, that would turn America into a totalitarian dictatorship like Nazi Germany.
JUSTICE AT NUREMBERG
Just before the final collapse of Germany in the spring of 1945, Goering suggested that he should become the Fuhrer once Hitler was dead, which led to Hitler's order that he be killed. Once it became clear that Germany would lose the Battle of Berlin, Hitler committed suicide on April 30, 1945. That left Goering as the highest ranking Nazi leader left alive. On the day before Germany's surrender on May 7, Goering sent a letter to U.S. military command offering to help the Allies form a new government for Germany with Goering himself as the new leader. When Goering was captured by U.S. troops, he asked to meet General Dwight Eisenhower, the Supreme Commander of Allied Forces in Europe, so that he and Eisenhower could arrange for the new government of Germany. But instead, Goering was taken to a prison camp in Mondorf-les-Bains, Luxembourg, where he joined fifty-two other high-ranking German leaders.
In early August, Captain Douglas Kelley arrived at Mondorf. He had worked in the medical service of the U.S. army, and his new assignment was to maintain the mental fitness of Goering and the other Nazi inmates. Kelley wanted to find out if there was a "Nazi mind" that would account for their heinous deeds. His great ambition was to write a book on this based on his studies of the captive Nazis, knowing that this would make him famous. If the psychic flaws of the Nazi personality could be understood, then this might prevent the future emergence of another Nazi-like regime.
On August 8, the four Allied powers (France, Great Britain, the United States, and the USSR) agreed on a charter for an International Tribunal that would try the Nazi war leaders for war crimes. Nothing like this had ever been done. The U.S. took the leading role, and Supreme Court Justice Robert Jackson agreed to head the prosecution. Jackson targeted Goering as the top-ranking Nazi who need to be convicted. The International Tribunal would meet in Nuremburg, Germany. On August 12, the Nazi prisoners were moved to a prison in Nuremberg to await their trial. Kelley moved there with them.
Kelley spent hundreds of hours with all of the prisoners, but he was most interested in Goering. They developed a strange personal relationship, perhaps even a friendship, based on mutual respect. Kelley's primary psychiatric methodology with all the prisoners was the Rorschach ink blot test.
On October 20, the Allied prosecutors delivered their indictments against the prisoners to the tribunal. That same day, Gustave Mark Gilbert arrived at the Nuremberg prison. He was charged with maintaining the mental welfare of the prisoners so that they would be fit to stand trial. But Gilbert was a psychologist who had the same ambition as Kelley--he wanted to write a book that would explain the psychology of the Nazis. He was also like Kelley in that he relied on the Rorschach ink blot test for studying the minds of the Nazi prisoners.
Goering liked to brag about his heroic achievements as a military and political leader. He had been a flying ace in World War I. He was once shot down. He was credited with shooting down twenty-two enemy planes. At the end of the war, he flew the unit of planes he commanded into Germany while refusing to surrender to the Allies. He received his country's highest military award for his exploits.
Goering told Kelley how he first heard Adolf Hitler give a speech. In the early 1920s, he heard Hitler in Munich speech shout: "You've got to have bayonets to back up your threats." Goering explained: "Well, that was what I wanted to hear. He wanted to build up a party that would make Germany strong and smash the Treaty of Versailles. 'Well,' I said to myself, 'that's the party for me! Down with the Treaty of Versailles, goddammit! That's my meat!" He saw that this young, small party was open to new members who could quickly rise to leadership positions--"that meant I could soon be a big man in it." This desire for becoming a "big man" confirmed his mother's prediction: "Hermann will either be a great man or a great criminal!" (El-Hai, 11).
That he became a great man seemed clear by the long list of titles he had in World War II, which he was happy to rattle off to Kelley: President of the Reichstag, Hitler's deputy, Prime Minister of Prussia, Reich Minister of Aviation and Commander in Chief of the Luftwaffe, Minister of Economics, member of the Secret Cabinet Council, director of the massive Hermann Goering Works manufacturing combine, field marshal, chairman of the Reich Council for National Defense, and Reich Forestry and Hunting Master. Goering was most proud of the title Reichsmarschall--a rank similar to a six-star general--held only once before, two hundred years earlier, by Prince Eugene of Savoy, who was the most distinguished field marshal in the Army of the Holy Roman Empire and of the Austrian Hapsburg dynasty.
Goering insisted to Kelley that he had become the supreme leader of Germany once Hitler died:
The people flocked to us, the old soldiers swore by us--and I became head of the nation. . . . Too late you would say? But perhaps not. Anyway, I made it. . . . You know I shall hang. I am ready. But I am determined to go down in German history as a great man. If I cannot convince the court, I shall at least convince the German people that all I did was done for the Greater German Reich. In fifty or sixty years, there will be statues of Hermann Goering all over Germany. Little statues, maybe, but one in every German home (El-Hai, 114).
On the morning of November 20, 1945, the tribunal convened to begin its public trial. "Goering entered first," El-Hai writes. "He wore his pearl-gray, brass-buttoned Luftwaffe uniform, stripped of all insignia and symbols of rank, and he appeared energized to retake the world stage" (128). Goering had had months to plan his defense, and he expected to speak eloquently of the glories of the Nazi German Reich.
But then, on the afternoon of November 29, Goering's plans for his defense were undercut when the prosecution showed filmed footage of the concentration camps shot by British and American troops less than a year earlier. Everyone was transfixed by the images of emaciated camp inmates, stacks of corpses, and bulldozers pushing mounds of bodies into mass graves. At least ten minutes of the movie were given over to these films. And even though most of us in the theatre had seen some of these images previously, to see them again was as disturbing as it was for the courtroom audience in the movie. Even Goering coughed nervously and leaned on the railing of the dock and covered his face with his right arm.
Later, Goering said to Kelley: "It was such a good afternoon, too, until they showed that film. They were reading my telephone conversations on the Austrian affair, and everybody was laughing with me. And then they showed that awful film, and it just spoiled everything" (El-Hai, 136).
By the end of December, Kelley decided that since he had not seen his wife in almost three years, it was time to go home. When Goering learned that Kelley was leaving, he broke down and wept. By late January of 1946, Kelley was reunited with his wife in Chattanooga. This left Gilbert in Nuremberg to continue his psychological studies of the prisoners during the trial. Here the movie changes the story. In the movie, Kelley stays in Nuremberg for the whole trial.
And so, in the movie, Kelley was in the audience for Goering's dramatic jousting with prosecutor Robert Jackson in March of 1946. When Jackson presented documents signed by Goering that referred to the "final solution" to the Jewish problem as evidence that Goering knew about the extermination of Jews in Germany, Goering responded by pointing out that these documents identified the "emigration" of Jews out of Germany as the "final solution," and nothing was said explicitly about exterminating millions of Jews.
Goering argued that neither he nor Hitler himself knew anything about the deliberate killing of Jews in the camps. If any Nazi leader was responsible for the Holocaust, Goering insisted, it was Heinrich Himmler, who had died by suicide at the end of the war. Although most people in the audience probably did not find this persuasive, it did show that the Nazis had not left any documentary evidence that explicitly recognized mass killing of innocent Jews as a deliberate policy.
Goering used the witness chair as a stage for a powerfully assertive speech as if he were speaking at a Nazi Party Rally. One series of speeches lasted twelve hours over two days. Everyone saw that Goering was enjoying himself in his passionate display of mastery. He declared: "The only motive which guided me was my ardent love for my people, their fortunes, their freedoms, their life, and for this I call on the Almighty and the German people as my witness."
Janet Flanner of the New Yorker reported: "When the former Reichsmarschall strode from the witness stand to the prisoner's box after his last session with Mr. Jackson, he was congratulated and smiled upon by his fell-Nazis there, like a gladiator who had just won his fight" (El-Hai, 145). Indeed, the movie suggested this by filming the scene of Russell Crowe entering the courtroom, with the camera focused on his back and the wide courtroom audience before him, which replicates a scene in Gladiator, when Crowe enters the Coliseum, knowing that he will fight to a glorious death.
At the end of September in 1946, the judges of the Tribunal delivered their verdicts. Of the 21 prisoners, 3 were acquitted, and 18 were found guilty. 11 (including Goering) were sentenced to death by hanging. 7 were given prison sentences.
Goering admitted to Gilbert that his attempt to affirm the glory of the Nazi years and win the admiration of the German people had failed. "You don't have to worry about the Hitler legend any more. When the German people learn what has been revealed at the trial, it won't be necessary to condemn him. He has condemned himself" (El-Hai, 150).
Wanting to escape the indignity of hanging, Goering asked that he be killed by a firing squad. But his request was denied.
The night before he was to be hanged, Goering bit into a capsule of potassium cyanide that he had somehow hidden from the guards. His suicide was his final act of defiance.
Remarkably, as the movie indicates in its closing intertitles, Kelley also killed himself with cyanide in 1958. This ended his own life-long struggle with his inner demons.
NAZIS INTERPRETING INKBLOTS
Both Kelley and Gilbert thought the only way to probe into the deepest recesses of the Nazi Mind was through the Rorschach Inkblot Test, which had been developed in 1921 by Hermann Rorschach, a Swiss psychiatrist. Rorschach created a set of ten inkblots that were intentionally drawn to be ambiguous. He thought that when patients were asked to describe what they saw in these inkblot drawings, they would reveal their mental disorders and personalities, even when this was beyond the patients' conscious awareness. So, for example, if patients responded with lots of descriptions involving color, that indicated that they were emotional and impulsive. Or if they described people engaged in cooperative activities, that indicated that the patients found social interactions to be pleasurable and helpful.
How the Rorschach Inkblot Test Works
Although the Rorschach test was popular among psychiatrists and psychologists in the 1940s and 1950s, there is now a general agreement that this test has very limited uses, and that for most purposes it is little more than a variation of astrology and palm reading (Wood, Nezworski, and Garb, 2023). The test has some validity for detecting disorders such as schizophrenia that involve perceptual distortion and disorganized thinking. And some of the Rorschach test scores are related to IQ. But the Rorschach test scores have little validity for providing a general understanding of personality. And it is certainly not a psychological x-ray that can detect mental realities of which the patient is unaware of.
The failure of the Rorschach test in evaluating the Nazi prisoners became evident when Kelley and Gilbert could not agree in their interpretations of their inkblot tests. Kelley saw imagination, boldness, and even genius in Goering's responses. Gilbert saw the mediocrity of Goering's intellect and a lack of originality. Kelley thought the Rorschach tests of the Nazis revealed that there was no mentally disordered "Nazi mind," because they were ordinary mentally healthy people, which showed that many mentally healthy people could become Nazis in the right circumstances. By contrast, Gilbert thought the Nazis were mentally disordered in having antisocial personalities with no sympathy for the suffering of others. Gilbert identified Goering as an "amiable psychopath" with a sadistic aggressiveness (1948).
And yet Kelley and Gilbert could agree on one facet of Goering's personality--his restless desire for dominance and power (El-Hai, 10-11, 74, 113-14, 134, 140; Gilbert, 1948, 212, 220, 225).
DOMINANCE, DEFERENCE, AND RESISTANCE TO DOMINANCE
The political psychology of Nazi politics manifests the tense interaction of three natural propensities of our evolved human nature as political animals: dominance, deference, and resistance to dominance (or counter-dominance). Dominance is the natural propensity of a few individuals to seek the power over others that comes from superior rank in a group. Deference is the natural propensity of many individuals to submit to those few who are dominant. Counter-dominance is the natural propensity of many individuals to resist being dominated.
The desire for dominance and the grandiose narcissism of a man like Goering are easily mistaken as signs of a psychopathic personality. But as I said in Darwinian Natural Right, pure psychopaths--people who have all the psychopathic traits identified by Hervey Cleckley and Robert Hare--cannot be successful in the pursuit of dominance and power, because the behavior of pure psychopaths will always be self-defeating in that they cannot act prudently for any long-term goal. As Cleckley said: "The psychopath shows a striking inability to follow any sort of life plan consistently, whether it be one regarded as good or evil. He does not maintain an effort toward any far goal at all" (Arnhart, 1998, 222). By contrast, Goering showed self-control and deliberate planning in his pursuit of dominance--in his quest to become the Big Man.
As Goering explained to Kelley and Gilbert, he and Hitler easily won the support of the German people because most people are easily persuaded to defer to the dominance of charismatic leaders.
Nazi Germany did not have a constitutional system of countervailing powers that would have allowed legal resistance to Nazi Party rule. For example, the Nazi rulers could not be turned out of office through elections. But Goering and Hitler did see illegal resistance--both armed and unarmed--to their dominance over Nazi Germany (Wikipedia, 2025a). Over 800,000 Germans were arrested by the Gestapo for resistance activities. Tens of thousands of Germans were executed by the Nazis. And hundreds of thousands of Germans deserted from the Wehrmacht, and many defected to the Allies or to anti-Fascist resistance forces. There were also at least 42 assassination plots to kill Hitler, and some of them came close to succeeding (Wikipedia, 2025b). (Hitler would have benefited from reading the longest chapter in Machiavelli's Prince, which is about assassination plots as the greatest threat to the Prince who is hated by many of his people.)
All of these armed and unarmed ways of resisting the unjust dominance of rulers are expressions of what John Locke called "the executive power of the law of nature"--the natural right of all individuals to punish those who violated the natural law of individual liberty.
Of course, ultimately the most successful resistance movement was the military resistance of the Allied forces that defeated Germany. As Leo Strauss (2007) observed in a lecture in New York in December of 1943, what really influenced the Germans who supported Nazi rule was not the silly Nazi doctrines like Aryan racial superiority but rather the Nazi promise that Nazi arms and diplomacy would bring "the solution of all German problems by a short and decisive war," which "convinced a substantial part of the German people that large scale and efficiently prepared and perpetrated crime pays." Strauss believed that "this doctrine is subject to the test of sense-experience." First, that this was not going to be a short and decisive victory for Germany became clear as early as 1940 when the British Spitfires blunted the attack of Goering's Luftwaffe in the Battle of Britain (July to October of 1940). By December of 1943, people had seen with their own eyes that the Allies were defeating Germany on the battlefield. And Strauss foresaw that this "re-education of Germany" would be "consummated by a meeting of British-American and of Russian tanks" in Berlin, and "by the harmonious cooperation of the Western and Eastern occupying forces in bringing to trial the war criminals." The Nuremberg Tribunal accomplished that.
LESSONS FOR AMERICA?
Many people who see "Nuremberg" will detect a subtext in the movie that suggests questions about America: Can a Nazi-like dictatorship arise in America? And if so, can this American dictatorship be brought to trial for its crimes? Can an American dictatorship be overthrown by a popular resistance movement? Is Trump driven by the same desire for dictatorial dominance that drove Hitler and Goering?
That the answer to this last question is yes should be evident once we remember some of Trump's most arrogant boasts about his power--such as "As president, I can do anything I want."
We can hope, however, that unlike Goering and Hitler, Trump will always face the limits on his power that come from a constitutional system of countervailing powers, in which, as Publius said in The Federalist: "Ambition counteracts ambition." But Trump has been setting aside that constitutional system and replacing it with a competitive authoritarianism--a hybrid regime that combines elements of democracy and authoritarianism, which has emerged around the world over the past 35 years since the end of the Cold War (Levitsky and Way, 2002, 2010, 2025). A competitive authoritarian regime has multiparty elections, but they are not completely free and fair, because the incumbent's abuse of power tilts the electoral playing field against the opposition, and basic civil liberties are restricted to make it hard for the opposition to challenge the ruling party.
A fully authoritarian regime (like Nazi Germany) allows little or no countervailing power. A fully democratic regime (like the U.S. until recently) allows strong countervailance. A competitive authoritarian regime (like what Trump is establishing in his second term) allows weak countervailance.
Through various ways, the U.S. could become a fully authoritarian regime. Trump could declare a state of national emergency that requires canceling the midterm elections next year. Or the Supreme Court could adopt a version of the Unitary Presidency Theory that means that there are no constitutional limits on the power of the President--and therefore Trump is right when he says that as President, he can do anything he wants.
If that were to happen, then we would have to hope that many Americans would join the resistance to dictatorial dominance that has started with the "No Kings" protests. But these protestors will have to be willing to face imprisonment and violent suppression from the government. We would also have to hope that military personnel and law enforcement officers would refuse to obey illegal orders from Trump.
It is a dark time in America. But it could become much darker, perhaps even as dark as in Nazi Germany, 1933-1945.
REFERENCES
Arnhart, Larry. 1998. Darwinian Natural Right: The Biological Ethics of Human Nature. Albany: State University of New York Press.
El-Hai, Jack. 2013. The Nazi and the Psychiatrist: Herman Goering, Dr. Douglas M. Kelley, and the Fatal Meeting of Minds at the End of WW II. New York: MJF Books.
Gilbert, G. M. 1948. "Hermann Goerig, Amiable Psychopath." The Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology 43: 211-229.
Levitsky, Steven, and Lucan Way. 2002. "The Rise of Competitive Authoritarianism." Journal of Democracy 13 (April): 51-65.
Levitsky, Steven, and Lucan Way. 2010. Competitive Authoritarianism: Hybrid Regimes After the Cold War. Cambrige: Cambridge University Press.
Levitsky, Steven, and Lucan Way. 2025. "The Path to American Authoritarianism." Foreign Affairs 104 (March/April): 36-51.
Strauss, Leo. 2007. "The Re-education of Axis Countries Concerning the Jews." The Review of Politics 69: 530-38.
Wikipedia. 2025a. "German Resistance to Nazism."
Wikipedia. 2025b. "Assassination Attempts on Adolf Hitler."
Wood, James M., M. Teresa Nezworski, and Howard N. Garb. 2023. "The Rorschach Inkblot Test: We See an Unsinkable Rubber Ducky." Skeptical Inquirer 47 (6): 39-45.

