What you believe about this picture is determined by what you’ve been told about Adolph Hitler. There are very few people left alive today who can personally tell you their experiences with him, so why are you so sure that you know enough about him to have an opinion about the man?
Almost everybody today knows that Hitler was a monster. That’s what I believe. That’s almost certainly what you believe. We’ve seen all the pictures from concentration camp victims and we’ve heard his hateful rhetoric about Jews. We’ve been told that he was responsible for millions and millions of deaths. So that’s what we believe.
But why did the Germans in the picture above adore the man? Why did they see him as their hero, not as a monster? The difference is that their narrative was very different from the one we’ve been given. Because they believed a different story, they saw him as a hero.
What is a narrative? It’s just a story. When you think about what you believe — about anything — you probably tend to assume that you’ve carefully looked at all the facts and come to a rational decision. The truth, though, is that you know a tiny fraction of the facts regarding anything, even things very close to you.

How would we see the gang war in Texas if the faces had been black?
Irrational beliefs hurt all of us when you hand power to the ignorant
That huge fed debt increase? They’ve already used 60 percent of it
There’s a secret to contentment that selfish people never accept
Peshawar murders show need to support those who share our values
Grief keeps reopening the door my loving mother walked out of
I want to help out of pure love, but human motives are messy
Loving father’s pride in daughter easily bridges our language gap
Freedom matters more than safety, even if you can’t see that