Acceptance: The Lack of it Killed Millions
When I read Elie Wiesel quote about the Holocaust, I remember The hardships of Bilbo and Frodo, In the Hobbit and Lord Of The Rings. I remember all of the decisions Bilbo had to make, like keeping the ring of power a secret from gandalf, or when frodo didn't end golems miserable existence. These are all things, then if done by frodo and bilbo, would have made their story much more of a walk in the park. When I was reading and came across there major decisions that more or less decided their fate, it made me want to think about my everyday decisions more. If Bilbo had told gandalf about the ring, bilbo would never have had to hide it and become another golem slowly, if he had just told gandalf, in spite of his love for the ring, he would have returned to bag end, and lived his life out as a happy normal hobbit. If hitler had just accepted that the germans lost and did not use the Jews as a scapegoat, then hitler would have been able to live a full happy life. If Hitler did not want to rule the world, then millions of people would be spared from a horrible fate of death, work and overall torture. Even though hitler had a horrible childhood, “The needs of the many, outweigh, the needs of the few.” Even if we as people make a mistake, we must take responsibility for it and learn from those mistakes to make out future decisions better.
Another book that wiesel's quote reminds me of is The Ranger's Apprentice. The villain in this book, morgarath wants complete control over all of Araluen, even though he is already the Baron of a huge fief. If he had just worked his way up the ladder the become ruler, or just stayed in the place that he was in, Thousands of lives would have been saved. Because of morgaraths jealousy and hatred, many people died, all because one man was to selfish. The story if the same with hitler. If Hitler had not been so jealous and envious of his rulers and the Jews that had so much to be thankful for, than many lives would have been saved, and stories would not be told of how some people escaped from death camps, or fled Germany, and over all, the earth would have had a different but happier future. Once again, “The needs of the many, outweigh the needs of the few.”
“The Needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few.”

