Can you explain how they did a better job? Is there no more hatred of Jews in Germany?
Actually, not really. They built a HUGE Holocaust Memorial on some seriously expensive real estate in downtown Berlin-bigger than anything of this sort built in New York or DC.
Are there no racists in Germany? Are Germans welcoming people from every nation with open arms?
We here in the US are not welcoming people with open arms. We are especially unwelcoming of Black Haitians (Haitian immigrants do not come in other colors), as we have four or five Coast Guard cutters in the Florida Straits intercepting them and returning them to Haiti.
I am not saying we should welcome people with open arms, but we are just as unwelcoming, or more so than the Germans. People from any of the other 29 or so EU nations can come to Germany and leave as they please. Here in the US even Canadians and Mexicans have to undergo a lot of paperwork and expense to come here.
I said the Germans have done a better job to make up for their Nazi past than the US has done to make up for slavery, and this is true.
It is also true that after WWI, manipulations of Germany's currency by bankers, a lot of whom were Jewish, caused the utter collapse of the currency, and many Germans lost every cent they had saved as a result. It certainly is not true that every Jew in Germany was an entirely innocent patriot. There was a reason why Hitler and antisemitism appealed to enough Germans to make Hitler popular.
Black slaves did practically nothing to incite hatred of themselves by Whites in the US, other than a few slave rebelliions such as Nat Turner's and Denmark Vesey's rebellions.
The Japanese have entirely abolished their army and navy, other than a few defense forces. Japan retreated from every nation that it occupied and no Japanese even suggests that Japan should return to being an imperial power.
Italian trains and airplanes do run mostly on time now, but that is about the only thing Modern Italy retained from Mussolini.
There are lots of Turks in Germany, many were invited there by the German government when Spaniards and Portuguese became in short supply.