First off, not all Norse were Vikings. That's like saying all Germans are Nazi's. And even so, the Vikings (which is a word that means "pirate" basically) were no more violent than any other group during that time - Including the Christians.
(Please look up Charlamagne for violent Christians) Women did not exist just to give birth and serve warriors. Many were warriors themselves and the women ran the home... they were not servants to it. To die in battle is the highest glory.
It's the only way you can go to Valhalla. But then, Valhalla is not the only hall either. It is Odin's hall.
ALL of the other gods have their own halls as well. Hel is not as bad as you are trying to make it out to be. The old and sick go to Hel.
It is NOT a place of torment like Christianity's hell. And to die in such a way is NOT a disgrace except to Warriors. I'm not sure where you get the idea that an old warrior puts on his armor and commits SUICIDE.
It's my understanding that suicides do NOT go to Valhalla. You either die in battle or you don't go. Women are not separate from the men like you are showing here.
Women warriors who die in battle will either go to Freya's hall (Freya gets first pick of the slain in battle... then Odin gets to pick). Or maybe they go to one of their gods halls? Or maybe they end up being a Disir - a spirit that's normally attached to their family.
They could be reincarnated. They could cease to exist. This is not an either/or religion.
It's not - you either go to Valhalla or you go to Hel. It doesn't work that way. Vikings made Al-Qeada look like girl scouts?
Could you show an actual reference to a battle that would even make you think that? Seems you're drawing from some pretty poor historical references or reading someone's material who has the Hollywood idea of what the Vikings were. Loki is not a god of evil.
That is not how this works. We don't have one good god and one bad god. You are applying Christianity's dualism to this and dualism does not belong here.
And Odin-worship did not advocate invading other people's lands. Read the Eddas. Or, even better since sometimes the Eddas are hard to grasp due to the lang, get Kevin crossley-Holland's book Norse Myths.
Going by how you have set this up here... I can take the acts of Charlamagne and apply them to all Christians, right? And then make the assumption that Jesus-worship advocates invading other peoples lands and forcing them into conversion.
You should really sit down with a practicing Norse Heathen and get everything straight. Some of your info is a little "off".
I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.