Posted on 09/04/2003 6:16:03 PM PDT by swilhelm73
Nazis murdered millions of unarmed people. They put them in ovens. They made soap out of them. They carted off children in boxcars to die and used some of the kids for medical experiments, including injecting dyes into their eyes to see if they could improve their looks. Lower on the list of charges, the Nazis enslaved millions and launched wars for territorial and egotistical gain (and sent many of the conquered populations to death camps as well). Lower still, they banned books and burned them too. They expropriated homes and businesses, banned religions, etc.
An intelligent person wouldn't normally assume these are the sorts of facts people forget. It's not quite the same thing as saying that the Mork and Mindy was a spin-off from Happy Days, is it?
I could, of course, get more graphic about what the Nazis did, but I don't much like writing about the Holocaust. It's not merely a depressing subject, its enormity is so depressing, so compacted down with evil and barbarity and cruelty that it folds in upon itself like a black hole. The gravitational pull of its tragedy has permanently bent the trajectory of mankind. Suffice it to say that the Nazis weren't simply generically bad, they were uniquely and monumentally evil, not just in their hearts but also in literally billions of intentional, well-planned, and bureaucratized decisions they made every day.
And yet, in polite and supposedly sophisticated circles in America today it is acceptable to say George Bush is akin to a Nazi and that America is becoming Nazi-like. Indeed, in certain corners of the globe to disagree with this assertion is the more outlandish position than to agree with it.
In the September 1, 2003, issue of National Review, Byron York chronicles (read the piece here) some of the Bushphobia. He writes,
A staple of Bush-hating is the portrayal of the president as a Nazi. That has, of course, been a prominent part of other attacks against other presidents, but today it seems to be deployed with particular aggressiveness against Bush. There are thousands of references, across the vastness of the Internet, linking Bush to Adolf Hitler and the Third Reich. Do you want to buy a T-shirt with a swastika replacing the "s" in Bush? No problem. Do you want to collect images of Bush in a German army uniform, with a Hitler mustache Photoshopped onto his face? That's easy. Do you want to find pictures of Dick Cheney and Tom Ridge and Ari Fleischer dressed as Bush's Nazi henchmen? That's easy, too.
As York observes, It's not just the intellectual poltroons of the Internet who feign bravery by loudly saying what is patently stupid so that people a fraction dumber than them might mistake it for boldness and conviction. It's not just the masses of undifferentiated cattle who sport their Hitlerfied George Bush T-shirts and who chant slogans with a verve more truly reminiscent of Nuremberg than anything ever uttered by George Bush.
Indeed, "smart" people mouth this nonsense too. Scholars at Berkeley insist that George Bush shares a psychological profile with Hitler. An editorial writer for the Kansas City Star invokes Martin Niemoller's "First they came for the Jews " mantra to decry the alleged excesses of the Patriot Act. Various Muslim activists are constantly suggesting that they are the Jews of the Nazified America. Almost everyday I get dozens of e-mails from seemingly intelligent liberals and a few conservatives who insist that I "can't deny it" anymore it's 1933 Germany in America. Retired Princeton University professor Sheldon Wolin writes of the "inverted totalitarianism" of the Republican party "a fervently doctrinal party, zealous, ruthless, antidemocratic, and boasting a near majority" as a stand-in for a Nazi party which doesn't need to use "totalitarian thugs" to attain power. He writes:
No doubt these remarks will be dismissed by some as alarmist, but I want to go further and name the emergent political system "inverted totalitarianism." By inverted I mean that while the current system and its operatives share with Nazism the aspiration toward unlimited power and aggressive expansionism, their methods and actions seem upside down. For example, in Weimar Germany, before the Nazis took power, the "streets" were dominated by totalitarian-oriented gangs of toughs, and whatever there was of democracy was confined to the government. In the United States, however, it is the streets where democracy is most alive while the real danger lies with an increasingly unbridled government.
You may think that's brilliant stuff and that Wolin is a savant. As for me, I'm simply reminded of Walter Bagehot's observation that "In the faculty of writing nonsense, stupidity is no match for genius."
"It's going a bit far to compare the Bush of 2003 to the Hitler of 1933," writes Dave Lindorff in "Bush and Hitler: The Strategy of Fear," which according to York's article appeared in February on the site Counterpunch.org. "Bush simply is not the orator that Hitler was. But comparisons of the Bush administration's fear-mongering tactics to those practiced so successfully and with such terrible results by Hitler and Goebbels . . . are not at all out of line."
In the September issue of Vanity Fair a photo of Richard Perle is placed alongside Joseph Goebbels and the caption asks: "Separated at Birth?" The editors of Vanity Fair ran the pictures because a letter-writer noted a similarity between the two. "Perle isn't the first government official to use deceit and fear mongering to force an extremist, irrational, and ultimately violent view on an entire nation, or globe." In the face of this idiocy the editors of The New Republic were forced to ask: "Does someone really need to explain to Vanity Fair that nothing Perle or President Bush will ever do can invite a comparison to Nazi Germany?"
But The New Republic misses the point. They believe Vanity Fair mistakenly took a "crank" correspondent too seriously. Unfortunately, The New Republic isn't taking Vanity Fair seriously enough. For while it's by no means an extraordinarily serious magazine, Vanity Fair is a near-perfect barometer for what is fashionable and what passes for intelligent conversation among the chattering classes.
Show me the camps. Show me the millions of people being gassed. Show me the tattoos on people's arms. Show me elderly Muslim men being beaten in the streets, their stores smashed, and books burned. Show me huge piles of emaciated bodies stocked high like cords of wood.
Instead, on the web we find juxtaposed pictures of Bush with a dog and Hitler with a dog; Bush posing with children and Hitler posing with children; Bush appearing before large crowds and Hitler appearing before large crowds. By such "standards" every president every politician since at least the day photography was invented is a Nazi. To assume the mantle of "reasonableness" as Lindorff does by conceding that Bush isn't as good an orator as Hitler was, is to claim soundness of mind by conceding that a clock doesn't melt because vests have no sleeves.
The likes of Wolin and Abbot Gleason are more clever. They, too, say that Nazism is coming, but they don't refer to the Holocaust. They simply mean an illiberal regime with imperial ambitions is in the offing. I think this is ludicrous, too. But it's a different argument. Nevertheless, the intellectuals insist on using Nazism as a way of decrying what they see as American militarism. But comparing America to Nazi Germany in this way is like saying Jonah Goldberg is just like the "Son of Sam" serial killer because they both get lots of parking tickets. To leave out all the genocide and murder is to leave out a pretty important part of the story.
So if you can't show me the death camps and the horror, find another example. Compare Bush to Bismarck or Franco or Mikey from the Life cereal commercials for all I care because any of those would make more sense.
By the way, I don't say this because I feel a passionate need to defend George Bush. I would make the exact same points if Al Gore were president. I would make the exact same points if anybody running for the Democratic nomination were president. This has nothing to do with partisanship. It has to do with the fact that such comparisons are slanderous to the United States and historical truth and amount to Holocaust denial. When you say that anything George Bush has done is akin to what Hitler did, you make the Holocaust into nothing more than an example of partisan excess. Tax cuts are not genocide, as so many Democrats have suggested over the years. (For example,. during the Contract with America debate, Charles Rangel complained that "Hitler wasn't even talking about doing these things" that were in the Contract with America. In other words, the Contract with America was in some way worse than what Hitler did. At the end of the day, that is Holocaust denial.)
"Darn those Republicans" does not equal "Darn those Nazis." The Patriot Act is not the final solution. The handful of men in Guantanamo may not all be guilty of terrorism, but it's more than reasonable to assume they are. And no matter how you try to contort it, Gitmo is not the same thing as Auschwitz or Dachau. There are no children there. You don't get carted off to Cuba and gassed if you criticize the president or if you are one-quarter Muslim. And, inversely, there was no reasonable justification for throwing the Jews and the Gypsies and all the others into the death camps. The Jews weren't terrorists or members of a terrorist organization. To say that the men in Guantanamo or any of the Muslims being politely interviewed by appointment are akin to the Jews of Germany is to trivialize the experiences of the millions who were slaughtered. Even if you think Muslims are being unfairly inconvenienced, when you say they are the Jews of Nazified America you are in essence saying the worst crime of the Holocaust was to unfairly inconvenience the Jews.
But let's stop talking about Nazis.
I hate blue cheese. I mean I hate it. To me, it tastes like death or Al Sharpton's socks after they've been under the fridge for a year. But no matter how much I hate it, no matter how much I loathe its texture and smell and taste, it's still only blue or, if you must, "bleu" cheese. Even if you tripled my hatred for it, it would still just be a musky fromage from the land of cheese, long speeches, and short-lived loyalties. It would not, through the mysterious alchemy of hatred and bile, become poison. Sure, I could call it Sarin or Anthrax but that would not make it so. Because, you see, hating an object doesn't change an object. Only the most arrogant and solipsistic fool would argue or convince himself that his hatred of something increases the importance of that thing.
And that's how I think of all these people who e-mail me insistent that George Bush is a Nazi. They believe they are so important, so noble, their hatred and fear must be rooted things of Great Consequence. It's just so prosaic to hate Republicans. I am better than that. So, Republicans must be Nazis. They must be a threat to the whole world and to the sanctity of everything I hold dear because anything less would not be worth my time. George Bush can't simply be someone I disagree with. No, his popularity must be an indication of mass hysteria, of Nuremberg-style devotion to evil.
So desperate are these people to live in interesting times and play the hero, that they are willing eager to topple every significant moral and historical category so they can role play as the Heroes who Would Not Stay Silent. That would be fine if these losers were playing some multisided dice game in their basements. But they're not. There's a war going on and these guys are acting like we're the real enemy. That's not just shameful and stupid, it's unhelpful.
Moral indignation is the standard strategy for endowing the idiot with dignity.
--Marshall McLuhan
Meanwhile - Cally's Cruz Bustamante does not denounce MEChA's motto of - "For the race, everything. For those outside the race, nothing."
RATS are slowly exposing themselves, and it ain't purdy...
Take at look at how I do mine. Here.
There's a twit at work who piped-up with this "Bush is Hitler" crap and, as the conversation weaved on, it turned out that she didn't know who Herman Goering was.
Any person who you hear say "Bush is a Nazi" may safely, and immediately, be labeled as a "dink".
We are still wide open to widespread crippling attacks. In general the lack of "just do it" empowerment that our government retains in an era of selfish Leftist populism, continual virtual "polling" and political careerism, has prevented both wider full scale war preparations and a truly effective response to terrorism.
The American people are simply not capable of considering let alone accepting the sorts of sacrifices and life style changes which would have been necessary in order to foster the correct response and mobilization.
Our military is a hollowed out shell of its robust 1980s former self, overworked, underpaid and still too rife with ghetto boy mentality and feminized leadership to command respect overseas. We have no Civil Defense to speak of in fact a number of developing countries have more in the way of a program than we have. Our borders are still not secure.
Our security organizations are unable to gain control of the massive channels of importation, both legal and illegal, due to the lack of courage to control anti nationalist and naive corporations' desire to maintain JIT continuous flow material processes from factories in China. Within our corporations, the modern equivalent of the barbarian mercenaries have unprecedented access to corporate financial data (including write access!), material control, product designs and software. Many of them are citizens of the PRC, Russia, Pakistan and other nations who have nuclear war fighting capability and increasing cyberwar capability. None of them have been investigated to determine past or present active duty in foreign militaries, intelligence organizations and terrorist groups. Increasingly, these same companies conduct major operations on the soil of nations who have openly declared hostility to the West and the US. None of the foreign citizens who work for our corporations have ever been asked to disavow any oaths or pledges to their nations, particularly, there has been no requirement to disavow doctrines of attack on the West.
Our institutions are rotten, both operationally and spiritually. There is no will to resist conquest within vast tracts of urban and suburban areas, particularly and, significantly, in the coastal centers of international trade and economic activity. The martial spirit and sense of national duty are not only in recession but actively attacked by liberal utopians who occupy leadership positions in both the public and private sector. In most "global" corporations headquartered in the US, open expression of such spirit is increasingly labelled as harassment and is said to create a hostile working environment for employees who do not agree with such spirit. In the halls of management power, there are still no ready means to inject the consideration of geopolitical risks and patriotic duty into decisions both major, and, especially, the many small minor ones which collectively set the overall direction. Today's manager is typically a hollowed out shell, devoid of patriotic passion, morally "neutral" and well trained to drive ambiguous and non commital programs which are sadly mislabeled as "strategies."
Yes, indeed, something horrible is coming. The pent up destructive energy is too great to diffuse. The only ways out all involve incredible chaos. The pain level going forward will be high, no matter what. The only decision point is whether the pain will be regulated and self controlled, or, will be passively felt, in a state of pure reactiveness. The most moral decision may bring the most short term pain, the path of least resistance may delay the pain but ultimately, will bring a cumulative pain level much higher if not outright destruction.
Now is the time for the real leaders amongst us to hone our skills and begin our final preparations for the mother of all wars.
==========================================
Is this not the sort of thinking that is required in order to get a grip on terrorists, anti Western sponsoring states and other enemies both foreign as domestic?
/sarcasm so thick it drips like sulfured sorghum off the tongue.
You're insulting idiots.
There's a twit at work who piped-up with this "Bush is Hitler" crap and, as the conversation weaved on, it turned out that she didn't know who Herman Goering was.
Just damn.
Any person who you hear say "Bush is a Nazi" may safely, and immediately, be labeled as a "dink".
Now you've libeled dinks.
For shame!
This all reminds me...has Illbay left here for good? I knew he'd taken a flack-hiatus, but there's been nary a nary for months now.
(:
Unfortunately - I don't think he'll return.
That's only because Mrs. Clinton has not announced. ;-)
Seriously, as others have pointed out, if you took her "...and we have the right to disagree with any administration!" speach and put it side by side with a Hitler rally, the similarity of cadence is uncanny.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.