Posted on 08/18/2015 7:59:15 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
Nazi comparisons remain a dime per dozen in the political discourse, wielded liberally and often outside historical context. Godwin’s law suggests that any online debate which lasts long enough will result in someone evoking the Nazis.
That moment has arrived in our consideration of Donald Trump. Newsweek commentator Jeffrey A. Tucker asks, “Is Donald Trump a Fascist?” However, the question stands as more than provocation or insult. Tucker is serious, and offers evidence to bolster the suggestion:
Whats distinct about Trumpism, and the tradition of thought it represents, is that it is not leftist in its cultural and political outlook (see how he is praised for rejecting political correctness), and yet it is still totalitarian in the sense that it seeks total control of society and economy and demands no limits on state power.
Whereas the left has long attacked bourgeois institutions like family, church and property, fascism has made its peace with all three. It (very wisely) seeks political strategies that call on the organic matter of the social structure and inspire masses of people to rally around the nation as a personified ideal in history, under the leadership of a great and highly accomplished man.
Typically, when fascism is evoked, people think of concentration camps and the Holocaust. Such images fuel the notion that Nazi comparisons are inherently exaggerated. However, it’s important to realize that concentration camps were a product of fascism, not its defining characteristic. Fascism subjugates the individual to the state in the name of some collective, whether “the nation” or “the race.”
Reason editor-in-chief Nick Gillespie describes the effect an implementation of Trump’s immigration plan would have upon the state’s relationship to individuals. Trump’s government would become a “vast and always beefed-up bureaucracy that will have control over whether you can work and when you need to show proof of U.S. citizenship.”
Tucker continues:
This is how strongmen take over countries. They say some true things, boldly, and conjure up visions of national greatness under their leadership. Theyve got the flags, the music, the hype, the hysteria, the resources, and they work to extract that thing in many people that seeks heroes and momentous struggles in which they can prove their greatness…
… They purport to be populists, while loathing the decisions people actually make in the marketplace (such as buying Chinese goods or hiring Mexican employees).
Trump’s rhetoric, his so-called plan, emerges from the same instinct of economic protectionism which opposes right-to-work and Uber. It’s the politics of scapegoating, blaming the other guy for your inability to compete. For the Nazis, their scapegoat was the Jew. For Trump, it’s the Mexican. He may not be proposing concentration camps. But the rhetorical path he’s leading Republican voters down leads in that direction. It certainly doesn’t lead to less government and more freedom.
Cowardly way to say what they believe: Trump is a fascist.
Someone should point Newsweak to the White House if they are looking for a fascist.
Inquiring minds want to know: is Newsweek an apologist for communist rat bastards and murderous will to power driven sociopaths?
Newsweek, a shadow magazine. Undead and Zombie-like...
A better question is “Is Hillary A Criminal”?
A lot of ignorant or intellectually shallow people out there equate fascism entirely with National Socialism. No serious person thinks Trump is Hitlerite. But does Trump pose a risk of fascism as a political strongman, not famous for a principled approach to matters, coming to power riding a wave of popular exasperation, who’s intent on a program of national greatness and impatient of constitutional limits? It’s not an unreasonable thing to worry about.
Before anyone objects: Obama is contemptuous of Constitutional limits, but he isn’t fascist because he’s an internationalist — not interested in national greatness — and because his political philosophy is highly principled (not moral — principled. He believes and desires certain things and knows precisely what they are.) President Reagan did believe in national greatness, but he respected the Constitution. He too knew what he stood for, and was not in it for personal power.
I do not trust Trump and don’t expect to be supporting him.
The Washington GOP Elite are the ones running a fascist cartel.
Looks like textbook politics to slander your opponent with accusations mirroring your own weaknesses.
Like Time, NW is stumping along looking for a place to collapse and die.
Obama is a fascist. Trump is a populist riding the wave.
Is Obama a Muslim and a Communist?
LOL - nice... and true.
If Trump was a fascist you wouldn’t be allowed to ask that question unless you liked picking the weevils and maggots out of your gruel, sleeping in huts with 99 other prisoners and performing back-breaking manual labor in the hot sun 14 hours a day under the watchful eyes of the national police.
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