Comparing today’s demagogues with Adolf Hitler is almost always unwise. Such alarmism tends to trivialize the actual horrors of the Nazi regime and distracts attention from our own political problems. But if alarmism is counterproductive, the question remains: At what point are democracies truly in danger? What was unimaginable only a few years ago – a US president insulting democratic allies and praising dictators, or calling the free press “enemies of the people,” or locking up refugees and taking away their children – has become almost normal now. When will it be too late to sound the alarm?
Great books have been written about this very question. Giorgio Bassani’s masterpiece, The Garden of the Finzi-Continis, describes the lives of bourgeois Italian Jews under fascism. Slowly, step by step, a legal and social noose tightens around these cultivated Italians, who took their lives of comfort and influence for granted. And yet, in different ways, they are in denial. The narrator’s father even joins the Fascist Party, while the wealthier Finzi-Continis withdraw into their ever more isolated family circle. Pride and a lack of imagination blind them to the danger they are in until it is too late and they are deported to the death camps.
The human incapacity to see what is coming also animates Sebastian Haffner’s memoir Defying Hitler, written in 1939, a year after he left his native Germany. Haffner, later a journalist and author, was a law student who witnessed how the Nazi dictatorship became lethal, again incrementally, like the persecution of Jews in Italy. He saw how his fellow law students, none of whom were Nazis, came to accept each step – racial laws, abrogation of the constitution, and so on – precisely because they were couched in legal terms. There never seemed to be a point at which they recognized that an intolerable line had been crossed and only resistance or exile would do. Haffner, who was not Jewish, did recognize it; he left in the year that synagogues were torched and Jews driven from their homes.
Under most circumstances, there are probably more Finzi-Continis than Haffners. It is hard to sleep well in a state of alarm. Life is easier if the world seems normal, even if it is anything but.
There are many ways people stick their heads in the sand, and some parallels between our own time and Europe in the early 1930s can be seen. Quite a number of German businessmen and industrialists, who were conservatives but not Nazis, thought they could live with Hitler, as long as he benefited them financially. He was a vulgar upstart, whose manners might not have been the finest, but surely they would be able to control him.
Historical knowledge can help people to recognize certain patterns of behavior – attacks on an independent judiciary, for example – that have led to tyranny in the past. But historical memory, often blended with myth, can also stop people from reading the signs of what might come. In countries with a democratic history, it is easy to assume that “it could never happen here,” because “our institutions are too strong,” or “our people love freedom too much,” or they are “too civilized” or “too modern” to slide into barbarism.
Donald Trump may not be a reincarnated Hitler, but Republicans’ acquiescence in every step he has taken away from civilized democratic norms is ominous
Leftists can be just as blinkered as conservatives. Communists (instructed by Stalin), but also the non-communist left in 1920s Germany, refused to defend the fragile Weimar Republic when it was under assault from the right. Communists saw social democrats as a greater danger than Nazis, and left-wing intellectuals were distracted by the hypocrisy and corruption of mainstream parties they really should have supported.
Donald Trump may not be a reincarnated Hitler, but Republicans’ acquiescence in every step he has taken away from civilized democratic norms is ominous. And so is talk on the far left that the difference between Trump and Clinton or Obama is one of degree, not kind: he merely displays the iniquities of neoliberalism more blatantly than they did. In both cases, the particular dangers posed by today’s right-wing populism are underrated or ignored.
The much-maligned mainstream press – those “enemies of the people” – is still robust. But its influence is waning. What appears in The New York Times or the Washington Post matters less than presidential tweets that go straight to millions of people and are echoed in partisan radio or TV shows.
In a polarized society, politicians who stir up the mob by exploiting fear and resentment are probably more likely to be successful than less exciting figures who try to appeal to our more rational faculties. Political parties that oppose the anti-liberal trends are in a serious bind. If they respond to youthful anger and idealism and move too far to the left, they could lose essential votes in the center. If they choose centrist candidates, who look for reforms rather than radical change, they might lose the fired-up young.
And yet freedoms must be defended, which is possible only when the threats are seen clearly. The moment people stop believing that the demagogues can be prevented from doing their worst is the moment we can be sure that it is already too late.
Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2018
www.project-syndicate.org
Nazifascism needs some ingredients to be feasible:
1) imperialism: the nation in question must have the potential to, with the people willing, invade and militarily conquer other countries. That’s the main function of nazifascism: the capitalists need to expand and convince the working class to do the dirty job for them, so they use nationalism as a mistified legitimation. Nazifascism can also be the symptom of a decadent industrial power (Germany) trying to revive its former glory.
2) internal enemy: the nation in question must have a significant minority which can be designated as an "internal enemy". This can be a substitutive to #1. Generally, this is what happens in third world countries (which don’t have the imperialist factor) that resort to nazifascism, which serves as a factor of domestic counterrevolution.
3) economic hardship: the national elite (capitalists) must be at a historical low in terms of profits and the people (working class) must be desperate, in order to accept anything.
4) power vacuum: in such difficult times, there must not be a revolutionary solution, i.e. the absence or a very weak socialist movement.
Virgens VK
Perhaps a more quantitative and IMHO a qualitative list of fascism is contained in the below link.
https://ratical.org/ratville/CAH/fasci14chars.html
I think we can all agree that in the end Hitler was a bad guy. However there is a difference between Trump, / Obama/ GW Bush/ Clinton and the rest of the US Presidents since the 1950s. Hitler took a war torn , on it`s back country, and built it into the most powerful country on earth. he gave his people pride and a decent standard of living. In short he made his country great again. In short he performed miracles and was just fine until he decided that he should conquer Europe.
Trump and his predecesors have done exactly the opposit. Just compare the USA of today with the USA of the 1950s. The capitalists and political class have taken paradise and turned it into a parking lot. in every category worth mentioning the USA is a dump today as compared the the country in the 1950s, a country that everyone wanted to live in even me a loyal Canadian thought I would like to live there.
i live in South America and when I travel to my homeland of Canada I will wait for as long as it takes to make certain that I will fly over that Godforsaken country. Under no circumstances do I want to land there. it is a police state in all but name.
One of the continuing horrors of the Nazi regime is the fact that merely questioning the "indisputable" truths of the holocaust is a crime in too many European countries. If the facts are so obvious, why is questioning them a crime?
The political superstructure is a reflection of the economic reality. Economic disarray always leads to loss of liberty whether fascist or communist.
hysterical article… need smelling salts
Yes. Hitler gave his people pride and a decent standard of living. Unfortunately, the list of who "his people" is turned out to be rather short and not include a whole lot of people, you know, like the Jews, the Communists, the Gypsies, the opposition, the ugly people, the Christians….