In Hitler’s footsteps: From Auschwitz to America
>> Wednesday, November 30, 2016
PERRYSCOPE
Perry Diaz
Perry Diaz
Little
did Donald J. Trump realize that by preaching the gospel of hate, it would
bring him to the pinnacle of power in America. Or, could it be that he was aware that
hate was what dictators use to achieve power and exercise total control over
their people? Take Adolf
Hitler for one, who arguably was the most despicable of these tyrants who
didn’t see any value on the human lives that he put to death. In a short time, he systematically
exterminated more than six million Jews during World War II.
Seven decades after the end of World War II, the specter
of another Hitlerian era looms in America, right under the torch held high by
Lady Liberty who keeps vigil at the Liberty Island in New York Harbor. But the
threat to Americans’ freedom today does not come from without; it comes from
within the tarnished soul of America, its purity poisoned by the promises of a
snake oil salesman – Donald J. Trump -- who lives not too far from where the
vigilant Lady Liberty stands.
Hitler’s Germany
Two
months from now, Trump will be sworn in as the 45th president of the U.S. But his ascension to power is fraught
with danger. For the fourth time in the history of the U.S., Trump won the
electoral vote -- and thus the presidency -- although he lost the popular
vote. It’s a quirk in the
U.S. electoral system, which is anachronistic and, in my opinion, should be
reformed.
But that is not where the danger lies, it’s what Trump
promised the American people, which many believe ran eerily in parallel to the
pathway that Hitler took to achieve control of the political system of Germany.
On that day, January 30, 1933, the German President Paul von Hindenburg named
Hitler as Chancellor of Germany (equivalent to Prime Minister).
Hitler’s meteoric rise was
spurred by the German people’s dissatisfaction with the economic conditions
caused in large part to Germany’s defeat in World War I. Hitler, a fiery and charismatic
speaker, took advantage of the German people’s discontent with their government
and directed their anger at Germany’s Jewish community whom he blamed for all
the malaise and suffering of Germany’s majority “Aryan” race.
Hitler’s
emergence as Germany’s undisputed leader marked a pivotal turning point for
Germany… and ultimately, the world. He
immediately expanded the state police – the Gestapo – and put Hermann Goring in
charge over it.
Trump’s
America
With
the succession of Trump to the presidency, it’s déjà vu all over again or so it
seems. There are uncanny
similarities between Trump and Hitler. Take
for instance, Trump’s favorite slogan. On
June 14, 2016, Trump greeted America’s Flag Day on his Twitter account with the
words “AMERICA FIRST!” And
throughout the campaign, Trump repeatedly said, “When I am president, it will
always be America first.” But
while there is no doubt – and it was an effective campaign slogan—that it was
patriotic in every sense, what Trump had in mind was quite different when he
said, “America first.”
That same day in Atlanta, Trump told the audience at a
rally that his “America first” slogan was different from Ronald Reagan’s. He defined it as the “America” he
wants to put “first” by saying those who don’t properly belong in it. “That definition does not include
certain people of foreign descent born in the United States, who are to him
still foreigners and whom he labels accordingly (in the past few weeks, Trump
has referred to native-born Americans as ‘Mexican’ or ‘Afghan’). It does not include Muslim
residents, whom he would ‘certainly’ and ‘absolutely’ force to register their
presence with the U.S. government (asked how this proposed policy differs from
Nazi laws regarding Jews, Trump replied, ‘You tell me’). Trump
wants his exclusionary America to cower behind walls. He would erect
metaphorical barriers against immigrants and exclude Muslims from entering the
United States until they can be ‘properly and perfectly’
screened.” (Washington Post/Reuters)
Trump
and Hitler
While
Trump denied that he didn’t steal the “America First” slogan from Reagan, the provenance of
“America First” is traced to the Nazi-friendly Americans in the 1930s. “During the early 1930s,” the Washington Post article said, “as the Nazis
consolidated control over Germany, the U.S. media baron William Randolph Hearst
began touting the slogan ‘America First’ against President Franklin Roosevelt,
whom he saw as dangerously likely to ‘allow the international bankers and the
other big influences that have gambled with your prosperity to gamble with your
politics.’
Hearst regarded Roosevelt’s New Deal as ‘un-American to
the core’ and ‘more communistic than the communists’ -- unlike Nazism, which he
believed had won a great victory for ‘liberty-loving people’ everywhere in
defeating communism.”
During
the 2016 presidential campaign there were many published articles showing
similarities between Hitler and Trump. One
article posted on the Nairaland Forum’s website shows uncanny similarities
between Hitler and Trump, to wit:
Adolf
Hitler: Donald Trump:
1.Used
racism to rise to
power. 1. Uses racism to rise to
power.
2. Promised to make Germany great again.
2. Promises to make America great
again.
3. Anti-Jew
Fascist. 3. Anti-Muslim Fascist.
4. Blamed Jews for Germany’s
problems. 4. Blames Muslims for U.S.’s problems.
5. Forced Jews to wear special
IDs. 5. Wants Muslims to register.
6. Proposed mass deportations. 6. Proposes mass deportation.
Transition
period
With
the transition period now in progress, Trump’s nominees to his national
security team have raised eyebrows and created anxiety among
libertarians. With Sen.
Jeff Sessions as Attorney General, Retired Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn as National
Security Adviser, and Rep. Mike Pompeo as Director of Central Intelligence
Agency (CIA), there is a lot of apprehension about how they are going to
implement Trump’s scary national security agenda.
Sessions
as Attorney General will hold a key post in national security. When Reagan nominated him to a federal
judge in 1986, the Republican-controlled Senate rejected Sessions “out of
concern” based on devastating testimony by former colleagues who accused him of
being a racist. The
question is: Would the intervening 30 years change his racist past?
Trump’s nominee for National Security Adviser,
retired Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn was controversial in so many ways. He was fired as Director of the
Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) under the Obama administration.
Accused
of sexism and harboring anti-Muslim sentiments, Flynn believes that Islamist
militancy poses an existential threat to the U.S. The question is: Would his extremist
views on Islam become the underlying motivation to require Muslim-Americans to
register?
Trump’s nominee for Director of CIA, Rep. Mike Pompeo,
lacks the experience to head the CIA. He
had been accused of being anti-Muslim and had participated in a “racist political
campaign,” which makes one wonder if he’d inject racism in safeguarding the
nation’s security?
With Trump’s national security team consisting of people
with extremist views on race, sex, and national origin, is America going the
way of Hitler’s Germany? And is Trump following in Hitler’s footsteps? Are we seeing a pathway from the
Auschwitz concentration camps to America’s walled bastion where Americans who
don’t fit in Trump’s “America First” don’t belong in America?
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