Chuck Ardo for BuzzFlash: Trump's "Reichstag Fire" Is Incinerating the US

September 23, 2022

By Chuck Ardo

As a child of Holocaust survivors, my mother having survived Dachau and my father Oranienberg, while much of my family was murdered at Auschwitz, I have always been more sensitive to the dangers of fascism than most people I know. With that in mind, I’ve become increasingly alarmed by the casual way in which the word Nazi has been invoked in the current political arena by people who don’t seem to have a clue about the movements true nature. Media reports reveal that, as President, Donald Trump was complimentary of some of Adolph Hitler’s achievements, thus confirming John Bolton’s assertion that Trump seemed to have no sense of history.

To be clear, Nazism is a right wing ideology based on fanatical nationalism, racial superiority and religious hatred and Nazis perpetrated some of the worst crimes against humanity in contemporary history. Right wing Republicans often refer to Nazis as socialists. But, just because the Nazis called themselves the National Socialist German Workers’ Party doesn’t mean they were socialists any more than North Korea is a democracy because it calls itself the Democratic People's Republic of Korea. Much of the Nazi party’s appeal to ordinary Germans was its strong opposition to the political left.

Desperate and disillusioned German voters, frustrated by the ruling coalition government’s failure to improve the economy, were attracted to the Nazis. There was little concern that the Nazi platform included imprisoning their political opponents and implementing the most frightening elements on their agenda. And there was little reaction when among their first acts was to erect the Dachau concentration camp to house socialists and communists: long before Jews, the disabled, those with intellectual disabilities, gays and other out of favor groups were sent there to perish.

Nazi propaganda targeted voters in small towns and rural areas who were suspicious of urban elites. It emphasized the threat people who were different from them posed to the social order and the political power they had always enjoyed. It was Nazis who pioneered “fake news” by labeling the media as the “lying press”, a tactic allowing their story to be dominant in the minds and hearts of the German people.

In their effort to maintain popular support, the Nazis introduced “patriotic education” to indoctrinate young people with a glorified version of German history. They passed new laws forcing public education to reflect their nationalist ideology and vision of racial superiority. The Nazi minister of education made clear the objective of public schools was to “Awaken in the pupils a sense of responsibility toward the nation” and “imbue the pupils with pride in the fact that the German people are the most important exponent of the Nordic race.”

Much as Hitler used the burning of the Reichstag, the German Parliament building, an act of arson by the Nazis themselves, as an excuse to seize power and pave the way for the most evil regime in human history, the Trump inspired insurrection should serve as a warning of things to come. When General Mark Milley, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, warned of a possible “Reichstag moment” during Donald Trump’s final days in office, fearing that Trump might attempt a coup, we can’t afford to ignore the possibility.

While no one today is proposing concentration camps and gas chambers there is an eerie similarity in our politics to that of the rise of the Nazis. Nazism was a movement comprised predominantly of conservative Christians whose original party platform promised a re-Christianization of German society. Calls to “lock her up”, labeling the media as purveyors of “fake news”, insisting that a less honest version of American history be taught and the racial, ethnic and sexually oriented animus of many Trump supporters are all echos from the past.

Nazi propagandist Joseph Goebbels contended that the bigger the lie and the more it was repeated the more likely it would be believed. If we don’t learn from history we are doomed to repeat it. What seems impossible here seemed impossible in Germany before the Nazi takeover.

Throughout their post-war lives my parents warned me that what happened in Germany could happen here. With every passing news cycle my fear grows that I’m now watching it happen in slow motion

Follow @BuzzFlash on @Twitter

Continue the conversation at the BuzzFlash Nation group on Facebook

No paywall or advertisements here! Keep BuzzFlash independent and free from the influence of Corporate Interests – Make A Donation Now.