Speak Its Name: Yes, This Is Naziism

from the indeed-we-are-the-baddies dept

History never repeats exactly the same, which is how it can be hard to recognize when it is indeed repeating—too many little things may be different the second time around for subsequent events to be a perfect twin of the previous. But it’s the big things that often reappear in similar ways that are meaningful. As they are here, which is why it’s time to recognize: for all intents and purposes, how the government of the United States of America is behaving is just like how the German Nazis behaved. It is doing to the people within its national embrace exactly what the Nazis did to theirs. The comparison to 20th Century Nazi Germany is not something that 21st Century America is still working up to; it’s where we have already arrived.

That we have not (yet) set up an Auschwitz-Birkenau, replete with crematoria, is not evidence to the contrary. After all, the German Nazis didn’t just suddenly start killing millions in the 1940s; their crimes against humanity began years earlier, in the 1930s. Even Hitler himself referred to the mass murder Auschwitz facilitated as the “final solution,” because it was the tactic deployed only after he had already committed plenty of other atrocities first—atrocities that look an awful lot like the ones we are inflicting now upon the human beings in our own national midst.

In the case of both nations the atrocities began, as such horrors often do, with the “othering” of people, as if there were those who, by virtue of something about their own humanity, were somehow disqualified from being part of our national community. While the Trump Administration may have begun by ostensibly focusing on “illegal immigrants”—which itself is a grotesquely deceptive label (an immigrant cannot be illegal; an immigrant can only immigrate illegally, and, for the most part, such illegality is but a civil or misdemeanor offense and not the heinously lawless act the administration paints it as)—like the German Nazis it has also stigmatized racial, religious, and ethnic groups comprising America’s cultural tapestry, as well as LGBTQ+ people. The rhetoric it espouses is all about conditioning the public to believe that there are some people who belong in America, and some who need to be expunged from it, so that the public will get on board aiding, supporting, and even celebrating the expunging that will soon follow.

The horror in both countries then continues by upending the law such that the targeted people cannot legally belong anymore. In Germany we saw how Jewish families who had been in the country for generations suddenly lost their rights as citizens. Here in the U.S. denaturalization has so far only been threatened, albeit palpably, but for non-citizens whose presence in the country has so far been entirely lawful, the Trump Administration has been unilaterally changing that status, moving people from welcomed additions to our community to accused interlopers who must be expelled and, per the government, right now.

But before the expulsions can happen, first the targeted people need to be rounded up. And so a force of federal police has been showing up at people’s homes, schools, jobs, health care providers, bus stops, and anywhere American life takes place to arrest people, without warrants or due process, for no crime at all other than existing. Even if not yet officially prisoners, everyone targeted by the regime has already been made to be, by forcing them to withdraw from life in fear. Governor Walz is absolutely right: there is some child writing a new diary about what it is like to have to hide from a lawless regime incapable of respecting the law and liberties that are supposed to protect them, just like the German Nazis refused to respect any of it either.

After rounding its targets up, the American government then does what the German Nazis did and “concentrate” those they have snatched in detention centers, or, as in the case of some of the larger complexes, “camps,” if you will. There these people—even small children—are kept as un-convicted prisoners, unable to leave on their own volition while, just like the Nazis’ victims, they are forced to live in inhumane conditionsassuming they manage to stay alive at all. Here history has been loudly echoing once again, as the stories emerging from America’s human warehouses are, as the German Nazis’ were, tales of inadequate food and healthcare, brutality by the guards, and indifferent murder.

The comparison to history does not even stop there. For instance, German Nazis also liked to banish their prisoners to far-flung nations where they could be imprisoned instead. It is an example the Trump Administration has already followed, such as by sending its own to places like CECOT in El Salvador or other nations around the world where a secret flight could be sent in accordance with a secret deal made with a regime willing to accommodate America’s evil. Furthermore, the Trump Administration has continued to walk in the path of the German Nazis in its penalization of any dissenting voice that would challenge its actions. Here, too, opponents of the regime have also become targets of its brutal power, being entered into databases, surveilled, and even summarily executed.

Naturally there are of course some differences between then and now. In fact, one of the biggest differences between what the Germany Nazis of the 1930s and 1940s did then and what the United States government is doing now is that we’re mostly using airplanes instead of box cars to traffic innocent people to places where at best they are imprisoned, often tortured, and generally put in mortal peril. And, unlike the German Nazis, who were meticulous in their paperwork, our government can’t seem to be bothered keeping track of whom we have sent to their doom. But apart from these differences what is happening now is still fundamentally the same as what happened then. Families are still being broken up, children are effectively being orphaned (even citizen children, who are also being expatriated), and lives and futures are being destroyed, if not ended outright. All without due process, and in grotesque volume, just as during the Holocaust.

However, there is another important difference: that so many in America can see what is happening for what it is and be willing to stand against it. There are of course stories from the Holocaust of people resisting Nazism and trying to save their neighbors—Anne Frank’s, for instance—but history lacks good analogs to what is happening now, like in Minnesota, where virtually the entire community has stood in solidarity to shield their neighbors and protest en masse, with even local government pushing back as well.

But that wonderful exception to America’s descent into Nazism does not mean the descent hasn’t already happened. The comparison remains too apt, and too important to run from. Because it also is instructive for how we got here. After all, how could it have happened here, in a country strong enough to have defeated the actual German Nazis, with its nearly 250-year old constitutional order that should have prevented everything that is now happening. But the answer is revealing: because neither regime committed their crimes with any legitimacy. In both cases, the sitting governments had to destroy the law that would have restricted their evil in order to perpetuate it.

Of course, even if the Weimar Republic had been too weak to resist it, surely America should have been more durable and able to resist such a threat emerging from within. Yet here we find ourselves, which itself adds to the list of reasons why it is so important to realize it: because thinking it can’t happen here is precisely why it has happened here. Saying it can’t and wouldn’t happen here is exactly what ensures that it can and will. It could and it did, because too many ignored one of the critical lessons of the Holocaust, which is that its horrors don’t come from nothing. Yes, there are malevolent people, but they only have power over us when good people do nothing with the power they have to stop it. And here far too many people who should have protected us from what is now happening turned a blind eye to it while it was brewing on the horizon and in doing so cleared the way for it.

As history keeps demonstrating, the price of liberty is eternal vigilance. Which is why it is so important to stop burying our heads in the sand, or, worse, try to excuse the inexcusable by rationalizing, even if only out of some sense of misplaced patriotic vanity, that what is happening is anything less than what we believed should never be able to happen again. It is only by recognizing that this evil has slipped through our defenses that those defenses can be fortified.

And it is important to start now, because, again, the story of Nazi Germany offers even more important lessons. One is that there will come a tipping point after which it may be impossible to stop the horrors the government is perpetuating without risking war. Furthermore, even if the atrocities the American government is committing were to stop today—and at last there finally seems some political enthusiasm for trying to get them stopped—hundreds, if not thousands, of innocent people have already been traumatized, tortured, or killed by these monsters we allowed to run around among us for the last year wearing our flag. There is no undo button for what has befallen them. But if we act now we can save others. As well as ourselves.

Because one other key lesson is that this evil doesn’t just victimize others; it victimizes everyone. It is not just the targets of the regime but everyone’s welfare that is at stake. The history of the Holocaust shows how ultimately every German suffered along with the people the Nazis specifically targeted. There is no allowing this evil to happen to just some among us. We’re all in this country and world together with our fates inexorably intertwined. These are crimes being committed against all of us, trying to destroy the fabric of our nation, its values, and all the law that is supposed to protect us all. Saving everyone is the only way to save ourselves.

And the first step to salvation is acknowledging the true danger we face.

Note: I originally started writing this post because I thought it had an important point to make. Then I saw the execrable news that the US Holocaust Museum had the gall to criticize the comparisons being drawn between what is unfolding against the vulnerable among us now, and what unfolded decades ago against the vulnerable in Nazi Germany, as if any victims had some sort of a monopoly on sympathy for being victimized, and it only became more relevant. I may not be a Trump sycophant unlawfully operating one of the nation’s most important museums, but I’ve visited enough Holocaust memorials and museums, studied enough Nazi propaganda in academic environments, and toured enough concentration camps to have learned the lessons that curators in every instance have been desperate to teach the future. The US Holocaust Museum board should think about becoming similarly educated so that they, too, can learn that the point of all these efforts archiving and instructing on the past is NOT to take the Nazis’ side.

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Comments on “Speak Its Name: Yes, This Is Naziism”

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17 Comments
AnObserver (profile) says:

In fact, one of the biggest differences between what the Germany Nazis of the 1930s and 1940s did then and what the United States government is doing now is that we’re mostly using airplanes instead of box cars to traffic innocent people

Wait until there are too many to transport, and planes can’t scale enough.

And, unlike the German Nazis, who were meticulous in their paperwork, our government can’t seem to be bothered keeping track of whom we have sent to their doom.

Probably because these people don’t want records to be available and link them to attrocities. Or, perhaps Hanlon’s razor applies, “Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity.”

Anonymous Coward says:

We need to stop calling them fucking Nazis and call them what they REALLY are — FUCKING CONFEDERATES.

Seriously, where do y’all think Nazis got the blueprint from? They got it from southern plantation owners who concentrated their wealth and believed they had a divine and unchallengeable right to rule over everyone else.

We are literally fighting the Confederacy again right now. Wealth is concentrated in the hands of a few. Slave patrols are running amok in Minnesota and Maine. Congressmen from southern states are letting it happen, because their real backers are still angry about Gen. Sherman burning down Atlanta, and 16 decades later, they remain intent on getting their revenge by destroying this republic. There’s no point in talking about a second Civil War, because these bastards are still fighting the first one.

We’re doing a terrible job of knowing our enemies in this country, and that gives those enemies too big of an advantage. Trump is front and center, because that’s how he’s always liked it, but the real enemies are moving in silence, and we need better tactical maneuvers against them.

ThatOtherOtherGuy says:

We are already there...

The US is shipping people off to their deaths. It is being outsourced to other countries so well hidden from the media and citizenry.

The numbers are still small, but that is just a matter of time.

And then factor in things like defunding USAID and the body count really starts to add up.

Trump and Stephen Miller are every bit as evil as the Nazis and just as intent on genocide.

BernardoVerda (profile) says:

Same rhyme, same meter

“History doesn’t repeat itself… But it rhymes.”

(often ascribed to Mark Twain, but origin not known)

What’s happening in the USA today is not only rhyming, but following the same old meter as well… so I’ll just call it Naziism or fascism, or authoritarian autocracy or totalitarianism or whatever, as best seems to fit at the moment.

Right now I don’t care; it doesn’t matter — the fight is on, and the arguments are mostly fomented by people trying to distract us from the ugly truth — I’ll leave academic debates over the most precisely correct label as an exercise for political scientists and historians, once the fighting is finally over.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

Nazism is quite specific and you probably need jews to be a main target. There certainly are neonazis near the administration and on the supporting side, but they are still being fought because some right wingers support the more extreme parts of Israels government.
Fascism is a lot closer with the demands for partial ownership of companies and the hostility to “others” as well as the “sexual conservativism”.
Authoritarian is a generic term that could apply to any leadership who doessn’t follow the constitution or ground laws. Would apply to at least ICE as there are now 3+ instances of contempt-proceedings against different efforts from their side.
Totalitarianism is “je suis l’etat”. The breakdown of separations of powers. You can argue that the judicial branch is still partially free, but the federal banking is looking to be swallowed by the swamp like DOJ has been…

Anonymous Coward says:

What do Jews think?

American Jews reclaim German citizenship | DW News
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XEkE4BZyu4Y

Once unthinkable: At 103, Holocaust survivor Ruth Gruenthal has reclaimed the German citizenship the Nazi regime stripped from her because she was Jewish.
After surviving Nazi persecution and rebuilding her life in the U.S., Ruth became a psychotherapist and raised a family spanning four generations — many of whom have now also reclaimed German citizenship.
Born in Hamburg in 1922, imprisoned in France, and forced to flee Nazi persecution as a teenager, Ruth rebuilt her life in the United States, where she lived for decades. But recent political developments, rising antisemitism, and fears of growing authoritarianism in the U.S. have shaken her sense of security.
Ruth is not alone. An increasing number of Jewish Americans with family histories shaped by the Holocaust are applying to restore German citizenship — not necessarily to leave, but to have a safeguard: the option to move to Germany should conditions in the United States deteriorate further.
Germany allows victims of Nazi persecution and their descendants to reclaim citizenship that was deliberately taken from them. In New York alone, applications have more than doubled in recent years.

Bondles (profile) says:

Paging Jesse Owens

Hardly the most important thing, but there’s another parallel coming down the road as MAGA America prepares to host the Olympics. Not many countries these days boast about their participation in the 1936 games, and the few stories still celebrated are those of protest and defiance against the hosts. I wonder how many national Olympic Committees will have the bravery to consider the lesson and sit 2028 out.

ajoslin103 (profile) says:

I object

I object to calling them “German” Nazis, just as I object to calling them “American” ICE

They are fanatics and they rarely [actually] speak for their nations people

They speak for their Nationalistic Authoritarian Regimes and it’s claimed Ideals

They speak for their Crusade, and as fanatics they will destroy anything on their way to victory (rather than creating)

They kill for their just and true God – Or/And they kill because they enjoy it — in both cases violating any claims to such representation as they may make.

And so I object, I object because they claim to speak for me with impunity

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