“Fascism: A form
of far-right, authoritarian ultranationalism characterized by dictatorial
power, forcible suppression of opposition and strong regimentation of society
and of the economy which came to prominence in early 20th-century Europe.”
“Antifa: a political protest movement comprising autonomous
groups affiliated by their militant opposition to fascism and other forms of
extreme right-wing ideology.”
Trump’s continued reference to Antifa is primarily aimed at
shifting attention from his continued and increasing cult of personality/oligarchy/isolationism.
America’s relationship to and with Fascism is not, I think, generally very well
understood, if at all, by the majority of her population.
On the simplest level, it is noteworthy that most
multigenerational US families have, or have had, family members whose military service
they venerate. If this service was in either of the two World Wars, the
opposition was Fascist in both. In WWI, Germany was, although a nominal monarchy,
in essence fascist in some of the areas as listed in the definition.
However, the
aftermath of that war was, almost predictably, the breeding ground for a far
more vicious version: Sven Reichard, in a 2009 book, summed it up thus: "The
experience of World War I was the most decisive immediate precondition for
fascism.” In other words, without that
war there would have been neither fascism in Italy nor National Socialism in
Germany. “Without the First World War and its consequences, but also without
the October revolution and the symbolic strength of Leninism, fascism would have
remained a sectarian movement.”
Although peripheral, it cannot be overlooked that the Versailles treaty, while endeavoring to make things better for colonial subjects, also condemned Germany to post war economic struggle, always a fertile field for a rabble rouser, and Germany found one. Additionally, Hitler availed himself of a sort of “reverse” religious zealotry, not the usual muscular support of a specific faith, but the brutal condemnation and demonization of one.
Blaming Jews was nothing new to Germans. German Crusader Knights had slaughtered indigenous German Jews before leaving for the Crusades. Even reformer, Martin Luther, had, in his last years, become a rabid anti-Semite. Hitler simply took it to the next level, blaming Jews, not just for the “denial of Christianity” but for essentially every ill Germany endured in the late 1920 and early thirties, having been devastated by the great depression.
Into this misery, Hitler revived every Germanic heroic legend, implying that they had been part of a “golden age” (they hadn’t) and as Benito Mussolini would in Italy, called for a return to a largely manufactured “heroic age.” Hitler’s speech, the infamous prophecy on 30 January 1939, is significant: “Today I will once more be a prophet: If the international Jewish financiers in and outside Europe should succeed in plunging the nations once more into a world war, then the result will not be the Bolshevizing of the Earth and thus the victory of Jewry, but the annihilation of the Jewish race in Europe.”
Subsequent
events are well known, as both Germans and Italians succumbed to propaganda and
“manufactured histories” to become text-book fascist states. What is less emphasized
(by some) in the US is that, while we properly venerate those who (eventually) landed at Normandy and fought and died valiantly
in Italy, North Africa and Western Europe, we hear far less about how long many
Americans opposed US entry into the war.
The America
First movement was amalgam of groups from liberal to conservative, united under
the banner of “Stay the hell out of the “European war.” Underlying this however, and under emphasized,
In this writer’s opinion, was the sense of some Americans that the Germans and
to a lesser extent the Italians were “Christian folks like us” added this was
the undercurrent of American anti-Semitism, reflected by the refusal of US
authorities to allow the 900 passengers on the MS Saint Louis, all Jewish
refugees from Nazi Germany seeking sanctuary, to land in America. The vessel
was forced to return to Europe where eventually, about a third of those passengers were executed.
Even earlier, such prominent Americans as Henry Ford had stoked the fires of anti-Semitism. A business acquaintance recalled that, on a 1919 camping trip, Ford had lectured a group around the campfire. He "attributed all evil to Jews or to the Jewish capitalists," the friend wrote in his diary. "The Jews caused the war, the Jews caused the outbreak of thieving and robbery all over the country, the Jews caused the inefficiency of the navy…"(??)
In 1918, Ford acquired a newspaper, The Dearborn Independent. A year and a half later,
he began publishing a series of articles that claimed a vast Jewish conspiracy
was infecting America. The series ran in the following 91 issues. Ford bound
the articles into four volumes titled "The International Jew," and
distributed half a million copies to his vast network of dealerships and
subscribers. "I regard Henry Ford as my inspiration,"(!!!!) Hitler
told a Detroit News reporter two years before becoming the German chancellor in
1933, explaining why he kept a life-size portrait of the American automaker
next to his desk. Actually, both Ford and GM readily retooled German plants to build
the military machines which were used to invade Poland in 1939.
In July
1938, four months after the German annexation of Austria, Henry Ford was awarded
and accepted the highest medal that Nazi Germany could bestow on a foreigner,
the Grand Cross of the German Eagle. The following month, a senior executive
for General Motors, James Mooney, received a similar medal for his
"distinguished service to the Reich." As one of the most famous (yet
markedly undereducated) men in America, Henry Ford legitimized ideas that
otherwise may have been given little authority.
FDR realized
that the fortunes of the US were tied to a free Europe and tried in several
ways (not going into details here for brevity’s sake) to ease the nation farther
toward open alliance (And armed participation
with) Britain and France. We’ll never know how long that might have taken,
because another Fascist State halfway around the world attacked the US Naval
base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. It was easy to get an almost unanimous declaration
of war against Japan, since pre-existent anti-Asian racism and religious intolerance
fueled the fire. When we declared war on Japan, Germany and Italy (the Axis Powers)
actually honored their treaty with Japan and declared war on the USA.
I know, “That’s
fine Mike, but why the history lesson?” It’s Simple really, because as
Santayana (a philosopher, not a guitarist) famously said, “Those who forget the
past are condemned to repeat it.”
It could well
be argued that a significant portion of Trump policy and rhetoric reads and
sounds like precursors of Fascism. Look at those he admires, beginning with
Vladimir Putin, who rules Russia with the collusion of a handful of oligarchs,
responsible to no elected body, willing to sanction the poisoning of political rivals,
controlling all media and glorifying the state above all else.
Then examine
Mohammad Bin Salman, Absolutist ruler of Saudi Arabia, whose $1.3 trillions
make Trump salivate, while ignoring the brutal dismemberment of a journalist at
his (MBS’s) order, (yes the CIA told Trump so, but he chose to disbelieve, because,
“Hey, he’s rich?”)
Trump has described both of these individuals as “very nice,
very fine, people.”
In conclusion, nothing
I can write will change the xenophobic, racist, religiously intolerant,
economic elitist attitude of Trump many supporters, but I would hope they would
at some point acknowledge that, by condemning Antifa at Trump’s bidding, they
are supporting a political philosophy against which some of their predecessors
fought and died in Europe and the Pacific, less than a century ago.
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