There is a gross misconception among the people and pundits
alike that extremism in the Republican Party is limited to one wing of
the conservative movement.…One isolated case of group extremism, no matter how
severe, is not a movement. There have always been extremists causes in
America even though they are seldom embraced by a major political party;
except of course the McCarthyism of the 1950s. Even two extremist
movements do not necessarily constitute a trend toward a specific
ideology, although when they are embraced completely by a political
party it should be cause for alarm or at least close monitoring.
Tragically for America, and with little notice, Republicans have
embraced a rash of extremist ideologies and tactics that are identical
to the rise of the Nazi movement in Germany and the American people are
seemingly oblivious.
There is a gross misconception among the people and
pundits alike that extremism in the Republican Party is limited to one
wing of the conservative movement. However, it is glaringly evident that
establishment Republicans have embraced several extremist agendas that
were hallmarks of the Nazi movement’s rise to power in 1930s Germany.
This agenda did not begin when Americans elected an African American man
as President, but it has escalated rapidly since Republicans tapped
into the racial animus plaguing this nation.
The specific aspects of the Republican march toward
Nazism are extreme xenophobia and racism, Christofascism, attacks on
unions, and corporate fascism; all facilitated by a willing media
propaganda campaign. The parallels are beyond refute beginning with the
propaganda campaign against any and everything contrary to what the
Republican fascists consider “conservative purity;” multi-culturism,
ethnic diversity, religious freedom, and the U.S. Constitution.
Despite America being a nation of immigrants, the
Republican establishment has become a vile and rampant medium for
xenophobic hatred of anything they define as foreign, other, or
“un-American.” As Hrafnkell Haraldsson elucidated here,
the speakers and sponsors of the Conservative Political Action
Conference (CPAC) demonstrated a severe hatred of any and all people who
are not white, not Christian, and not conservative. It is true
Republicans have transformed their typically substantial distaste for
non-whites into a raging hatred, but it now extends throughout the party
to include Hispanics, African Americans, Asians, and particularly any
American of Middle Eastern descent; whether they are Muslims or not.
Immigrants are simply a representation of all things not white.
In fact, Republicans and their ardent supporters are
the personification of a xenophobe; a person with unreasonable and
extreme hatred of that which is perceived to be foreign, strange, or
“the other.” Americans have witnessed it in the Republican movement
manifested in the relations and perceptions of the in-group (white
conservative Christians) towards an outgroup (Hispanics, African
Americans, Muslims, non-Christians, liberals) including overwhelming
suspicion of its activities, outright aggression, and a dangerously
rabid desire to eliminate its presence to secure “American purity.” In
Nazi Germany it was “Aryan Christian purity” that led to the Holocaust,
slaughter of Gypsies, homosexuals, and various non-Christian and
non-Aryan groups.
Although the concept of “Christofascism” began as a
counter to “Islamofascism” popularized by conservative media after 9/11,
it actually had its beginnings in Nazi Germany. Like raging xenophobia,
a particularly potent Nazi propaganda tool, Republicans have wholly
embraced Christofascism with a vengeance to incite their supporters to
demand the ideology as a means of governance. According to its
dangerous tenets, Christofascism is an extremely virulent and very lethal movement that “disposes
or allows Christians to impose themselves not only upon other
religions, but on other segments within a culture and political parties
which do not fall in line, bow down, and march under the banner of
radical Christianity.” In America the movement is made up of both
the extremist religious right and the all-powerful United States Council
of Catholic Bishops (USCCB).
Everything from the attack on women’s reproductive
rights, bans on contraception, attacks on education and entertainment,
and the blatant discrimination of the LGBT community are the results of
Christofascism. It is true no politician, judge, or victim has the
courage to cite religious motivation of Republicans denying other
Americans their freedom and liberties guaranteed in the Constitution,
but make no mistake; it is the direct result of Christofascism and
nothing else. If religion is the opiate of the masses, like Adolf Hitler
and Joseph Goebbels
in Nazi Germany, Republicans have kept their acolytes drug-focused on
“imposing themselves and their bastardized version of Christianity on
all segments of American society according to Dominionist theology’s
well-laid plans.
The recent concerted attacks on unions by Republicans around the nation, although not yet outright bans, are on par with Adolf Hitler’s. In fact, the Republican attacks have been ongoing over the past few years with so-called ‘right to work‘
legislation that the Koch Congress is intent on imposing nationally.
Republicans have always been anti-worker’s rights, and they have
successfully convinced their supporters that other Americans’ worker
rights are why they are suffering; Hitler and Goebbels would be proud of
the Republican machinations. It is noteworthy that a Republican-Koch
hero, Wisconsin governor Scott Walker, likened school teachers,
firefighters, street sweepers, and law enforcement officers to murderous
extremists in ISIS that he handily defeated in battle as if the public
sector workforce is an imminent existential threat to other Americans;
only because they negotiated for decent wages and working conditions.
For too long in this country it has been a mortal
sin to not only cite the theocratic takeover of government, but to
identify the parallels between the conservative movement’s agenda and
that of the Nazi rise to power in 1930’s Germany. That reluctance to
identify the most serious threat to America as a democracy and the
people as free has to end now. Republicans have had a free ride imposing
a Nazi-style fascism on America only because they have had little-to-no
pushback due to fear of being criticized for violating an absurd
Internet meme; Godwin’s Law. Sod off Godwin.
In great part, Republicans have been wildly
successful due to the population’s ignorance of history, and in part
because of willing accomplices in conservative media and religious
corporate conservative purists on the nation’s highest court. It is
worth noting that the High Court has aided and abetted Republican
fascism by deconstructing the religious clauses in the First Amendment,
eliminating the people’s voice by destroying electoral integrity, and
granting corporate fascists a greater voice than the people in
governing.
What
is happening to America is not one isolated case of conservative
extremism or one specific wing of the Republican Party. It is a
concerted, well-executed conservative attack on America as a
representative democracy and funded by Charles and David Koch. Unlike
1930s Germany there is not one mesmerizing orator inciting hatred for
“the other” or imposing extremist Christianity on the people or
abolishing workers’ rights. It is the entire Republican movement funded
by a dirty cabal of fascist ideologues that studied and followed the
tactics that allowed Adolf Hitler to impose Nazi ideology on Germany.
Sadly, they are close to seeing their vision for America reach fruition
while Americans slept and the Founders’ wept.
No comments:
Post a Comment