Monday, July 16, 2018

A VERY CLEAR AND VERY PRESENT DANGER: Is Donald Trump a Fascist?




Bad things are happening in the world right now.  Americans wake up every day more concerned than the day before about preserving democratic institutions and the country’s dedication to the rule of law. Daily news reporting brings word of new attacks on Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation into Russian interference of the 2016 Presidential election.  Assaults continue on the courts and the very idea of an independent judiciary.  The President’s lawyer says the chief executive can’t obstruct justice, could pardon even himself, and suggests he doesn’t have to respond to a subpoena for his testimony. This is the United States of America?

As if all that weren’t enough, images flood the media of children being torn apart from their parents and hustled off to
detention center cages.  Those children suffer that terror because their parents dared come to the United States seeking refuge from unspeakable violence and abuse in their home countries.  The picture suggests a modification of the inscription on the Statute of Liberty from:

“Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled mases yearning to breathe free,
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed to me,
I lift my lamp beside the golden door!”

To:
“We dare you give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled mases yearning to breathe free,
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed to me,
And we will make you wish you never had,
I lift my lamp besides the golden door, so that ICE can see to apprehend you!”

Polls say a majority of Americans recoil at this picture of their
country.  Indeed, the pushback grows daily, as last week’s nationwide protests of President Trump’s immigration policies demonstrates.  Unfortunately, what we’ve witnessed in the Russia investigation and at the southwestern border, symbolize something larger and more dangerous.  That something is FASCISM and it is a worldwide threat. 

Madam Secretary

Madeleine Albright served America as United Nations

Ambassador, then as Secretary of State.  She’s now a professor at Georgetown University, teaching graduate students the ins and outs of diplomacy and world affairs.  To see how her seminars work , read her wonderful new book Fascism: A Warning.  The book takes on so much significance now because it clearly and succinctly lays out, in historical and contemporary terms, the danger the world faces from the fascist threat brewing around the globe.  Yes, that includes the United States. 

Secretary Albright understands fascism first hand, having fled Nazi occupation of her native Czechoslovakia as a child.  She followed in her father’s academic and diplomatic footsteps and became a major player in world affairs, culminating in her service as Bill Clinton’s Secretary of State between 1997 and 2001.  Ministers around the world she knew and still confers with are sometimes called “Madeleine’s Exes.” She knows of what she speaks.

What’s Fascism?

The Secretary defines a fascist as “someone who claims to speak for a whole nation or group, is utterly unconcerned with the rights of others, and is willing to use violence and whatever other means are necessary to achieve the goals he or she might have.”  This definition covers a wide swath of potentially abhorrent political behavior and governmental mischief.  By showing how fascists have operated in history and what they’re doing today, Secretary Albright makes clear just how much danger the world now faces.  From Turkey to North Korea to Venezuela, the book traces how today’s would-be fascists mimic the classic fascists of history, like Italy’s Benito Mussolini and Nazi Germany’s Adolf Hitler.

The book makes clear most fascists, both historically and those currently on the rise, first come to power through elections.  This book will disabuse readers of the notion fascists always take power through military coups or armed rebellion.  That happens from time to time, but it’s the exception, not the rule, and has been in history.  Hitler, for example, got his nose under the tent as his party, through electoral success and coalitions, gained control of Germany’s parliament in 1933.  The fascist - looking leaders who’ve worked their way to greater and greater power in recent years - Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Turkey, the late Hugo Chavez in Venezuela, Viktor Orban in Hungary -- all won elections of some kind.  Once in office, they solidified control by eroding democratic institutions, taking advantage of nativist instincts in their populations, or exploiting economic dislocations enabling concentration of executive power.  They co-opted the courts by appointing cronies (or ideological soul mates).  The legislative branches rubber stamped their programs.  They silenced criticism from the media.

Trump’s Playbook

Capitulation to the executive by legislators, appeals to nativism, and attacks on democratic institutions, including the media, characterize the first 18 months of Trump’s tenure.  Secretary Albright writes of the 45th President, “Trump’s view of the United States is dark.  Among his favorite mantras are that U.S. courts are biased, the FBI is corrupt, the press almost always lies, and elections are rigged.  The domestic impact of these condemnations is to demoralize and divide.”  As Secretary Albright contends, Trump’s actions resemble those of the authoritarian figures, like Russia’s Vladimir Putin, he so admires.

Trump’s opportunity to replace semi-moderate Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy  first drew alarm because the court vacancy means Trump could appoint someone to the Supreme Court who would dangerously expand executive power and appoint someone who will vote to overturn Roe v. Wade and make abortion illegal in many American states.  His choice of appellate judge Brett Kavanaugh has inflamed, not calmed
those fears. Now, Democrats are sounding the alarm because a fifth vote for the conservative block on the Supreme Court might serve as Trump’s get-out-of-jail-free card in connection with the Russia investigation.  That’s the kind of fascist action really at stake in the coming battle over a Supreme Court nominee and the kind that lurks in the pages of Secretary Albright’s essential book.                      

No comments:

Post a Comment