NYC, November 10th, 2016.
The day after the presidential election, David Remnick, the editor of The New Yorker, published a piece titled âAn American Tragedy.â Stunned, treading carefully toward some understanding of what was to come, he wrote, âFascism is not our futureâit cannot be; we cannot allow it to be soâbut this is surely the way fascism can begin.â
In the days and weeks since, President-elect Trump has lurched and shouted and broken historical conventions in ominous manners. He has also gone about the protocols of governance with some small smidgen of standard procedure, while Democratic leaders urge for a âpeaceful transition of powerâ or say âwe owe him an open mind.â As Trump fills cabinet positions and chats with world leaders, that notion of looming fascism has largely retreated in the popular conversation.
This isnât only due to creeping normalization. Itâs also due to the anti-Trump movementâs increased, and rightful, focus on strategy. In the private sector, liberal institutions like the ACLU and Planned Parenthood have reported record numbers of donations. In the public sector, Republican senators have pledged fierce pushback on Trumpâs promised draconianism.
Talk of strategy is practical. Itâs also wilfully optimistic, and rooted in a certain sector of the oppositionâs bedrock belief: our democratic institutions and traditions are too strong for Trump to do away with. So even within the opposition, some equivocate â urge patience, say âletâs wait and see.â
And then there are those who have argued impassionedly and persuasively that Trump is actively a unique threat to American democracy, and needs to be handled as such. Not if or when he carries out on that threat, but right now. âDonât wait for something dramatic to happen,â Upshot contributor Brendan Nyhan tweeted a few weeks back. âThere will be no one moment when democracy fails.â
Writing in the New York Review of Books, with a commanding force, the journalist Masha Gessen elaborated what it is that Nyhan was getting at. âI have lived in autocracies most of my life, and have spent much of my career writing about Vladimir Putinâs Russia,â she wrote. âI have learned a few rules for surviving.â
She ticked off a few things, all painfully, pressingly necessary: âRemember the Future.â âDonât Compromise.â âBelieve the autocrat. He means what he says.â But itâs Rule #4 that stuck with me the most.
âBe outraged,â she wrote. âIn the face of the impulse to normalize, it is essential to maintain oneâs capacity for shock. This will lead people to call you unreasonable and hysterical, and to accuse you of overreacting. It is no fun to be the only hysterical person in the room. Prepare yourself.â
Long ago â and nowadays, nearly daily anew â Donald Trump established himself as a threat to democracy. But how do you tell people youâre afraid of fascism without sounding like Chicken Little?
NYC, November 10th, 2016.
Last week, I spoke with Kathleen Canning, the Chair of the History department at the University of Michigan. (When I was a student there in the mid-2000s, I took Canningâs excellent âOrigins of Nazismâ course.) She understood the desire to draw parallels between Trumpâs dark potential and historical cases of fascism â most famously, the Nazis. But respectfully, she pushed back on the desire to jump directly to that line of thinking. Actively, the âworst danger is self-censorship,â she said. âNormalization. You can already hear it going on.â
Still, she added, âI do believe America can produce our very own version of fascism.â
âItâs not like fascism was always just an interwar phenomenon or always just a reaction to Bolshevik revolution in other parts of Europe,â Canning continued, alluding to two of the driving factors in the rise of the Nazis. âRight now in the U.S. thereâs some sort of potential, and itâs very hard to extricate from white nationalism. And it does seem like youâve got your target group. Except the target group is not one group of Jews â itâs everyone whoâs not white.â
In September, a New York Times review of a new biography of Hitler by the historian Volker Ullrich was shared widely. Without ever mentioning Trump by name, Times reviewer Michiko Kakutani drew a number of seemingly sharp, unbelievably alarming similarities between the two demagogues: their exploitative public speaking, their catchphrases, their egomania, their lies.
Following up, The Atlantic spoke with Ullrich directly about the comparison. Ullrich conceded similarities both possibly coincidental (âHitler was also a multi-millionaire who successfully avoided paying taxesâ) and almost certainly not (âresentment of established elites ⦠their mutual talk of restoring the greatness of their respective countriesâ). Ultimately, though, the historian pointed out that comparing Trump (or anyone) to Hitler is only useful if you fully consider the dissimilarities, as well.
âHitler possessed a completely different caliber of destructive and criminal energy [than] Antonescu,â Ullrich said at one point, referring to Romaniaâs one-time dictator Ion Antonescu. Both men were active at the same time, and both men were fervent, authoritarian anti-Semites. Only one entered historical lore. The comparison is a reminder to carefully ascertain danger, to not prescribe attempted genocide to every powerful loudmouthed bigot.
âIn the context of crisis, a lot is possible.â âGavriel Rosenfeld
Ultimately, though, Ullrich does leave The Atlantic with a warning. âIf the case of Hitler teaches us anything, itâs how swiftly democracy can be dismantled."
So how swiftly can it?
I spoke with Gavriel Rosenfeld, Professor of History at Fairfield University, and he sketched for me the unique parameters under which Hitler consolidated power after becoming Chancellor of Germany in 1933.
A popular politician with the burgeoning NSDAP (known now as the Nazi Party), Hitler was appointed, not elected, to Chancellor. He was brought in to lead as part of a right-wing coalition that believed it could control his violent, virulent urges. The coalition partners were something along the line of opportunistic racists, Rosenfeld explained, who normalized anti-Semitism in order to gain voters âin a way that people are afraid that Steve Bannon is doing now.â But the conservative coalition never intended on letting Hitler run his agenda in full.
Amazingly quickly, though, all governmental checks on Hitlerâs control fell away. In February of 1933, the governmental Reichstag building was burned down, most likely by a young Dutch communist. It was used as a pretext. Press outlets adversarial to the Nazis were shuttered, political opponents were thrown in makeshift concentration camps. âThese were factory barracks, abandoned housing complexes,â Rosenfeld said. âThe later organized concentration camps grew out of these improvised ones.â
Hitlerâs next coup was pushing the Enabling Act through parliament in March. It gave him a four year dictatorial term, and effectively abolished the parliament. Democracy had only existed in Germany since 1918, the end of World War I. In the U.S., Rosenfeld said, âOne would like to think itâs got a stronger foundation. The Nazis were fundamentally intent on destroying the party system.â
The historical strength of American democracy is, and will continue to be, a succor. But it canât be taken as a catch-all bulwark. âOf course, the United States has much stronger institutions than Germany did in the 1930s,â Gessen wrote in her NYRB piece. âThe problem, however, is that many of these institutions are enshrined in political culture rather than in law.â
Beyond faith in our political culture, though, Rosenfeld checked off a few more possibly heartening items: the Republican Partyâs strong libertarian wing that should act as a Trump check; the unlikelihood of Trump actually being able to change libel laws to curtail free press thanks to the 1964 Supreme Court decision in The New York Times vs. Sullivan.
We talked about how, first with the Stormtroopers of the SA and then the SS, Hitler had street armies. Meanwhile, Trump has âinternet trolls that send harassing messages to journalists on Twitter.â Rosenfeld deadpanned: âAs far as any paramilitary organizations running around with a capital 'T' on their tunics, thatâs the kind of thing that fortunately hasnât been present yet.â
Doing a bit of thinking out loud, though, Rosenfeld echoed what Canning had told me. âItâs a far cry from street violence and targeted assassinations, God knows, but if [the online Trump faithful] can encourage journalists into self censorship â well, itâs not as effective as abolishing the free press with Stormtroopers. But maybe you donât have to be so knuckleheaded about it.â
Before we got off the phone, Rosenfeld drew one more parallel: to post 9/11 America, where calls for national unity gave President Bush dangerously wide leverage.
âYou can suspend all kind of civil liberties for the sake of national security,â Rosenfeld said. âStripping people of certain rights is always a threat. Thatâs why people were so afraid of the Patriot Act. And after the Reichstag fire, there was a feeling that âweâre under assault.ââ
âThe worst case scenario thenâ â after some unimaginable crisis giving Trump that same wide leverage â âis perhaps internment, or forceful deportations across the border, and Democrats going meekly along with it. It would ostensibly happen on a democratic basis.â
âIn the context of crisis, a lot is possible.â
In a recent much-hyped post-election sit-down with The New York Times, Trump seemed to roll back one nefarious campaign promise after another. Possibly most brazen was his disavowal of the torture heâd so recently lusted for (previously: âI would bring back a hell of a lot worse than waterboarding.â)
After one conversation with James N. Mattis, a retired Marine Corps general, Trump had apparently changed his mind! General Mattis had told him, âIâve never found it to be useful ⦠Give me a pack of cigarettes and a couple of beers and Iâll do better.â And Trump âwas very impressed by that answer.â
The optimist hears that and thinks, perhaps this man isnât insane after all. The pessimist, perhaps, keeps reading the interview, and finds this quote â âTo me more important is taking care of the people that really have proven ... to love Donald Trumpâ â and remembers: this man is a liar and he will say anything he sees fit.
Personally, then, I choose not to hold out hope that Trump will temper his views, or be moderated into some kind of partial submission.
I choose to hold out hope in local officials from so-called sanctuary cities â Chicago, L.A., New York â who have pledged to not cooperate with federal officials on mass deportation despite threats of funding cut-offs and even prosecution. And I choose to hold out hope in the protests and the groundswell of active resistance that I believe the protests indicate.
In 1930s Germany, even before Hitler consolidated his cult of personality and choked out avenues of dissent, there was no real protest movement to speak of. (The closest thing were barhall brawls between the then-budding Nazis and a patchwork of communist and socialist groups in Berlin. One local motto: âBeat the fascists wherever you encounter them!") In the modern day U.S., whatever else happens, the protestors put us on the historical record. âWe reject the President-elect,â the kids in Vegas and Philly and D.C. chanted.
I thank them dearly for that. And I urge them to ignore any pleas for âcivility,â any calls to âget back to normalâ â I urge them to keep going. âThe autocratâs favorite con,â Gessen wrote in her NYRB piece, âis the implied equivalency between civil resistance and insurgency. [This is] the explanation for the violent suppression of peaceful protests the world over.â
To continue speaking about Trumpâs historical threat to democracy is worthwhile as well. There are those that will scoff at you, that will laugh at you, that will tell you, that cannot happen here. Remind them that it doesnât have to be Hitlerâs Germany to be fascism, that it doesnât have to be Putinâs Russia to be autocracy. Remind them that it doesnât have to be anything other than Trump â doing what he has said all along that he will â to be a nightmare.

