It Can’t
Happen Here... Can It?
Trump’s Storm Troopers and the Possibility of
American Fascism
By Bob Dreyfuss
March 14, 2016
"Information
Clearing House"
- "Tom
Dispatch"
-
Can it
happen here?
That’s the
question circulating now that Donald Trump, the
nativist, rabble-rousing xenophobe, and billionaire,
is threatening to capture the Republican nomination
for president of the United States -- and it’s a
question that isn’t being asked only on the left.
It’s been raised by a New York Times
editorial, which claimed that Trump has brought
the GOP “to the brink of fascism,” and
by Republicans, ranging from neoconservative
pundit Max Boot to Virginia's centrist former
Governor Jim Gilmore. Conservative Times
columnist Ross Douthat was reasonably typical in a
piece headlined “Is
Donald Trump a Fascist?” While he allowed that
The Donald may not be Adolf Hitler or Benito
Mussolini, he added, “It seems fair to say that he’s
closer to the ‘proto-fascist’ zone on the political
spectrum than either the average American
conservative or his recent predecessors in
right-wing populism.”
For figures
ranging from comic Louis C.K. to right-wing
commentator Glenn Beck, making direct Hitler-Trump
comparisons has become the fashion of the moment. I
must admit, however, that “proto-fascist” sounds
about right to me. Certainly, the rise of Trump has
caused many voters to take notice -- the question
being whether the real estate mogul (who further
stirred the pot recently by
retweeting a quote from Italian fascist dictator
Benito Mussolini) could cobble together enough of a
coalition of nationalists, Angry White Men, “poorly
educated” working-class backers, the disaffected
religious right, Islamophobes, immigrant-bashers,
and others to wield the figurative pitchforks in a
march to victory in November.
If indeed
Trump is a mere “proto-fascist,” then what
ingredients, if any, are still needed for the
emergence of an authentic twenty-first-century
American fascist movement? To think about that
question, I recently read Richard J. Evans’ book,
The Coming of the Third Reich. It spans
the era from 1871 to 1933, describing in exquisitely
painful detail the gestation and growth of the Nazi
party. If you decide to read the book, try doing
what I did: in two columns in your head draw up a
list of similarities and differences between the
United States today and Weimar Germany in the 1920s
and early 1930s.
In this
edgy moment in America, the similarities, of course,
tend to jump out at you. As Trump repeatedly pledges
to restore American greatness, so Hitler promised to
avenge Germany’s humiliation in World War I. As
Trump urges his followers, especially the white
working class, to blame their troubles on Mexican
immigrants and Muslims, so Hitler whipped up an
anti-Semitic brew. As Trump -- ironically, for a
billionaire -- attacks Wall Street and corporate
lobbyists for rigging the economy and making puppets
out of politicians, so Hitler railed against Wall
Street and the City of London, along with their
local allies in Germany, for burdening his country
with a massive post-World War I, Versailles
Treaty-imposed reparations debt and for backing the
Weimar Republic’s feckless center-right parties.
(Think: the Republican Party today.) As with
Trump’s China-bashing comments and his threats to
murder the relatives of Islamist terrorists while
taking over Iraq’s oil reserves, Hitler too appealed
to an atavistic, reckless sort of ultra-nationalism.
The
Second Amendment Society
But don’t
forget the differences, which are no less obvious.
The United States has a long-established tradition
of democratic republicanism, which 1920s Germany did
not. The economy of the planet’s last superpower,
while careening into a near-depression in 2008, is
incomparably too strong to be put in the same
category as the hyperinflation-plagued German one of
that era.
There is,
however, another difference between Donald Trump of
2016 and Adolf Hitler of 1921 (when he took over the
leadership of the fledgling National Socialist
German Workers Party) that overshadows the rest.
From the beginning, Hitler wielded the support of a
brutal, thuggish armed paramilitary wing, the
notorious
Sturmabteilung (SA), the Storm Detachment (or
storm troopers). Also known as the Brown Shirts, the
SA often used violence against its opponents in the
streets of Germany’s cities, and its sheer presence
intimidated Germans across the political spectrum.
And that
got me thinking. Would it be possible for Donald
Trump or some future Trump-like figure to build an
armed following of his own? Frighteningly enough,
the answer is certainly: yes. And it might not even
be that hard.
Bear with
me a moment here. Back in 2010, in Alexandria,
Virginia, radical partisans of the Second Amendment
right to bear arms, bolstered by Virginia’s
egregiously anything-goes open-carry laws, held a
Restore the Constitution Rally in Fort Hunt Park on
the Potomac River -- and they
came armed. The event was, by the way, scheduled
for April 19th, the anniversary of Timothy McVeigh’s
1995 bombing of the federal building in Oklahoma
City. At the time, I lived a mile or so from that
park, and the combination of fear, anger, and
disgust that such a weapons-displaying political
demonstration could happen in the virtual shadow of
the Capitol was palpable.
Admittedly,
only about
50 armed people took part, though 2,000 others
held an unarmed, parallel rally in Washington, D.C.,
where carrying weapons is forbidden. Think about how
many more might turn out today in a country where
there have already been a number of
armed rallies and demonstrations by Second
Amendment activists, and in 2016, thanks to
effective lobbying by the National Rifle Association
(NRA), the majority of states have enacted complete
or partial open-carry laws. Meanwhile,
all 50 states now have concealed-carry laws,
meaning that pistol-packing is lawful in most public
places other than Washington, D.C.
So imagine
this scenario for a moment: Donald Trump (or a
future Trump-esque demagogue) announces that he’s
convening a rally in a state where open-carry is
permitted -- say, in Dallas, at the Cowboys' AT&T
Stadium -- and adds that he wants his supporters to
come armed. (Trump has
loudly defended the NRA’s interpretation of the
Second Amendment during the primary season and
on his website there’s a plank called
“Protecting Our Second Amendment Will Make America
Great Again.”) Under
Texas law, it would be perfectly legal for his
supporters in the thousands to attend such a rally
armed with semi-automatic weapons. And there, at the
podium, looking out over the crown of gun-wielding
militants would be The Donald, smiling broadly.
It doesn’t
take much to imagine the instant backlash this would
engender, from near-apoplectic television talking
heads to scathing editorials in the New York
Times and other newspapers to sputtering
denunciations from liberal and moderate politicians,
especially those from urban areas. But it’s also
easy to imagine Trump’s vitriolic disdain for the
naysayers, while the NRA’s pet Republicans
tut-tutted over Trump but defended his right to
organize such an event.
Imagine
then that he repeated the event in other stadiums
in, say, Denver, Phoenix, Indianapolis, and Miami --
and then announced that he’s establishing the Donald
Trump Second Amendment Society? He might even issue
specially designed baseball caps emblazoned with the
name. How far might we then be from armed marches by
the new organization in the streets of American
cities, its name, of course, soon abbreviated to the
Trump SA (for Second Amendment) Society?
To some,
this may sound like an outlandish, near-doomsday
scenario. (“It can’t happen here.”) But developments
in this country in recent years suggest that the
path is open to just such a possibility, and that
the question is less “if” than “when.” The
groundwork is already potentially being laid.
According to the
latest report from the Southern Poverty Law
Center (SPLC), 2015 saw a significant increase in
hate groups in this country, with militias and
anti-government “patriot” groups growing last year
from 874 to 998, having fallen precipitously in the
previous two. Of these,
says the SPLC, at least 276 were anti-government
“militias.” It adds: “Generally, such groups define
themselves as opposed to the ‘New World Order,’
engage in groundless conspiracy theorizing, or
advocate or adhere to extreme antigovernment
doctrines.”
In early
January, the nation
watched in shock as a band of “dozens of white,
armed American militants stormed a federal wildlife
refuge in Oregon seeking to take a ‘hard stand’
against federal government ‘tyranny.’” The action
thrilled militia and “patriot” groups across the
country, while, oddly enough, the mainstream media
was reluctant to apply the obvious word --
“terrorism” -- to this armed rebellion by political
radicals led by the sons of Nevada rancher
Cliven Bundy. (Juliette Kayyem, a Harvard expert
on terrorism and a former assistant secretary of
homeland security, was a rare exception in
writing for CNN, “The men, heavily armed, urging
others to come support their cause, and claiming
somehow that, while peaceful, they will ‘defend’
themselves whatever it takes, are -- by any
definition -- domestic terrorists.”)
The
occupation was eventually suppressed, but in the
present overheated atmosphere expect other
provocative actions by some of the 200-plus militias
that the SPLC has identified. Though Trump himself
expressed mild disapproval of the Oregon
militia, calling for “law and order,” Gerald
DeLemus, a co-chair of Veterans for Trump in New
Hampshire,
praised the action as a “great success,”
insisting in an
interview with Reuters that the militia’s cause
was “peaceful” and “constitutionally just.” He was
later
arrested “as a ‘mid-level leader’ and organizer
of a conspiracy to recruit, organize, train, and
provide support to armed men and other followers of
rancher Cliven Bundy.”
Trump, of
course, has repeatedly played with fire when it
comes to violence, intimidation, and the role of
white supremacists, the radical right, and others.
His dog-whistle refusal to instantly disassociate
himself from David Duke and the Ku Klux Klan on the
eve of the Super Tuesday primaries in the Deep South
was widely condemned even by Republican officials.
But in at least one case, an actual neo-Nazi,
Matthew Heimbach, the leader of the
Traditionalist Workers Party, used physical
force against protesters at a Trump rally in
Louisville.
Uniquely American Fascism
However
reprehensible Trump’s dalliance with the far right
may be, however disturbing the actions of figures
like Heimbach, we’re still a significant way from
the birth of a true national fascist movement, even
if the Times’s Roger Cohen can already
write a column
headlined “Trump’s Weimar America.” (“Welcome to
Weimar America: It’s getting restive in the beer
halls. People are sick of politics as usual. They
want blunt talk. They want answers.”) As of yet,
Trump has not tried to fuse his far-right allies
into a genuine movement -- though he has started
using the term “movement” -- or a party, nor has he
made any real effort to rally the country’s
gun-owning right-wing militants into his own version
of the SA. And he may never do so.
Keep in
mind as well that an American-style fascist movement
would hardly be a precise copy of either the German
or the Italian models, or even of the parties
currently building far-right movements in
France,
Hungary,
Greece, and elsewhere. Nor would it copy the
proto-fascist coalition of ultra-nationalists and
religious zealots being courted by
Russia’s Vladimir Putin. It would undoubtedly be
a uniquely American creation.
Though
Trump has managed to bring together disparate
elements of what an American fascist movement might
roughly look like, he may not, in the end, be quite
the right messenger for its development, nor may
this be quite the right moment for it to fully
develop. Among other things, for such a movement and
the armed militias that would go with it to
coalesce, you might need another 2007/2008-style
economic meltdown, a crisis long and profound enough
for such a movement to seize the moment. In that
case, of course, it’s also possible that a Bernie
Sanders-like leftist or socialist -- or maybe
Sanders himself -- would emerge to capture the
ensuing political and economic unrest in a very
different manner. But in The Donald’s America, don’t
rule out the possible emergence of an even more
formidable and threatening Trump-like figure, one
unburdened by his clownish persona, Trump
University, and the rest of his billionaire’s
baggage.
Whether or
not Donald Trump wins the Republican nomination or
is elected president, for the gathering members of
his grassroots coalition, he’s certainly shown what
can, indeed, happen here.
Bob Dreyfuss, an independent journalist in New York
City and Cape May, New Jersey, specializes in
writing about politics and national security. He’s
written widely for the
Nation, Rolling Stone, the
American Prospect, Mother Jones, the
New Republic, and other magazines. He is
the author of
Devil’s Game: How the United States Helped Unleash
Fundamentalist Islam.
Follow TomDispatch on
Twitter and join us on
Facebook. Check out the newest Dispatch Book,
Nick Turse’s Tomorrow’s
Battlefield: U.S. Proxy Wars and Secret Ops in
Africa, and Tom Engelhardt's latest book,
Shadow Government: Surveillance, Secret Wars, and a
Global Security State in a Single-Superpower World.
Copyright
2016 Bob Dreyfuss |