He’s not Hitler. More like Mussolini.
The cult of personality is the same, as is the fetishization of power. But Trump isn’t planning a genocide, at least not yet.
Should that make you feel better?
We all know that Trump is a wannabe fascist. Every journalist, political science professor, and economist knows it. Every progressive knows it. Just about every conservative — at least the honest ones — knows it.
And his base — those most ardent of his fans and followers — absolutely knows it and love him for it.
Consider that a second Trump administration would create an “imperial presidency that would reshape America and its role in the world.”
Among his goals are the following:
A deportation program, including massive detention camps, that would remove 11 million people from the country.
The deployment of the U.S. military on American soil.
The monitoring of women’s pregnancies.
The prosecution of women who violate abortion bans.
The withholding of congressional funds at his whim.
The politicization of the Justice Department.
The gutting of the U.S. civil service.
The staffing of the executive branch with yes-men.
A refusal to help ally countries if they are attacked.
The pardoning of every January 6 rioter.
If you look at that list and fail to see the authoritarianism, then I can’t help you.
Keep in mind that the lunacy has infected all three branches of government. Congress is shut down because Trump’s toadies refuse to let it govern. And the Supreme Court is considering “absurdist presidential immunity questions for the first time in centuries because it’s the first time we’ve had a president who was this much of a criminal and such an existential threat to democracy.”
Some will tell you that Trump has fooled millions of voters. They say he has gotten this far because so many Americans are idiotic, delusional, or tuned out. That’s true of course.
But in addition to the feeble-minded and the insane, Trump’s hardcore fans include those who know what he’s proposing and are all for it.
The fact is that “for many Americans, a turn toward authoritarianism isn’t seen as a negative.” Many Americans support the idea.
Political scientists estimate that about one-fifth of Americans are “highly disposed to authoritarianism.” Among Republicans, “support for authoritarian tendencies” is a key indicator of support for Trump. Surveys show that about one out of every seven Americans admits that Trump doesn’t respect the rule of law but still want him to be president.
If you add it all up, “roughly 40 percent of Americans tend to favor authority, obedience, and uniformity over freedom, independence and diversity.”
These numbers have led experts to conclude that “the reason Trump is doing well in the polls … is not simply that people are unfamiliar with his stated authoritarian intentions should he be inaugurated in January 2025.” The reason is that “a lot of people support those intentions.”
Indeed, when asked if his psychotic ideas would turn off voters, and why so “many Americans see such talk of dictatorship as contrary to our most cherished principles,” Trump insists, “I think a lot of people like it.”
Well, he’s finally right about something.