Monday, February 22, 2016

Harvard Professor of Political Theory: Trump = Hitler

 

“Donald Trump gives a thumbs up during a South Carolina Republican primary night event in Spartanburg, S.C. on Feb. 20. (Paul Sancya/ Associated Press)”
 

By Nicholas Stix

Apparently, the Washington Post, where the rant in question, and so many others, has a block allotted for Trump = Hitler rants.

The essay below is so poor, in so many ways, that it’s hard to know where to begin.

The writer identifies Trump with Hitler in roughly the 10,000th such pathetic propaganda piece (not just at the Washington Post), only to disingenuously deny what she just did.

She abuses Hannah Arendt, in particular Arendt’s famous phrase, “the banality of evil,” and exposes herself as utterly ignorant about Germany, by confusing Weimar and Nazi Germany. Before Hitler became chancellor, millions of Germans opposed him. Once he was appointed chancellor by President Paul von Hindenburg, fighting him was a suicide mission.

Arendt coined the phrase “the banality of evil” to describe not ordinary Germans but Adolf Eichmann (in Eichmann in Jerusalem), the boring, high-level Nazi official who ran the railroads that transported Jews to the death camps.

Nowhere does Danielle Allen attempt any argument as to why Donald Trump is another Hitler (but of course she’s too dishonest to say what she means), and must therefore “be stopped.”

And on whose behalf must Trump be stopped? Why that be communist Hillary Clinton, whose Wellesley senior thesis on Saul Alinsky remains under lock and key.

Hitler slaughtered under 10 million civilians. Communists slaughtered over 100 million civilians during the past 100 years. Danielle Allen says, in effect, ‘I’ll take the 100 million, please.’

Allen is also dishonest about the role of the media. She wants the media to unethically refuse to cover Trump, and force him to buy any time he gets, to promote the “foul and incendiary ideas” she refuses to identify. The media gave Trump saturation coverage early on, because they were sure it would destroy him. Instead, it boomeranged against them.

Likewise, Allen dishonestly depicts Trump-haters as variously disheartened and heroic, when in fact Trump’s opponents have engaged in every sort of dirty trick to thwart him, from godawful political writing, up to and including conspiracies over dinner in overpriced restaurants.

America has real Nazis in its midst, but Allen says nothing about the media needing to refuse to cover “Black Lives Matter.” Presumably, she supports Nazis, if they are black.

Allen reminds me of Communist activist students I crossed paths with during my university days in West Germany (1980-1985). There was nothing to discuss with them, either, except how they would seize power. Allen’s favored method is to sabotage the democratic process. Well, she’s a lefty, so what can you expect?

“We, the people, need to find somewhere, buried in the recesses of our fading memories, the capacity to make common cause against this formidable threat to our equally shared liberties. The time is now.”
But Allen is completely opposed to liberty.

She wants to destroy democracy, in order to save it.

I recall that Harvard has its own, Communist-style, political tradition. During the early 1970s, its most brilliant political thinker was not the doctrinaire socialist John Rawls, but the libertarian Robert Nozick. But Nozick was a gregarious and weak man. When he wrote Anarchy, State, and Utopia in 1974, his Philosophy Department colleagues responded by shunning him. No more dinner party invites. Finally, Nozick broke and submitted, recanting his position.

Thus, I doubt that Danielle Allen has ever encountered a colleague at those infamous Harvard dinner parties who challenged her totalitarian attitude.

I was tempted to say that Harvard is the most overrated antiversity in America, but then I remembered Jerelyn Luther’s Yale… and so many others.
 
Opinions
The moment of truth: We must stop Trump

By Danielle Allen
February 21 at 1:00 P.M.
Washington Post

Danielle Allen is a political theorist at Harvard University and a contributing columnist for The Post
.

Like any number of us raised in the late 20th century, I have spent my life perplexed about exactly how Hitler could have come to power in Germany. [You haven't spent five minutes "perplexed" over that question, not even while you typed out that sentence.] Watching Donald Trump’s rise, I now understand. Leave aside whether a direct comparison of Trump to Hitler is accurate. That is not my point. My point rather is about how a demagogic opportunist can exploit a divided country.

[If your point wasn't to compare Trump to Hitler, you have no essay.]

To understand the rise of Hitler and the spread of Nazism, I have generally relied on the German-Jewish émigré philosopher Hannah Arendt and her arguments about the banality of evil. Somehow people can understand themselves as “just doing their job,” yet act as cogs in the wheel of a murderous machine. Arendt also offered a second answer in a small but powerful book called “Men in Dark Times.” In this book, she described all those who thought that Hitler’s rise was a terrible thing but chose “internal exile,” or staying invisible and out of the way as their strategy for coping with the situation. They knew evil was evil, but they too facilitated it, by departing from the battlefield out of a sense of hopelessness.

One can see both of these phenomena unfolding now. The first shows itself, for instance, when journalists cover every crude and cruel thing that comes out of Trump’s mouth and thereby help acculturate all of us to what we are hearing. Are they not just doing their jobs, they will ask, in covering the Republican front-runner? Have we not already been acculturated by 30 years of popular culture to offensive and inciting comments? Yes, both of these things are true. But that doesn’t mean journalists ought to be Trump’s megaphone. Perhaps we should just shut the lights out on offensiveness; turn off the mic when someone tries to shout down others; reestablish standards for what counts as a worthwhile contribution to the public debate. That will seem counter to journalistic norms, yes, but why not let Trump pay for his own ads when he wants to broadcast foul and incendiary ideas? He’ll still have plenty of access to freedom of expression. It is time to draw a bright line.

One spots the second experience in any number of water-cooler conversations or dinner-party dialogues. “Yes, yes, it is terrible. Can you believe it? Have you seen anything like it? Has America come to this?” “Agreed, agreed.” But when someone asks what is to be done, silence falls. Very many of us, too many of us, are starting to contemplate accepting internal exile. Or we joke about moving to Canada more seriously than usually.

But over the course of the past few months, I’ve learned something else that goes beyond Arendt’s ideas about the banality of evil and feelings of impotence in the face of danger.

Trump is rising by taking advantage of a divided country. The truth is that the vast majority of voting Americans think that Trump is unacceptable as a presidential candidate, but we are split by strong partisan ideologies and cannot coordinate a solution to stop him.
Similarly, a significant part of voting Republicans think that Trump is unacceptable, but they too, thus far, have been unable to coordinate a solution. Trump is exploiting the fact that we cannot unite across our ideological divides.

The only way to stop him, then, is to achieve just that kind of coordination across party lines and across divisions within parties. We have reached that moment of truth.

Republicans, you cannot count on the Democrats to stop Trump. I believe that Hillary Clinton will win the Democratic nomination, and I intend to vote for her, but it is also the case that she is a candidate with significant weaknesses, as your party knows quite well. The result of a head-to-head contest between Clinton and Trump would be unpredictable. Trump has to be blocked in your primary.

Jeb Bush has done the right thing by dropping out, just as he did the right thing by being the first, alongside Rand Paul, to challenge Trump. The time has come, John Kasich and Ben Carson, to leave the race as well. You both express a powerful commitment to the good of your country and to its founding ideals. If you care about the future of this republic, it is time to endorse Marco Rubio. Kasich, there’s a little wind in your sails, but it’s not enough. Your country is calling you. Do the right thing.

Ted Cruz is, I believe, pulling votes away from Trump, and for that reason is useful in the race. But, Mr. Cruz, you are drawing too close to Trump’s politics. You too should change course.

Democrats, your leading candidate is too weak to count on as a firewall. She might be able to pull off a general election victory against Trump, but then again she might not. Too much is uncertain this year. You, too, need to help the Republicans beat Trump; this is no moment for standing by passively. If your deadline for changing your party affiliation has not yet come, re-register and vote for Rubio, even if, like me, you cannot stomach his opposition to marriage equality. I too would prefer Kasich as the Republican nominee, but pursuing that goal will only make it more likely that Trump takes the nomination. The republic cannot afford that.

Finally, to all of you Republicans who have already dropped out, one more, great act of public service awaits you. As candidates, you pledged to support whomever the Republican party nominated. It’s time to revoke your pledge. Be bold, stand up and shout that you will not support Trump if he is your party’s nominee. Do it together. Hold one big mother of a news conference. Endorse Rubio, together. It is time to draw a bright line, and you are the ones on whom this burden falls. No one else can do it.

Marco Rubio, this is also your moment to draw a bright line. You too ought to rescind your pledge to support the party’s nominee if it is Trump.

Donald Trump has no respect for the basic rights that are the foundation of constitutional democracy, nor for the requirements of decency necessary to sustain democratic citizenship. Nor can any democracy survive without an expectation that the people require reasonable arguments that bring the truth to light, and Trump has nothing but contempt for our intelligence.

We, the people, need to find somewhere, buried in the recesses of our fading memories, the capacity to make common cause against this formidable threat to our equally shared liberties. The time is now.

3 comments:

  1. So the people who say Trump is using fear to gain success in his presidential bid are doing what?Using fear to try and turn the public against him.Isn t that slanderous to defame someone publicly and compare them to Hitler?If I were Trump I d sue the professor ASAP.There was a cartoon I saw by Scott Adams(Dilbert)that has one person saying to Dilbert:"You know Hitler only had one testicle".
    "Yes" says Dilbert.
    "Well according to the MSM,that means Trump is only one testicle away from being Hitler.."
    "Quite a slippery slope there-wouldn t you say".
    Not much of an exaggeration anymore.

    ReplyDelete
  2. jerry pdx
    I'm always a little annoyed when headlines blame "Cragslist" for these crimes, this woman advertised for a potential roommate online but you could meet crazies off old newspaper classifieds, from signs in your window or just randomly on the street. The article also implies the man was a "roommate" but when you read about it she was just looking for a roommate and this guy showed up. She should have been more careful about meeting him though, she should have had someone there or met at a public location before bringing someone to her home. Obvious things to do but people can be naïve and careless. It also states in the article that he demanded sex and she refused - Where did he get the idea some woman he just met wanted to have sex with him? Could be some blame for her own behavior toward him or just the attitude of a lot of entitled males, you know which ones, toward certain females who they think owe them sex because of "racism". Fortunately she survived but watch the video and her mother said she didn't want to press charges because she was afraid he'd come back, I suspect she didn't want to because of his race, a common attitude with white women.
    http://www.aol.com/article/2016/02/22/woman-brutally-attacked-by-roommate-found-on-craigslist/21316583/?icid=maing-grid7%7Cbon1-c%7Cdl2%7Csec3_lnk4%26pLid%3D-1613022922

    ReplyDelete
  3. The usual Sanctimonius Condescending Leftist Twaddle, but with a soupçon of Hubris thrown in for good measure.

    ReplyDelete