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Likening Trump, Other Republicans to Hitler: The First and Last Refuge of Democratic Scoundrels

Just like Hitler? Then-President Donald Trump welcomes Rabbi Yisroel Goldstein to the White House’s National Day of Prayer service on May 2, 2019. (Official photo: Tia Dufour)

Top Democrats and Trumpophobes scream that former President Donald Trump is Adolf Hitler’s fascist twin.

English translation: Trump is a Republican.

John Kelly, Trump’s disgruntled former chief of staff, said last week that Trump matches “the general definition of fascist” and “certainly prefers the dictator approach to government.”

Relying, as usual, on anonymous sources, The Atlantic’s fabulist-in-chief, Jeffrey Goldberg, “reported” that Trump said in the White House, “I need the kind of generals that Hitler had.” 

“This is absolutely false,” Trump spokesman Alex Pfeiffer replied. “President Trump never said this.”

Regardless, Vice President Kamala Harris predicted on CNN that, if reelected, Trump would be “a president who admires dictators and is a fascist.”

What you might expect from left-wing MSNBC on Trump’s Sunday rally in New York City—and what one viewer thought of it. (Screenshot)

Referring to Trump’s appearance in Manhattan on Sunday, Hillary Rodham Clinton told CNN on Thursday that “Trump is actually reenacting the Madison Square Garden rally in 1939.” The pro-Nazi German American Bund (aka Amerikadeutscher Volksbund) staged an infamous Hitler lovefest at a different Madison Square Garden on the eve of World War II, complete with swastika armbands and stiff-armed salutes. That venue was demolished in 1968, soon after today’s Madison Square Garden opened a mile away.

Wearing a black sweater that paired perfectly with her soul, Clinton added: “President Franklin Roosevelt was appalled that neo-Nazis, fascists in America were lining up to essentially pledge their support for the kind of government that they were seeing in Germany. … [P]lease, open your eyes to the danger that this man poses to our country.”

Then-President Donald Trump visits the Western Wall in Jerusalem on May 22, 2017. (Official White House photo: Dan Hansen) 

Trump sold out Madison Square Garden in three hours. Do Harris, Clinton, and other Democrats believe that Trump’s 19,500 rally guests are Nazis? Concerning the 74 million Americans who voted for Trump in 2020, and proudly will do so in November, are we all Nazis, too?

Wednesday’s University of Chicago/GenForward survey found that 26% of black men aged 18 to 40 back Trump, up from 19% in 2020, per The Washington Post/Edison Research exit poll. Are these men black Nazis?

And what of the 12% of black women who support Trump in the University of Chicago’s study, up from 9% in 2020? Are they black Eva Brauns?

Just like Hitler, the absurd and repugnant charge that Trump resembles the bloodthirsty, Jew-hating, tyrannical warmonger fails on two fronts:

First, Trump’s top presidential aides included his orthodox-Jewish daughter and son-in-law, Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner. Trump welcomed his Jewish grandchildren and celebrated Hanukkah at the White House. In his first term, he moved the U.S. Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.

Trump’s staunchly pro-Israel policies culminated in the Abraham Accords. These four peace deals between Israel and Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates, Sudan, and Morocco strengthened—not weakened—the Jewish state.

Trump rejected the censorship that Harris and Democrats crave. He shredded government regulations, threw no opponents behind barbed wire, invaded zero countries, and launched no wars—a 40-year first.

Trump’s first-term record would make Hitler vomit.

Second, rather than a powerful accusation, “Trump = Hitler” is an exhausted cliché. Amid these repulsive, synthetic smears, Trump is in excellent and crowded company. Democrats routinely call Republicans fascists, Nazis, and “just like Hitler”—in much the same fashion as salmon swim upstream: frantically, instinctively, and predictably.

As Haisten Willis detailed Wednesday in the Washington Examiner, Democrats have been equating Republicans with Nazis for at least 60 years.

“This tired, old, baseless trope lacks insight and intelligence,” Willis wrote. “Most importantly, it is dishonest.”

Lesson: Regarding any similarity to Hitler, Donald Trump is nothing special. If every Republican is Hitler, then no Republican is Hitler. 

Then-President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump watch as Rabbi Moshe Moskowitz lights a menorah at a White House Hanukkah reception on Dec. 11, 2019. (Official photo: Andrea Hanks)

Democrats claim that Trump spouts divisive, violent political rhetoric. But, of course, Democrats call Trump Hitler, denounce half of America as Nazis, and peddle potentially explosive statements and sadistic fantasies. Meanwhile, Trump literally dodges bullets.

And let’s forgo the “both sides do it” rubbish. Imagine the glass-shattering shrieks if conservatives produced a video of fraternity bros playing volleyball with a mock-up of Harris’ head. Laughter? Arrests would be more likely. 

If psychological projection were a felony, the entire Democratic Party would be in federal prison.

On Oct. 12, Riverside County Sheriff’s Office deputies arrested Vem Miller, 49, of Las Vegas outside a Trump rally in Coachella, California. Officials say that Miller was “illegally in possession of a shotgun, a loaded handgun, and a high-capacity magazine.” He also allegedly carried bogus VIP passes, false press ID, multiple driver’s licenses with different names, and “fake passports” while operating an unregistered SUV with phony license plates.

Was Miller “100% a Trump supporter,” as he pleads, or had law enforcement “probably stopped another assassination attempt,” as Sheriff Chad Bianco suspects? Regardless, absent felony charges, Bianco freed Miller on a $5,000 bond.

After all of this, with any luck, America on Nov. 5 will flush the clogged toilet that is the modern Democratic Party. Given today’s low-flow commodes, voters should flush twice. 

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