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He didn't "confuse" the SPD with fascism. Rather, he understood that the SPD were in effect fascist enablers - which is a bit different. Similarly, today's American Democrats are not fascists. Rather, most of them would more accurately be described as collaborators and enablers.
Democratic Party loyalists make the fundamental conceptual error of believing that the fundamental dichotomy is the nominal one of Republican versus Democrat. But the more meaningful division is between those demanding basic change, and those who are mainly defenders of the status quo. IOW, the Republicans are the overt rapists and looters. Most Democrats, OTOH, comprise a group that in effect facilitates the ambitions of the Republicans. And then there is that pesky little group of seriously progressive Democrats (read Kucinich), and Greens, socialists, & independents, whom we can jointly designate "the left."
What is crucial to appreciate is that MOST Democrats are not part of "the left." They are, in effect, partners of the Republicans, even though they wear a different color jersey. They are a group whose political function is to siphon off dissatisfaction with Republican rapaciousness, & to channel it to areas where it will be rendered (from the Republican viewpoint) harmless & ineffective. Thus, they function as a safety mechanism protecting Republicans. They are guaranteed to be weak-kneed & impotent against Republican offensives -- indeed, their entire political culture and language is permeated with cowardice & supplicating compromise.
Only a few Democrats, like Kucinich, stand for real change. The attitude of the Democratic Party towards such mavericks is to contemptuously ignore & marginalize them. Dean is not really a maverick in terms of his politics, but his unorthodox & somewhat unpredictable style constituted a challenge to the status quo defenders of the Dem Party establishment. Thus, they had to destroy him. Not coincidentally, Kerry's attacks on Dean (cf the Saddam remark) had a distinctly rightwing flavor, sounding just like something Rove himself would have come up with.
Your quote from Thalmann is of great present-day relevance. He was saying that the SPD was trying to gain support by "raising the specter of Hitler's fascism" -- and thereby was diverting attention from the real underlying issue: opposing the dictatorship of finance capital. This is precisely analogous to today's Democrats, who point to Bush's version of fascism, and scream "ABB." This means, "Vote for us -- or else you get Bush!!" This is meant to divert the masses' attention from the real underlying issue -- which one could call "true structural change" (though ultimately, it too is just what Thalmann was calling the "dictatorship of finance capital").
You write "People on this forum are already weighing whether or not the real enemy to be defeated is a liberal Democratic Senator, or Bush....It is my contention that the greatest threat to this country is Bush, and not any of our candidates." This is a false dichotomy. If the Democrats nominate a collaborator (ie, Kerry) who has been relatively silent on most of the Bush outrages, who voted for the IWR and PATRIOT Act out of rank opportunism, was dishonest enough to try to spin it for the next year as "the correct vote," then launched rightwing attacks on Dean for minor departures from Establishment orthodoxy -- it is already a crushing defeat. Even if the collaborator wins, it presents no challenge whatever to the grip of America's ruling elite (which is precisely why the media is so pleased to see Kerry resurgent, and Dean left bleeding by the wayside).
PS - your last para asserts that the Dems would "at least" allow a third party challenge. This is not so. As a recent Nader column on CommonDreams pointed out, the Dems & Repubs kicked the League of Women Voters away from control of Presidential debates almost 20 years ago. Jointly, the two big business parties make certain that they, and they alone, control the entire political process.
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