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Edited on Sun Oct-14-07 07:44 PM by Mike03
I'm fascinated, enthused and worried by these historical comparative posts, but I believe the questions being debated are very much worth considering.
Are the comparisons between Hitler's Germany and Bush's America valid? Are they ludicrously overstated?
Americans are very inept when it comes to taking sociopolitical warnings about the future seriously.
Isn't one reason we are in the fix we are in because people are too complacent and indifferent to the human cost of the political changes we are experiencing? Most American citizens seem to have the mentality of cartoon characters when it comes to understanding the implications of the legislation that dominates our lives, and our foreign policy in the Middle East. How many Americans do you think know what a "Signing Statement" is?
"Everything will be okay," they assume, and this passive assumption is based on some Normal Rockwell faith in the goodness of America that is just an anachronism (forget anachronism, maybe it never did exist). Or perhaps it is based on pure hope and complete abdication of personal political responsibility. (Or terror of seeing the stark reality of what our country has become.)
Yet, in defense of working class America, does everyone have the time to do the thorough research necessary to navigate the complicated maze of reality when it is so obscured by mainstream media?
Noam Chomsky has argued that education about politics is a privilege because only people who have the time can educate themselves.
Okay, maybe the comparison of Hitler's Germany to the Bush's U.S. is an overstatement. But we are headed in an extremely dangerous direction, and sometimes warning flares help to pre-empt catastrophe. It's an "over-correction" but it is a correction for a good purpose, which is to prevent a hideous, unConstitutional, unimaginable future no one wants to see.
We can see the crocodile's teeth, even though we are not yet between the crocodile's teeth.
Think of a car skidding on black ice. You oversteer to maintain a straight line. This is a poor metaphor for why I'm not disturbed by these analogies. It is vital that we consider how bad things MIGHT get before we slide into a trend that is irreversible.
If most Americans were not such dunces or so hopelessly overworked and overburdened that they cannot even think straight, it would not be so imperative that we interpret the severity of our current situation as extremely dangerous, even though in fact and evidence it may be mildly to moderately dangerous. It can accelerate at any time, and it can happen overnight.
In other words, I'm in favor of these comparisons, whether I believe them completely or not, because I don't trust most Americans to even notice that we are moving in this very cataclysmic direction.
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