By Jonah Goldberg
Wednesday, January 10, 2024
An
unpopular Democratic president declares his Republican rival to be a threat to
American democracy. Like Hitler in Germany or Mussolini in Italy, his
Republican opponent is a “front man” for fascism and the “crackpot forces of
the extreme right wing.”
“I
know that it is hard for Americans to admit this danger,” the president
declared. “American democracy has very deep roots. But, if the antidemocratic
forces in this country continue to work unchecked, this nation could awaken a
few years from now to find that the Bill of Rights had become a scrap of
paper.”
The
Republicans were emulating the “the tragic story of what happened in Germany,”
the president insisted. “We know how Hitler used antisemitic propaganda as a
way of stupefying the German people with false ideas while he reached out for
power.” The coming election “is not just a battle between two parties. It is a
fight for the very soul of the American government.”
This
was Harry Truman, at a packed Chicago stadium, making
his closing argument in the 1948 presidential election. The address,
broadcast nationwide on the radio, received considerable coverage. The New
York Times put
its story about it on the front page:
Now,
the idea that Thomas
Dewey was a fascist is just contemptible, vile slander. As district
attorney in New York, he tried and convicted Fritz Julius Kuhn,
the head of the German-American Bund, which directed fundraising for the Nazi
cause in America. Harold Stassen, Dewey’s chief opponent in the primaries, made
outlawing the Communist Party his signature issue. Dewey forthrightly opposed
the idea, at some political risk. Dewey proclaimed in a debate:
I am unalterably, wholeheartedly, and
unswervingly against any scheme to write laws outlawing people because of their
religious, political, social, or economic ideas. I am against it because it is
a violation of the Constitution of the United States and of the Bill of Rights,
and clearly so. I am against it because it is immoral and nothing but
totalitarianism itself. I am against it because I know from a great many years
experience in the enforcement of the law that the proposal wouldn’t work, and
instead it would rapidly advance the cause of Communism. … Stripped to its
naked essentials, this is nothing but the method of Hitler and Stalin. It is
thought control, borrowed from the Japanese war leadership. It is an attempt to
beat down ideas with a club. It is a surrender of everything we believe in.
That
doesn’t sound very fascist, does it?
Dewey
was one of the most successful New York governors in history, winning three
consecutive elections. He was not a right-wing firebrand; some called him a
“pay-as-you-go liberal” insofar as he was a fiscal conservative who thought
government services should be generous, but not beyond. He rounded up no Jews
and never hinted he wanted to invade Poland. The hard right of the Republican
Party disliked Dewey, partly for being a liberal Republican, partly because
Dewey was the chief architect of sidelining Robert Taft’s bid for the GOP
nomination in 1952 in favor of Dwight Eisenhower (who went on to crush Adlai
Stevenson in the general election). Reading the New York Times’ obituary for
Dewey, you would have no idea that the president of the United States had once
called him the frontman of a domestic Nazi putsch to end American
democracy.
What’s
the point of this largely forgotten snippet of political history? Well, for
starters, it’s simply to point out that Joe Biden’s decision to go “full
Hitler” against Donald Trump is not as unprecedented as many—on both the right
and left—seem to think.
Argumentum
ad Hitlerum was
used against Barry Goldwater, too. On the eve of the 1964 convention, CBS
Evening News correspondent Daniel Schorr reported
from Germany that Goldwater’s rumored German vacation was a Nazi plot
of some kind. “It looks as though Sen. Goldwater, if nominated, will be
starting his campaign here in Bavaria, center of Germany’s right wing,” Schorr
told Walter Cronkite, adding that the location was “Hitler’s onetime stomping
ground.” Schorr went on to claim that an interview with Der Spiegel
should be seen as an attempt by Goldwater to “appeal to right-wing
elements.”
“Thus,”
Schorr declared, “there are signs that the American and German right wings are
joining up.” The only problem? None of it was, you
know, true. The Der Spiegel “interview” was simply a
reprint of an old interview elsewhere. Goldwater never planned to go to Germany
(and didn’t end up going to Europe at all).
Goldwater
called it “the damnedest lie
I ever heard” and told Victor Lasky (my late brother’s godfather) that it “made
me sick to my stomach. My Jewish forebears were probably turning over in their
graves.”
California
Gov. Pat Brown declared that Goldwater’s acceptance speech had the “stench of
fascism,” and all that was missing was “Heil Hitler.” Syndicated columnist Drew
Pearson wrote that “the smell of fascism has been in the air at this
convention.” And in the general election, LBJ constantly tried to link
Goldwater with the omnipresent climate of “hate.”
Readers
of Liberal Fascism know that I could go on with Reagan, the
Bushes, Gingrich, etc. Heck, FDR in his 1944 State of the Union Address,
proclaimed, “Indeed, if such reaction should develop—if history were to repeat
itself and we were to return to the so-called ‘normalcy’ of the 1920’s—then it
is certain that even though we shall have conquered our enemies on the
battlefields abroad, we shall have yielded to the spirit of Fascism here at
home.”
Now,
if Donald Trump were anything like a conventional conservative Republican, I’d
probably be leading the barricades to write “there they go again” columns. But
I can’t do that with regard to Trump.
I’m
not arguing that Trump is “literally Hitler” or even figuratively Hitler. But,
for the umpteenth time, one can fall well short of being Hitler and
still be pretty bad. There’s a weird tendency in public debates to take terms
for the worst thing—Hitler, genocide, totalitarianism, Communism, murder—and
drain them of their (im)moral status. I’ve had conversations with nice liberals
who know I cannot stand Trump yet nonetheless recoil when I say he’s “not
Hitler” as if I am defending him.
This
is not a left-wing thing, it’s a human thing. There are plenty of right-wingers
who would have the same reaction if I were to say, “Bernie Sanders is not a
Stalinist.”
I
think Donald Trump is, in fact, a legitimate threat to democracy and the rule
of law. Indeed, I think one of the primary reasons he’s running for president
again is to avoid being held accountable for his past assaults on democracy and
the rule of law.
Just
yesterday, his lawyers were in
court arguing that a sitting president could order Seal Team 6 to
assassinate a political rival and be immune from criminal prosecution—so long
as he wasn’t impeached. The day before, his lawyers argued in Georgia that
because Trump hadn’t received “fair
warning” that trying to steal the election was illegal, he can’t be
prosecuted for it. He has made
arguments about “terminating” the Constitution for the sole purpose of
putting him back in the White House. He vows that his presidency will
be about “retribution,” and constantly threatens the Biden
administration with criminal prosecution if it continues the legal proceedings
against Trump. He insists that all men who assaulted the police and smashed
into the Capitol are “hostages” of the Biden administration.
All
of these things fall well-shy of making Trump a Hitler. They are more than bad
enough, but we can have that argument another day.
Instead,
I just want to make one of the simplest, most basic, points in politics and
life.
Don’t
cry wolf.
If
you don’t understand why so many conservatives—and not just MAGA types—have so
much deep-seated distrust of the media, academia, and other elite institutions,
it’s because you trust the media, academia, and other elite institutions too
much. Jonathan Haidt has found that conservatives generally do better at
so-called ideological Turing tests. Generally speaking, conservatives can more
accurately describe liberal arguments than liberals can describe conservative
ones. This makes sense when you realize that conservatives constitute a
minority subculture at most elite institutions. We hear the left’s best
arguments all the time, while liberals often just hear the caricatures of
conservative arguments made by other “authoritative” progressives.
This
is why accusations of cryptofascism or right-wing
insanity often take flight so easily. If you don’t actually know the
conservative argument on an issue and only know the invidious descriptions
offered on MSNBC or in Paul Krugman columns or by your college professors, it
doesn’t shock you when you’re told that conservatives hold positions no
reasonable person would hold. You’ve been taught that being a
conservative is unreasonable (and sinister).
The
successful rise of conservative media cannot be understood without knowing
that, for generations, the dominant narratives about conservatives were unfair
to conservatives. The tragedy, of course, is that a lot of the right is now
playing catch-up, making many of the same mistakes the stewards of mainstream
media and other institutions made. Depending on the outlet, there’s as much
catastrophizing on the right these days as there ever was on the left. Donald
Trump takes advantage of this constantly, knowing that his rhetoric about
vermin, witch hunts, fascists and Marxists, etc. will play well in his loyal
echo chambers.
(One
of the things about The Dispatch I’m most proud of is that
many of our readers are skeptical of the dominant narratives of the left and
right. In surveys, one of the primary reasons left-of-center Dispatch subscribers
say they read us is that they want to know what the good faith, serious,
nonpartisan conservative arguments are for this or that. Many of our
conservative readers have a similar desire to separate principled arguments
from the hype and hysteria of partisan media.)
Again,
I think many of the warnings about the threat posed by Trump made in good faith
from people of the left have substantial merit, even if I think the “he’s
literally Hitler” rhetoric is overblown. But American politics didn’t begin in
2015, and even if these sincere progressives don’t know the history of
anti-conservative demonization, that doesn’t mean it didn’t happen. I can’t
tell you how many conversations I’ve had with decent conservatives since 2015
who’ve responded to criticisms of Trump by saying, “That’s what they said about
Reagan.” It’s really hard to say to them—persuasively—“Yeah, but it wasn’t true
about Reagan. It is true about Trump.”
It’s
not just that after generations of crying wolf, the left has lost credibility
with the right. It’s that after generations of left-wing wolf crying, the right
has built institutions and arguments dedicated to the proposition that
right-wing wolves don’t even exist. This ideological infrastructure of the left
and right wasn’t built yesterday, and it can’t be dismantled overnight. It will
take time, and a recognition from people of goodwill across the ideological
spectrum, that there’s plenty of blame for this mess to go around.
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