[lbo-talk] Weimar and the US, Trump and Hitler

Carrol Cox cbcox at ilstu.edu
Mon Dec 14 16:31:21 PST 2015


The most serious consequence of the profligate use of "Fascist" to describe U.S. political tendencies is that, by identifying authoritarianism of various sorts with the technicolor politics of fascist movements & regimes between World Wars it blinds people to forms of authoritarianism more suited to current conditions in the U.S.

Item: The destruction of U.S. public education, K12 to Grad school & proletarianization of teachers. (Personally, I tend to feel that the battle over education (schooling) is lost; now we need essentially to defend teachers as a part of the u.s. working class.

Carrol

-----Original Message-----

From: lbo-talk-bounces at lbo-talk.org [mailto:lbo-talk-bounces at lbo-talk.org] On Behalf Of Marv Gandall Sent: Monday, December 14, 2015 5:39 PM To: Pen-L Economics; LBO Subject: [lbo-talk] Weimar and the US, Trump and Hitler

Roger Cohen's NY Times opinion piece comparing the US to the Weimar Republic, and Donald Trump to Adolph Hitler, is mainly interesting as an example of the anxiety which is gripping some American liberal commentators shocked by the staying power of the latest nativist demagogue in the country's history.

Germany was prostrate, disarmed, and bankrupt, humiliated by the Versailles Treaty, with its industrial heartland in the Ruhr under military occupation. Hyperinflation was rampant. The capitalist system was tottering, racked by widespread industrial strife and threatened by the rapid growth of a mass communist party.

By contrast, the US is still the most powerful economic and military power in the world, notwithstanding its losses in Iraq and Afghanistan. Growth and real incomes are stagnant, but official unemployment is under 6% and concentrated outside the major urban centres. Dissatisfaction with the system has increased, but there is no threat to the system from below in any way comparable to that in Germany in the immediate aftermath of the Russian Revolution.

Trump is a narcissistic opportunist who is exploiting the ugly racism and fears of American society, but the material conditions in the US are not yet so dire as they were in Germany to provoke a mass movement from the established parties and electoral system, nor do the changing demographics of the country favour such a development.

Neither is there any incentive for US corporate leaders to throw their weight behind Trump, as there was for the German capitalists who supported Hitler, alarmed as they were at the time by the inability of the governing conservative and social democratic parties to quell the strikes and demonstrations and other manifestations of working class unrest, expressed politically in the rise of the German Communist Party (KPD).

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/12/15/opinion/weimar-america.html?action=click&p gtype=Homepage&clickSource=story-heading&module=opinion-c-col-right-region&r egion=opinion-c-col-right-region&WT.nav=opinion-c-col-right-region&_r=0 ___________________________________ http://mailman.lbo-talk.org/mailman/listinfo/lbo-talk



More information about the lbo-talk mailing list