When Fascism Was American [View all]
Nevertheless, three decades of inequality and austerity have impoverished large sections of the American working class along with declining US political prestige, bloody military adventures, and pervasive outrage at corruption in mainstream politics have made a growing number of Americans more receptive to xenophobic and racist appeals that give voice to the powerlessness they feel in the face of hardship.
The past shows that the US is not immune to fascism. We must take the current far-right upsurge seriously and use every tool at our disposal to destroy it.
Before Donald Trump, there was Father Charles Coughlin, who popularized fascism for Americans in the 1930s.
by Joe Allen 12-29-15
The open racism and xenophobia that have characterized Donald Trumps presidential campaign, and perhaps provided much of its appeal, has been alarming. For a growing number of people, Trumps rhetoric is a sign of something deeper and more frightening: the growth of a fascist movement in the United States.
Ohio governor John Kasich one of Trumps many rivals for the Republican nomination produced an anti-Trump video that paraphrases Protestant theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffers warning about the Nazis.
For many other commentators, as well, the violence Trump supporters have directed at critics during campaign rallies, along with the candidates call for banning Muslims from the United States, are further confirmation that Trump is a Nazi. In the last Democratic presidential debate, former Maryland governor and presidential candidate Martin OMalley denounced Trump as a fascist demagogue.
<snip>
The US hasnt seen the stirrings of fascist mobilization since the late 1930s when mounting fascist victories in Europe galvanized its adherents in America, chief among them Father Charles Coughlin and his Christian Front. This history has something to offer us today ...
Much more here:
https://www.jacobinmag.com/2015/12/trump-coughlin-nazis-christian-front-kristallnacht-antisemitism-kasich-fascism/