Yale author claims that U.S. has always practiced 'fascist politics'
"Fascism is a way to appeal to what I regard as people’s worst instincts."
By ED STANNARD/NEW HAVEN REGISTERUpdated: SEPTEMBER 4, 2018 13:44
NEW HAVEN (TNS) — Jason Stanley isn’t calling President Donald Trump a fascist.The president is no Adolf Hitler or Benito Mussolini, ready to commit genocide or to rule as a dictator.The case that Stanley, a professor of philosophy at Yale University, is making in his new book, How Fascism Works: The Politics of Us and Them, is that Trump, among others, including leaders of Russia, Hungary, India and Turkey, use techniques of far-right nationalism to gain power and to build their popularity.In his book, which goes on sale Tuesday, Stanley calls these strategies “fascist politics,” and its principles have been practiced in the United States throughout its history, most notably in defending slavery and Jim Crow laws (whose defenders Hitler admired and emulated).Ultimately, Stanley’s message is about the danger of normalizing fascist politics. He offers as an example his grandmother, Ilse Stanley, who wrote a memoir, The Unforgotten, in 1957 about staying in Berlin until 1939, rescuing hundreds of Jews from a concentration camp by posing as a Nazi social worker.Ilse Stanley “struggled to convince her neighbors of the truth,” Stanley writes. He quotes from her book:“A concentration camp, for those on the outside, was a kind of labor camp. There were whispered rumors of people being beaten, even killed. But there was no comprehension of the tragic reality. We were still able to leave the country; we could still live in our homes; we could still worship in our temples; we were in a ghetto, but the majority of our people were still alive.“For the average Jew, this seemed enough. He didn’t realize that we were all waiting for the end.“The year was 1937.”By drawing on an idealistic “mythic past,” demonizing minority groups, intellectuals and those who do not belong to the “heartland,” among other tactics, leaders such as Prime Minister Viktor Orbán in Hungary and Trump — who rose to the presidency to the surprise even of many Republicans — gain power and then use the same appeals to remain popular, Stanley writes.