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Have You Noticed America Has Gotten Meaner?
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Have You Noticed America Has Gotten Meaner?

Violence is the cardinal characteristic, the logo, the brand identity of fascism. Every fascist movement in history has lifted itself to power on the scaffold of violence

Thom Hartmann
Jun 23
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Have You Noticed America Has Gotten Meaner?
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Blood alone moves the wheels of history.
–Benito Mussolini

“Have you noticed that people are getting meaner?” the villain asks in a Paramount+ promo for their new show Evil.
“What does it mean?” asks the “nice” character.
“It means,” says the evil character with a note of triumph in her voice, “that your side is losing.”

And here we are. The lede of an above-the-fold story in yesterday’s Washington Post lays it out:

“In the past 24 hours, there has been an uptick in the number of violent threats against lawmakers on the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection at the U.S. Capitol, and all lawmakers on the committee are likely to receive a security detail…”

We need to discuss the violence and threats of violence now endemic to the GOP, because they signal a hopefully reversible — but possibly terminal — slide into fascism.

Fascism is violence.

Its philosophy is rooted in violence: the domination of the many by a few, whether the main instrument of that domination is personal physical violence, the violence of great wealth or political power being used to destroy one’s enemies, or unjustified violence inflicted by the state under color of law.

But at its core, fascism is rooted in physical violence, intimidation, and murder. It’s war brought into politics and governance.

Violence like this has its own power and its own attraction.

The media is drawn to it, making it the most powerful recruiting tool a fascist movement has.

Insecure, frightened men (and the occasional woman) participating in fascist violence find a sense of agency, of individual power and meaning, a sort of orgasmic release from a life of ordinariness and political impotence.

And make no mistake: the GOP has become the party of political violence.

Democrats treat the violence associated with today’s Republican Party as if it were coming from outliers, as if it’s “a few bad apples,” as if it’s simply a troublesome weirdness on the extreme periphery of the conservative movement.

We see this in their response to the violence of January 6th, to the threats of violence directed at members of the January 6th Committee who are now getting security details, and to the frequent but scattershot violence that erupts across the country almost daily.

Democrats watch threats of violence against school board members; against nurses and hospitals treating Covid; against abortion providers; against racial minorities and queer people who Republican legislators declare — and try to put into law — are less than human or “aberrations” that must not be tolerated in a “free society.”

The media continues to largely ignore those frequent moments when fascist-infiltrated police — the only group within our society who are legally authorized to use violence without consequence — overlook or overtly encourage the violence that breaks out when Americans dare stand up to fascist militias.

Twitter avatar for @ErinInTheMornErin Reed @ErinInTheMorn
Proud Boys stormed the Pine Valley Public Library in Wilmington, North Carolina. I did some research from people who witnessed things on the ground and took pictures, and it would seem that not only was the Sheriff's office ineffective - they ESCORTED the proud boys to the room!
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June 22nd 2022

5,561 Retweets18,178 Likes

“It’s the exception,” the media notes, and moves on to the next story.

In fact, these displays of violence and the willingness to use violence are declarations. They are statements of purpose. They’re spoken and executed with pride.

They are assertions by fascists that they intend to exercise violence and its power up to and including the ultimate: the power to take human life.

Republicans and their media lionize Kyle Rittenhouse for showing up at a Black Lives Matter protest and killing two protestors. They celebrate police violence with “thin blue line” flags, and wave the all-black US flag that signifies the willingness to kill one’s political opponents.

They show up at protests heavily armed and wearing tee-shirts evoking General Pinochet with the slogan, “Free helicopter rides for liberals.” Their leader said there are “very good people on both sides” after his fascists murdered a young woman named Heather Heyer.

Republicans running for office feature guns or imply threats to kill people in their television and online advertising. Eric Greitens is just the latest in a long list of GOP shooters glorifying assault weapons and implying political violence. This is Kentucky Republican Thomas Massie’s Christmas Card:

Twitter avatar for @RepThomasMassieThomas Massie @RepThomasMassie
Merry Christmas! 🎄 ps. Santa, please bring ammo. 🎁
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December 4th 2021

12,451 Retweets81,632 Likes

These are all expressions of fascism.

When men like Rusty Bowers and Brad Raffensperger — who dared stop Trump’s criminal attempts to steal the 2020 election — describe how they were and continue to be threatened with violence, elected Republicans fall silent.

Arizona House Speaker Bowers endured violent threats outside his home through night after night as his daughter lay dying: this kind of violence is devoid of compassion. It is evil.

Not a word from Ronna Romney McDaniel about the embrace of violence by the base of the Republican Party she leads, not a word from congressional Republicans about the violence their own fellow conservatives now face, not a word from Republican media other than to cynically mouth phony excuses and justifications.

Because violence is now their brand. They revel in it.

They boast of it in ways that are often misinterpreted as either hyperbole or jokes, like when Sharron Angle (and others) warned of “Second Amendment solutions” to Democratic efforts, or when Donald Trump said he could murder someone on Fifth Avenue and still get elected.

Their fascist followers know better: these are proud statements of their willingness to use or endorse violence, and carry explicit threats.

Holocaust survivor Hannah Arendt wrote in The Origins of Totalitarianism:

“[T]he propaganda of totalitarian movements which precede and accompany totalitarian regimes is invariably as frank as it is mendacious, and would-be totalitarian rulers usually start their careers by boasting of their past crimes and carefully outlining their future ones.

“The Nazis ‘were convinced that evil-doing in our time has a morbid force of attraction,’ … and experience has proved time and again that the propaganda value of evil deeds and general contempt for moral standards is independent of mere self-interest, supposedly the most powerful psychological factor in politics.

“The attraction of evil and crime for the mob mentality is nothing new. It has always been true that the mob will greet ‘deeds of violence with the admiring remark: it may be mean, but it is very clever.’”

When a nation goes fascist, it happens quickly. It takes people by surprise.

In 1919, Benito Mussolini started out with 300 armed volunteers, his Blackshirts. They began by terrorizing gay men, striking union members, and socialists; newspaper reports of their violence, beatings, and the occasional murder swept across Italy.

Over the next three years Mussolini’s Blackshirt militia burgeoned to over 20,000 men, so when, on the last day of October 1922, he directly confronted King Victor Emmanuel III with the threat of violence, the king gave in, dissolved the government, and appointed Mussolini Prime Minister of Italy.

No campaign, no election, just three years of unrelenting violence and the threat of more violence.

Hitler rose to power on the wings of violence as well, first in the Beer Hall Putsch and later, when he became Chancellor, through his volunteer militia the Brownshirts terrorizing gays, Jews, and union members. Paul von Hindenburg thought Hitler would set aside the violence, as promised, if he was given the power he demanded. Hindenburg didn’t understand fascism.

Violence is the cardinal characteristic, the logo, the brand identity of fascism. Every fascist movement in history has lifted itself to power on the scaffold of violence. And then continues to rule with violence.

Fascist media revel in the language of violence. They dehumanize the victims of their violence with words like “invaders” and “vermin” and “illegals.”

To justify the violence at the heart of their movement, they squeal a phony claim to victimhood: They think Democrats are trying to take their tax dollars. They fear gays are trying to groom their children. They believe teachers are indoctrinating their youth in socialism. Violence, they say, is their only option.

Over the past two decades, as this fascist movement has arisen in America and taken over the GOP, more than three-quarters of all politically motivated murders have been committed by rightwing often-Republican-aligned terrorists.

Terrorism is fascism. Isis and Al-Qaeda are fascist organizations, just like the various militias that attacked our Capitol on January 6th and today stalk our streets from the backs of pickup trucks while brandishing assault weapons.

Twitter avatar for @RoverGroverHealthcare 🇺🇸Voter 🇺🇦 @RoverGrover
ISIS recruitment techniques are too similar to Trump techniques
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August 31st 2020

1 Like

For the Republicans in Congress, this is not a problem until violence is threatened against one of their own; when a lone mentally ill man calls police to confess he’s hallucinating voices telling him to kill Brett Kavanaugh, legislation is passed within days to protect the Court’s justices.

Two years earlier, when “men’s rights” advocate Roy Den Hollander murdered the 20-year-old son of Judge Esther Salas and was carrying detailed plans to kill Supreme Court Justice Sonya Sotomayor next, Republican Senator Rand Paul blocked legislation in the Senate to provide federal judges with that protection.

Not even one Republican objected to Paul’s obstruction, and Mitch McConnell let it stand. Violence is their brand.

When violence is threatened against the few remaining non-fascist Republicans, theoretically members of their own tribe, that’s just fine with the “base voter” fascists who now control the levers of power in the party. Just ask any of the Republicans who have testified before the January 6th Committee or who voted to impeach Trump.

Fascists justify their violence as necessary to protect their faith, their families, and the “identity” of their homeland. They will tell you it’s the unfortunate last-ditch “necessity” provoked by the “others” who “threaten our way of life.”

In reality, violence is not the fascist’s final, last-gasp option: it’s their first.

  • It’s their most powerful recruiting tool, showing, as it does, their dominance of society and society’s institutions.

  • It’s how they cow dissent.

  • It’s the weapon that provokes action, and fascists are all about action.

  • It creates chaos, and fascism needs chaos to tear down the existing structures of governance and law that they intend to replace.

The final cause to which fascist violence is directed is what Jefferson (and Hobbes) called bellum omnium in omnia: war of all against all. Every murderous act is designed intentionally to bring society closer to breakdown, so the fascists can openly kill their enemies — particularly people of color and “liberals” — in the streets of the nation.

It’s why Tim McVeigh blew up the Oklahoma Federal Building in 1995, killing 168 people and injuring another 680. It appears to be what motivated both the Las Vegas shooter who killed 58 people and the Boston Bomber. It was claimed by the Buffalo killer of 20 people in a supermarket, and the 2019 El Paso shooter who murdered 23 people.

It’s the story line of the two best-selling books within the militia movement, Camp of the Saints and The Turner Diaries. Each ends with mass slaughter leaving a nation of “pure” white Christian survivors, most holding well-used assault rifles as they stand atop piles of bodies.

Hannah Arendt noted in her 1969 essay “Reflections on Violence”:

“[T]he danger of the practice of violence, even if it moves consciously within a non-extremist framework of short-term goals, will always be that the means overwhelm the end.

“If goals are not achieved rapidly, the result will not merely be defeat but the introduction of the practice of violence into the whole body politic. Action is irreversible, and a return to the status quo in case of defeat is always unlikely.

“The practice of violence, like all action, changes the world, but the most probable change is a more violent world.”

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi recently demanded that Republicans “take back their party.” So far, they’re not listening.

Every day that Republicans refuse to seize and root out the fascist violence now associated with their party is another day closer to a dystopia like the one through which Hannah Arendt lived.

It can happen here.

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Glen Brunner
Jun 23

I think you have identified one of the two very vital emotions--meanness as expressed through violence--that the universe is using to play us Homo sapiens. As I mentioned in a previous comment, I think the universe is playing 4-5-or-6 dimensional chess with us humans while we think we are just playing checkers. I'll explain. You write this morning, Thom: " violence (provides)...a sense of agency, of individual power and meaning, a sort of orgasmic release from a life of ordinariness and political impotence." How fantastically accurate you are in stating this ! Especially when viewed not just through the social, political, and historical lenses, but also through the psychological. one as well. What do I mean? Try this simple exercise: take a sheet of binder paper (yep that stuff that probably doesn't even exist anymore?), draw a vertical line down the middle, and a line across near the top. Then on the left side write down the word "ego" / "small self" / "immature self" / or whatever term you prefer to label our everyday "self" that is often insecure, fearful, angry, feeling impotent, and "wanting more." Then on the right side write down the term "Big Self" / "Higher Power" / "Universal Self" / or whatever term that you prefer to denote our Self in its best sense, best feelings, most inclusive, and feeling "at one" with the world. (I have to point out here that our current understanding of human psychology and terminology are still severely deficient). I'll give just one example of what I would enter in the two columns: "Greed" under "small self" and "Sharing / Giving under "Big Self."

When you have entered all your characteristics of each, then squeeze in at the top on each side the name of the political party that you find that most corresponds to that column of characteristics. What do you find? I will note here that Strauss & Howe in their book "The Fourth Turning" did a spectacular job of presenting their "saeculum" theory....but failed to clearly state the force driving the whole, dysfunctional, human dilemma--egoic identity based on human emotions. So when you very accurately say, Thom, that "violence (provides)...a sense of agency, of individual power and meaning," you are describing egoic identity based on anger and hate--one side of our two-faced human coin. The other side of this coin--love and a sense of Oneness with the world--manifest in a very different manner...does it not? What do you find in the right column of your paper? Where does all that come from--if not this other face of our coin? Why is our country almost evenly divided 51 /49 in preferring diametrically opposite Presidential candidates (Biden vs Trump in 2020)...and still going at it today? Is this not a reflection / manifestation of our basic human nature caught up in this dichotomous universe? And finally, Thom, your description of violence as " a sort of orgasmic release from a life of ordinariness and political impotence" is, I find, so uncannily accurate ! Yes, it is an unconscious release of energy--because hate & anger largely eclipse awareness & beingness. It is far from an accident that MAGA-hatters / -haters do not subscribe to facts, evidence, peace, democracy,and integrity. Their sense of "impotent" energy has built up due to the lack of release through more peaceful, integrating means...and like any energetic system, a release is either found....or the whole system explodes. The past 6 " 4th Turnings" have demonstrated that the egalitarian side--doesn't this term belong in the right column?--has won over the authoritarians / dominators in power...when the "common folk" refused to "take it anymore." But this time around, the USA with its roughly 250 years of increasing "egalitariaism," is facing in this current "Fourth Turning" a "reverse coup" as the authoritarian dominators want to crush their enemies--the supporters of democracy and a multiracial, diverse society. The dividing line appears to be "identity"--which side of the line is each of us on ?

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Barry J Kaufman DO
Writes Barry Kaufman's View from the B… Jun 23

Yes I have Thom. I have noticed you playing juvenile and demeaning Lincoln Project ads mocking conservatives who took Ivermectin. I have heard you repeatedly suggest that the unvaccinated should be punished by standing in line behind those who have been vaccinated for life-saving treatment. I have heard callers minimize the racism of our foreign policy and immigration system by claiming that we feel "closer" and can identify more with educated Europeans, alluding to our support for Ukraine and our destruction of black and brown countries around the world, with no pushback from you at all. So yes, the Biden/Clinton brand of neoliberalism you protect by obsessing about Trump and Republicans is a key player in the militarism, cruelty and division in our country. I hate to say you are a part of the problem.

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