Donald Trump’s second White House chief of staff tried to stop him praising Adolf Hitler in part by trying to convince the then president Benito Mussolini, the Italian fascist dictator, was “a great guy in comparison”.
I wonder how many people in America agree with him about Hitler. No, actually I don’t think I want to know.
95% of the voters currently
Sure ok
“I know you love arsenic, but have you tried cyanide?”
– this guy
Fucked up that title didn’t you.
It’s the literal headline of the article. Who are you addressing?
Which is wrong. Whoever wrote it.
It gets more clicks.
This just in…
Generalissimo Francisco Franco is still dead.
Took him long enough to get that way
Okay, at least include the in comparison part, guardian, this title is clickbaity crap
Here’s a non-clickbait article from Forbes. I like the style it’s written in with titled sections grouped by topic.
Yeah, I’m not reading anything from a Fox clone.
I mean it’s easy to be a great guy in comparison when you lower the bar to the depths of hell.
Mussolini was ok at the end when he decided to enter public service as a cuspidor.
He was the best decoration a gas station has ever had
All of his blood really did brighten up that piazza! I believe his lower intestine added a lot of character to a nearby frieze depicting Caesar crossing the Rubicon. I wonder if he would have appreciated the irony…
At this point we’ve reached a complete and utter death of euphemism around anything regarding Trump.
All attempts to “bring to light” any horrible thing Trump has factually committed will be met by his followers with, “Well that’s actually a good thing.” And any politician trying to ride his wake will have to go along with it.
How soon until we start hearing “Look, we have to view Hitler with some nuance” from the Senate podium.
How soon until we start hearing “Look, we have to view Hitler with some nuance” from the Senate podium.
The very fact that this is a serious question, that this even could be a serious question, is downright chilling.
Though it will likely show up in the House first, I fear the answer to your question is “not long”.
There should be some nuance.
We need to recognize that Hitler did at least one good thing.
(He offed himself.)
In a more serious vein, we need to recognize how easy it is to fall in with… that. Hitler was unspeakably evil. But he had a lot of people following him, some of whom are no more evil than anyone else.
the only way to prevent another version of him, is to recognize there is a risk we, personally, could fall for it. And to be perfectly blunt, republicans have.
Said another way, there is a capacity for evil in everyone; even as there is a capacity for good. Evil people don’t know that they’re evil- they can’t even consider the possibility, because they refuse to accept this.
I remember briefly questioning how tyranny takes hold of a whole country when I was younger. I didn’t think on it hard enough, really. It sucks now to have to live it.