173 points

“I better win or you’re gonna have problems like we’ve never had. We may have no country left,” Trump said at his weekend swing-state rally. “This may be our last election. You want to know the truth? People have said that. This could be our last election.”

It’s always projection with him and his supporters.

Side note: the thumbnail on this article has priceless meme potential.

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96 points

He’s quoting himself. He’s the one who said it. Its on video

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12 points

Wow, the one time trump has told the truth!

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9 points

Also orange dipshit:

I am going to be a dictator on day one

Interviewer:

Did you mean…

Orange dipshit:

Did I stutter?

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1 point
Deleted by creator
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31 points

Side note: the thumbnail on this article has priceless meme potential.

That’s the face my kid used to make as a baby when pooping.

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16 points

What a coincidence! There’s a reason why he wears adult diapers.

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71 points

The GOP seemed like it might have been turning against Trump (since, you know, he lost). And then it didn’t, and everyone was back to groveling at his feet. They had his name in lights at the RNC as if he was Roxy from Chicago.

They deserve the candidate they ran with.

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8 points

They deserve the candidate they ran with

they might but the rest of us don’t

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4 points

Roxy? Noooo… she don’t have to put up a red light. 😭

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3 points

They’re afraid of his base.

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67 points

Since 1930s Germany is mentioned, it also didn’t really work there. Hitler only won with 35 percent of the popular vote. So Trump in the US is already more popular as Hitler was then.

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21 points
*

That statement kind of elides the whole electoral and legislative structure of the Weimar Republic at the time, though. It was a parliamentary system (whose legislative body was - and was again, after the fall of the Third Reich - the Reichstag). So in point of fact, though the NSDAP (the Nazi Party) received a plurality of the votes in the WR’s last three elections, nobody “voted for Hitler”. So the analogy of political tribalism being leveraged by a fascist party with a fascist cult-of-personality head actually holds up a good bit better than the numbers you present here might lead one to assume.

It’s fair to point out that the NSDAP sort of formed around Hitler, where as the GOP (“Weimar” Republicans? Might have to start using that as a sneaky jab in conversation, hah) was subsumed by Trumpism, but all he really did was to turn the quiet parts of their platform up to 11 and emphasize populist and tribal (not as in “First Nation”) sentiments. However, I’d argue that that makes the GOP/Trump combination a good bit more insidious than the NSDAP - especially considering how much the GOP loves to lean on the technically-true-but-deeply-misleading line of “we’re the party that ended slavery”, since it utterly ignores the ideological shift of the party over the intervening 160 or so years.

Note: absolutely none of this should be construed in any way as Nazi apologia. It is simply a technical clarification on the system of government and the electoral and leadership-selection mechanics that existed in the Weimar Republic at the time, and my thoughts as to how that matches up with some parts of our current situation, in terms of the political analogies.

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11 points

Absolutely correct, as a German it just irks me that the popular belief about Hitler Germany was that all Germans were in favour of it. Many very much weren’t, at least at the beginning before all media was turned into a pure propaganda apparatus.

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0 points

France is a bit more analogous. The left had the most votes and Macron just appointed the conservatives to be Prime Minister.

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20 points

Kind of scary to think if we had parliamentary type elections Trump has a dedicated 35. There may be a larger coalition of liberal parties still but this election wouldn’t be the moratorium of Trump as we hope it turns out. Him and his party would win a substantial amount of seats.

Then you see the example Macron in France just set. Overwhelming liberal victory and he’s handing the PM spot to a very old, homophobic conservative.

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20 points

Hitler could only take over because the conservatives were more afraid of the communists and thought they could control Hitler and use him. He used them instead.

Something similar seems to happen again now in Germany.

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15 points

Hitler Trump could only take over because the conservatives were more afraid of the communists the left and thought they could control Hitler Trump and use him. He used them instead.

As the other comment or noted, that still works for trump. That’s basically 2016 in a nutshell

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11 points

That kind of talk has been consistent with the conservatives now too. The big bad scary socialist coming to the white house to destroy the economy. Same playbook. My point stands

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8 points
*

Hitler only became Chancellor because “moderates” were more afraid to form a coalition with leftists than allow a fascist to rise to power. Sound familiar?

If we had a parliamentary system, we would have been able to organize a much larger coalition against Trump, especially the second time around.

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18 points

Most people don’t realize this. You might enjoy this book:

Takeover: HITLER’S FINAL RISE TO POWER

It’s frightening to realize how the nazis were barely clinging to power and almost disappeared before becoming dominant. We’re right there now.

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10 points

There’s nothing more dangerous than a cornered animal as they say…

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52 points

Well, it made me turn off ad blockers then the ads crashed my tab.

But it sounded like it’s republicans overacting and mad at democrats because we’re “letting” trump run instead of a candidate who would have a better chance to beat Kamala?

They’re just jealous we dropped our geriatric candidate and they couldn’t.

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100 points

They’re just jealous we dropped our geriatric candidate and they couldn’t.

to be honest the GOP lost the chance to be free of Trump when their senators refused to convict him after the Jan 6 impeachment.

They could have been free of him. they could have put this party above their own personal power. but nope. They chose this. They chose him over america.

They chose an insurrectionist asshole. a misogynist. a racist. a rapist. a bigot in every way. A geriatric fascist prick.

which, all this besides, Trump could back out any time he wanted to. just like Biden did. But that also would put America before his own personal power.

TL/DR:

THEY DESERVE EACH OTHER

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22 points

I mean, they also could’ve convicted him after his first impeachment, too. Or they could’ve 25th’d him, or they could’ve not stacked the Federal judiciary with partisan traitors like Judge Cannon, or any number of things that would’ve entailed acting in good faith for the good of the country instead of blatantly trying to seize power at all costs. They had plenty of chances and rejected them all.

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11 points

all of which happened before the Jan 6 impeachment and senate trial. They and him are the same.

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3 points

to be honest the GOP lost the chance to be free of Trump when their senators refused to convict him after the Jan 6 impeachment.

I think they lost their chance when he won in 2016. He has so thoroughly captured their base that ousting him would certainly lose them the next several elections, if they ever could fully recover. That’s not to say it’s not 100% on the GOP, he’s the consequence of decades of pandering to the far-right. I’m convinced they could have gotten rid of him before 2016 as well, but the conservatives thought they could control Hitler again and now he’s got them by the balls.

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2 points
*

…well, he can’t back out: his 2016 win was the unintentional outcome of a failed media campaign gone awry, and everything since then has been a mad scramble to avoid prosecution for all the laws he broke along the way and to keep uncle vlad’s kompromat at bay…

…once he loses executive immunity or outlives his usefuless, his whole world comes crashing down: you’ve seen the panic in eyes since late 2016, and most of the remaining GOP have since come along for the same ride…

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1 point

That’s a good point.

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-5 points

Lmao, WHAT‽

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-3 points

Exactly

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11 points
*
Deleted by creator
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11 points

Doesn’t it mean “this fucking guy,” which is basically the same thing?

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-4 points

It’s not The Former Guy? Which soon won’t work, but still

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8 points
*

it is. caught on after Biden called him that. as jabba the cunt is someone who loves seeing and hearing his own name everywhere, some people use ways other than his name to refer to him. TFG is one of them.

of course there’s no reason why it shouldn’t be interpreted as this fucking guy/goon/git etc

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7 points

That Felon Guy will work forever.

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2 points

…i’ve always read it as the former guy but presumed that folks embrace the ambiguity of that f*cking guy

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1 point

I’m sorry you got downvoted for being right. You weren’t rude or anything 🤷

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