Alternet - Canadian lawyer and author Omer Aziz is
warning Americans that fascism has not only arrived, but it's also been alive
and well in the U.S. for some time. The real chore is in ending it before it
goes too far.
In his book Shadow of the
Republic, Aziz explains that it appears the pro-fascist group “is using the
machinery of constitutional government in a partisan way to make it subservient
to the political party and then to turn it against ordinary citizens,
dissidents, free thinkers, journalists."
It's something that horror writer
and anti-fascist activist Stephen King explained, "should be an alarm bell
announcing that the American house is on fire."
Speaking to Zeteo's Mehdi Hasan,
Aziz walked through America's long flirtation with fascism that is too often
glossed over in a history that prizes American exceptionalism above reality.
“By the time the fascists are
building the camps, it’s already too late and we have lost," Hasan read
from the book. It prompted him to ask just how close the U.S. is.
Aziz said that currently, Trump
likes to "cosplay as a fascist," using things like his
"weaponization fund" and "the prosecution of political
enemies" as examples. Republicans dismiss such claims as hyperbolic and
symptoms of the imagined "Trump derangement syndrome" or
"paranoid liberals."
But Aziz said there is
"substance" to the claim.
"I think when you look at
Trump's rhetoric around poisoning the blood of immigrants and some of the
language he has used and his team has used, they're clearly drawing from this
common wellspring of influence and inspiration. At the same time, I would say,
he is an opportunist. I think he likes the idea of himself thinking of himself
as a Mussolini or someone of a strongman character. But in terms of the rabid
ideology, I don't think he has that."
He explained that it's important
to understand that the emergence of fascism is different from every society.
Germany, for example, was very different from Italian fascists and American
fascists are also different. For Trump, his fascism is "particularly
American."
….The more dangerous part of
fascism, he said, isn't the obvious ones waving Nazi flags in the street. Aziz
called the "fascists in suits" far more of a threat to American
ideals, because they are the ones using that machinery of government to subvert
the citizenry, just as Italy and Germany did with journalists and dissidents.
One group he talks about in the
book that Hasan said he found particularly interesting is the younger spectrum
of voters who are growing more attracted to fascism, Nazism and white
supremacy.