I think he's implying that because the Nazi party had the word socialist in it, Republicans would disapprove of them. While this statement, by itself, raises alarm bells I didn't even know I had, the second-half might actually clear it up: I
think that the line about redefining words is actually intended to raise a point about we use and abuse language in political discourse, using the "Nationalist Socialist" thing as an example.
Or he's being completely literal and saying that calling Republicans Nazis is just wrong, because Republicans can't be Nazis, because they hate socialists. Which... I leave to someone with more sleep and fewer pending deadlines them myself to deal with.
I'd also note that "nazi" stands for national socialist, and while your right wing is pretty nationalistic (as any is, really), it's about as anti-socialist as it gets, to the point where "socialist" is an insult on your political scene. A tendency I'm noticing in American politics is redefining words with negative connotations to mean people you disagree with and not yourself.
Do note that North Korea refers to itself as the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, which is about as far away from the truth as you can get. Names of groups/countries/people tend to be a projection of what that group thinks themselves to be, not what they actually are.
So you think the National Socialist party wasn't actually socialist by our understanding of the term? How so?
Oh, ok. Have fun you guys. I'll merely add in while I'm not a fan - to put it mildly - of comparing Trump or Republicans to Nazis (My grandfather would actually return from the grave to slap me), you're kind of going too far with this line here:
And I wasn't aware that hiring a paramilitary for security is synonymous with "gas the jews".
I don't think anyone reasonable is arguing that (and anyone unreasonable who is not currently the President of the United States can be safely ignored). Nazism was a lot of things to a lot of people during the existance of the original NSDAP. It was genocide, it was racial purity laws, it was militarism, it was a lot of different things. What I mean here is that setting the standard as high as literally quoting Mein Kampf is already a bit of a problem, I think; not specifically with Nazism, but with any "ism" that people don't like. People say "Well if I'm not actually gassing jews I'm not a Nazi" or "Well if I am not going around flinging racial slurs at people in the street or
lynching negroes, so I'm not a racist." It reminds me of something from Catch-22 (Censored because I don't remember forum policy on these things, and I'd like to not be warned today.):
Racial prejudice is a terrible thing, Yossarian. It really is. It's a terrible thing to treat a decent, loyal Indian like a n****r, k**e, w*p, or s**c.
You're right that people have an amazing ability to make negative words mean "people I don't like", but you should also remember the "and not me" part. You're going on about the context of the NSDAP party, and that's fine; but when you consider that someone may well just be referring to Neo-Nazis, your analysis loses a bit of punch. These things are real, and it should be possible to call something out as being a part of that without all the "But HOW DARE YOU" that comes up. Yes, it's possible to be a racist or a nazi without personally murdering six million Jews, and the fact is that standards tend to inflate
towards that, for ourselves, and away for others. Both angles need to be rememebered.
(Also fuck you I NEED TO WRITE AN ACTUAL ESSAY DAMN IT)
Max, do you really think the US entered WW2 because they disliked Nazis?
Do you think the US would have gotten involved if they
did like Nazis?
They didnt. And neither did the Nazis dislike America - the US literally was the foremodel to them, they based many of their race laws on examples set by America. The only reason the US got involved was because of Japan attacking them.
A) I would not confuse considering US eugenics laws as a legal model, and admiring the country as a whole. Nazis respected the methods and efficiency of Bolsheviks, for example, but the massive violence visited upon the Soviet Union indicates that that sort of respect counts for little. B) Nazi Germany declared war on the US, not the other way around. The US declared war on Japan in response to Pearl Harbor, but not Germany. Germany and Italy declared war on the US three days later on December 11th, with the US only responding later that day; hardly a coincidence. C) It's not like the US was actually as neutral as it claimed to be before Pearl Harbor. Lend-Lease was pretty huge. US support was real and significant.
But seriously, has anyone seen a sign of life ever since Trump abruptly ended his late night Tweet in gibberish, and the tweet was removed 6h later?
It kinda looks like he keeled over and died while typing his last tweet.
Best explanation: Trump is actually a physical manifestation of my will to live (I'm
so sorry), and when my will to live gave out while writing endless text, so did he. As the poets say, "covfefe". (I
demand "covfefe" or some variation thereof be the new thread title! Make it happen!)
On an unrelated note, massive blast in Kabul claims at least 80 lives.