Consider the following words used to describe the President:
- He is: a tyrant, a despot, a racist, a bigot, a dictator, a liar, a demagogue, grossly unqualified, lacking in character, ugly, an idiot, a braggart, a buffoon, a monster, foul tongued, indecent, disrespectful to women, vulgar, intellectually lazy, a white supremacist, deranged from syphilis, disrespectful of freedom of the press.
- If he is elected we will: leave the country, secede, refuse to follow federal laws.
- He should: be assassinated, be impeached, be removed, go to hell.
- His way of speaking and writing is: silly, slip-shod, loose-jointed, lacking in the simplest rules of syntax, coarse, devoid of grace, filled with glittering generalities.
- He and his entire cabinet are not equal to the occasion, and are full of incapacity and rottenness.
Notably absent from the above are these: “He’s Hitler, a Nazi, a Fascist". That’s because those words were not
available in the 1860s. You see, those
were all words said verbatim by Democrats about Abraham Lincoln, not just Donald Trump!
That's not to imply some equivalence between Donald
Trump and the now revered Honest Abe. It is, however, to imply that there are some striking similarities between what's happening with Trump and what happened with Lincoln. In many significant and ominous ways we are
reliving the disastrous 1860s. That should concern everyone.
Here's the thing: Democrats hated Abraham Lincoln for the same reason they hate Donald Trump; it all comes down to entitlements.
Entitlements are anything that benefits one group of people at the expense of another. Slavery, aside from the racial, abuse, and imprisoning aspect, was all about benefiting one group at the expense of another.
Entitlements are anything that benefits one group of people at the expense of another. Slavery, aside from the racial, abuse, and imprisoning aspect, was all about benefiting one group at the expense of another.
Today’s Democrats have several entitlements perceived to be under
threat by Donald Trump: the teacher's
union monopoly entitlement, the government bureaucrat power entitlement, the
various Obamacare entitlements, the government union job entitlement, the cheap labor illegal immigrant entitlement, the Muslim refugee entitlement, the illegal voting entitlement, the congressional unlimited tax and spend entitlement, the
subsidized mortgage entitlement, the media power entitlement, the lopsided trade agreement entitlement, the EPA unlimited
power entitlement, the radical LGBTQ federal rights entitlement, the federally
funded late term abortion entitlement, and many more.
And that list doesn’t include the traditional redistribution entitlements like Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, Food Stamps,
etc. Even Donald Trump’s just released
budget doesn’t dare touch those entrenched goodies. But it matters little whether or not a
politician explicitly threatens to take the candy away.
The only requirement for drawing Democrat vitriol is the perception that an entitlement is under threat.
Thus, pretty much every Republican since the Progressive Era has been Hitler or equivalent. Most recently, Reagan was Hitler, Bush was
Hitler, McCain was Hitler. Even Mitt
Romney, perhaps the most decent man in America, a bishop in his church, was Hitler,
wanted to bring back slavery, kept women in binders, and was a notorious abuser
of puppies.
There is a big difference between dissent and hate. Dissenters will assert that the other side is wrong. Haters will assert that the other side is evil. When Democrats on a daily basis employ the vitriolic rhetoric they used against Lincoln, they are labeling Trump and his supporters evil. Unfortunately, all tactics, including violence, are appropriate when dealing with evil.
In both Lincoln's and Trump's cases, Democrat civil disobedience began immediately after the election. Southern Democrat states began seceding right after Lincoln won. Immediately following Trump's win, Democrats were in the streets protesting and in some cases being violent.
Most recently, several Democrat state and local governments have announced plans to "secede" by refusing to enforce certain federal laws. In response, Donald Trump has promised to
withhold their federal funds. This type of
standoff is exactly what led to the battle of Fort Sumter, the first battle of
the Civil War. Fort Sumter took place
six weeks after Lincoln took office.
Donald Trump has been in office about five weeks as of this writing.
If you think I'm exaggerating the danger posed by hateful rhetoric and demonization, consider that Betsy DeVos, the new Secretary of Education, vilified and threatened by Democrats and the teacher's union, has been placed under the protection of federal marshals.
The only other cabinet member ever needing federal marshals was a drug
czar in danger of being snuffed-out by drug cartels!
Entertainers have also expressed a particularly virulent strain
of hatred towards Donald Trump. Thus,
the Golden Globes and Oscars spent an inordinate amount of time bashing the new
President. Saturday Night Live is pretty much full time with Trump bashing, and you can’t
attend a play or concert without the actors and musicians lecturing on their
Trump hatred.
Abraham Lincoln faced a similar situation from Democrat entertainers in his day. An actor named John
Wilkes Booth, whom Lincoln had seen perform only a week before, was the man who infamously shot him in the head. As Booth jumped
onto the theater stage immediately after shooting Lincoln he shouted, “Sic Semper Tyrannis!”,
which if modernized would translate roughly to the headline above. Donald Trump has already survived at least
one bumbling assassination attempt during his campaign.
Dissent is a necessary part of democracy. Hatred is a necessary part of dissolution and
civil war. Once Democrats convince
themselves that half the country is made-up of deplorable fascist Hitler supporters,
don’t they then have an obligation to eliminate them? If you are convinced that any Trump supporter you know is evil, where does that logically lead? Hateful rhetoric disguised as dissent can unintentionally paint
impressionable minds into a dangerous corner with no peaceful way out. We know what that led to in the 1860s.
Come on America, we’ve seen this play before. Let’s not give it a sequel.
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