• Communication commission discussion

  • Re: NYT: 1918 Germany has a warning for America

    from bazril on Dec 02, 2020 08:44 AM
    Gracias, amigo!
    It's a voice of alert!!!
    Azril
    
    ----------
    On Wed, Dec 2, 2020, 03:17 Luis Alberto Padilla Menendez <
    luisalberto.luispa@...> wrote:
    
    > 1918 Germany Has a Warning for America
    >
    > Donald Trump’s “Stop the Steal” campaign recalls one of the most
    > disastrous political lies of the 20th century.
    > [image: Jochen Bittner]
    >
    > By Jochen Bittner
    >
    > Contributing Opinion Writer
    >
    >    - Nov. 30, 2020 The New York Times
    >
    > Credit...Getty Images
    >
    > HAMBURG, Germany — It may well be that Germans have a special inclination
    > to panic at specters from the past, and I admit that this alarmism annoys
    > me at times. Yet watching President Trump’s “Stop the Steal” campaign since
    > Election Day, I can’t help but see a parallel to one of the most dreadful
    > episodes from Germany’s history.
    >
    > One hundred years ago, amid the implosions of Imperial Germany, powerful
    > conservatives who led the country into war refused to accept that they had
    > lost. Their denial gave birth to arguably the most potent and disastrous
    > political lie of the 20th century — the Dolchstosslegende, or stab-in-the-back
    > myth
    > <https://www.nytimes.com/2020/11/23/opinion/trump-biden-conspiracy-theory.html>
    > .
    >
    > Its core claim was that Imperial Germany never lost World War I. Defeat,
    > its proponents said, was declared but not warranted. It was a conspiracy, a
    > con, a capitulation — a grave betrayal that forever stained the nation.
    > That the claim was palpably false didn’t matter. Among a sizable number of
    > Germans, it stirred resentment, humiliation and anger. And the one figure
    > who knew best how to exploit their frustration was Adolf Hitler.
    >
    > Don’t get me wrong: This is not about comparing Mr. Trump to Hitler, which
    > would be absurd. But the Dolchstosslegende provides a warning. It’s
    > tempting to dismiss Mr. Trump’s irrational claim that the election was
    > “rigged” as a laughable last convulsion of his reign or a cynical bid to
    > heighten the market value for the TV personality he might once again intend
    > to become, especially as he appears to be giving up on his effort to
    > overturn the election result.
    >
    >
    > But that would be a grave error. Instead, the campaign should be seen as
    > what it is: an attempt to elevate “They stole it” to the level of legend,
    > perhaps seeding for the future social polarization and division on a scale
    > America has never seen.
    >
    > In 1918, Germany was staring at defeat. The entry of the United States
    > into the war the year before, and a sequence of successful counterattacks
    > by British and French forces, left German forces demoralized. Navy sailors
    > went on strike. They had no appetite to be butchered in the hopeless yet
    > supposedly holy mission of Kaiser Wilhelm II and the loyal aristocrats who
    > made up the Supreme Army Command.
    >
    > A starving population joined the strikes and demands for a republic grew.
    > On Nov. 9, 1918, Wilhelm abdicated, and two days later the army leaders
    > signed the armistice. It was too much to bear for many: Military officers,
    > monarchists and right-wingers spread the myth that if it had not been for
    > political sabotage by Social Democrats and Jews back home, the army would
    > never have had to give in.
    >
    > The deceit found willing supporters. “Im Felde unbesiegt” — “undefeated on
    > the battlefield” — was the slogan with which returning soldiers were
    > greeted. Newspapers and postcards depicted German soldiers being stabbed
    > in the back
    > <https://www.dhm.de/lemo/kapitel/weimarer-republik/innenpolitik/dolchstosslegende.html> by
    > either evil figures carrying the red flag of socialism or grossly
    > caricatured Jews
    > <https://www.dw.com/de/juden-im-ersten-weltkrieg/a-17808361>.
    >
    > *By the time of the Treaty of Versailles the following year, the myth was
    > already well established.* The harsh conditions imposed by the Allies,
    > including painful reparation payments, burnished the sense of betrayal. It
    > was especially incomprehensible that Germany, in just a couple of years,
    > had gone from one of the world’s most respected nations to its biggest
    > loser.
    > Editors’ Picks
    > Hidden in Plain Sight: The Ghosts of Segregation
    > <https://www.nytimes.com/2020/11/30/travel/ghosts-of-segregation.html?action=click&algo=als_engaged1_desk_filter&block=editors_picks_recirc&fellback=false&imp_id=460452370&impression_id=8e95b7e0-3440-11eb-8184-b75938e67f1e&index=0&pgtype=Article&region=ccolumn&req_id=805854166&surface=home-featured&action=click&module=editorContent&pgtype=Article&region=CompanionColumn&contentCollection=Trending>
    > That Mysterious Monolith in the Utah Desert? It’s Gone, Officials Say
    > <https://www.nytimes.com/2020/11/28/us/monolith-utah-disappeared.html?action=click&algo=als_engaged1_desk_filter&block=editors_picks_recirc&fellback=false&imp_id=98259303&impression_id=8e95b7e1-3440-11eb-8184-b75938e67f1e&index=1&pgtype=Article&region=ccolumn&req_id=805854166&surface=home-featured&action=click&module=editorContent&pgtype=Article&region=CompanionColumn&contentCollection=Trending>
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    > <https://www.nytimes.com/2020/11/29/sports/the-college-athletes-who-are-allowed-to-make-big-bucks-cheerleaders.html?action=click&algo=als_engaged1_desk_filter&block=editors_picks_recirc&fellback=false&imp_id=353642943&impression_id=8e95b7e2-3440-11eb-8184-b75938e67f1e&index=2&pgtype=Article&region=ccolumn&req_id=805854166&surface=home-featured&action=click&module=editorContent&pgtype=Article&region=CompanionColumn&contentCollection=Trending>
    >
    > The startling aspect about the Dolchstosslegende is this: It did not grow
    > weaker after 1918 but stronger. In the face of humiliation and unable or
    > unwilling to cope with the truth, many Germans embarked on a disastrous
    > self-delusion: The nation had been betrayed, but its honor and greatness
    > could never be lost. And those without a sense of national duty and
    > righteousness — the left and even the elected government of the new
    > republic — could never be legitimate custodians of the country.
    >
    > In this way, the myth was not just the sharp wedge that drove the Weimar
    > Republic apart. It was also at the heart of Nazi propaganda, and
    > instrumental in justifying violence against opponents. The key to Hitler’s
    > success was that, by 1933, a considerable part of the German electorate had
    > put the ideas embodied in the myth — honor, greatness, national pride —
    > above democracy.
    >
    > The Germans were so worn down by the lost war, unemployment and
    > international humiliation that they fell prey to the promises of a “Führer”
    > who cracked down hard on anyone perceived as “traitors,” leftists and Jews
    > above all. The stab-in-the-back myth was central to it all. When Hitler
    > became chancellor on Jan. 30, 1933, the Nazi newspaper Völkischer
    > Beobachter wrote that “irrepressible pride goes through the millions” who
    > fought so long to “undo the shame of 9 November 1918.”
    >
    > Germany’s first democracy fell. Without a basic consensus built on a
    > shared reality, society split into groups of ardent, uncompromising
    > partisans. And in an atmosphere of mistrust and paranoia, the notion that
    > dissenters were threats to the nation steadily took hold.
    >
    > Alarmingly, that seems to be exactly what is happening in the United
    > States today. According to the Pew Research Center, 89 percent
    > <https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2020/11/13/america-is-exceptional-in-the-nature-of-its-political-divide/> of
    > Trump supporters believe that a Joe Biden presidency would do “lasting harm
    > to the U.S.,” while 90 percent of Biden supporters think the reverse. And
    > while the question of which news media to trust has long split America, now
    > even the largely unmoderated Twitter is regarded as partisan. Since the
    > election, millions of Trump supporters have installed the alternative
    > social media app Parler
    > <https://thehill.com/policy/technology/525795-parlers-post-election-popularity-sparks-misinformation-concerns>.
    > Filter bubbles are turning into filter networks.
    >
    > In such a landscape of social fragmentation, Mr. Trump’s baseless
    > accusations about electoral fraud could do serious harm. A staggering 88
    > percent of Trump voters
    > <https://today.yougov.com/topics/politics/articles-reports/2020/11/19/trump-voters-biden-poll> believe
    > that the election result is illegitimate, according to a YouGov poll. A
    > myth of betrayal and injustice is well underway.
    >
    > It took another war and decades of reappraisal for the Dolchstosslegende
    > to be exposed as a disastrous, fatal fallacy. If it has any worth today, it
    > is in the lessons it can teach other nations. First among them: Beware
    > the beginnings.
    >
    > Jochen Bittner (@JochenBittner <https://twitter.com/jochenbittner?lang=en>)
    > is a co-head of the debate section for the weekly newspaper Die Zeit and a
    > contributing opinion writer.
    >
    > *The Times is committed to publishing **a diversity of letters*
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