![World War I and Korean and Vietnam War memorial in Adams Park in Roslindale](https://universalhub.com/files/styles/main_image_-_bigger/public/images/2020/memorial1.jpg)
At one end of Adams Park in Roslindale Square is a mournful memorial to local service members who died in battle in World War 1, the sort of men we learned today the president scorns as "losers" and "suckers", men he's not even sure fought on the right side in that war.
The park itself is named for Irving W. Adams, who lived at Edgemont and South Street, who attended the Longfellow School and who, at just 20, became the first Massachusetts soldier to die in World War I, at Raimbeaucourt, France. So that might further discomfort the president, even if it weren't raining and so potentially posing a threat to his hair.
The World War I memorial was eventually extended to the dead of the Korean and Vietnam wars, the latter of which the president evaded due to alleged bone spurs, although he did fight his own "personal Vietnam" in attempting to avoid contracting a sexually transmitted disease from the "potential landmines" that are vaginas.
At the other end of Adams Park is a memorial urn for the dead of World War II.
![World War II urn in Roslindale](/images/2020/memorial2.jpg)
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Comments
Trump likes to brag he has the tough guys on his side. And
By MC Slim JB
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 2:31am
he certainly has the adoration of a certain kind of wannabe tough guy, the weekend warrior itching to wave his shiny dick-proxy in public to intimidate and maybe assault or kill someone with far less power and privilege.
It's a historic American ignominy that our President actively despises real heroes, the legion of young civilians who volunteered for or were pressed into service in defense of their country, who somehow stood up, answered the call of duty, and got maimed or killed by the hundreds of thousands to uphold democratic values.
CIC Bonespurs laughingly called being a rich fuckboy and avoiding STDs in the 70s his "personal Vietnam", and now ducks deceased-veteran homecoming services because one father of a dead serviceman dared to call him out. Also, shitting on unbelievably stalwart veterans like John McCain because they got captured. Jesus effing Christ. And denigrating Gold Star families. I'd say there can't be another way he could more basely desecrate the memory of honorably serving veterans, but Trump is Trump: there's always a new low to sink to.
I can only imagine with sorrow and grim humor what my uncle, who unhesitatingly answered the draft and as a fighter pilot got killed in combat -- an average Joe from a no-money family, a genuine tough guy -- would have said about this pampered, strutting, unspeakable coward. Pretty sure he would have cursed Trump with the vivid color and detail that actual soldiers reserve for half-men shirkers.
Whatever you say, JB, must be true, but...
By dmcboston
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 12:59am
...the only thing I find relevant and positive about this thread is the fact that an anti-faaa type hasn't vandalized the monument.
Yet.
Perhaps AG would be wise to not highlight it.
No idea what your point is, so I'll just ask: how
By MC Slim JB
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 1:26am
do you feel about Trump's ducking his military service for obviously bullshit reasons? (Alleged bone spurs -- so debilitating that Trump later couldn't remember which foot they were on -- didn't stop him from enjoying luxury skiing vacations and other sports shortly after he got his deferment.) What's your take on his shitting on McCain and Gold Star families? What's it like to support a Commander in Chief who thinks the service men and women under his aegis are losers and suckers? Inquiring minds want to know.
"wHaTEvEr U sAy, jB"
By J.R. Dobbs
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 5:47am
"But I find relevancy only in a hypothetical situation I cooked up in my head and have placed blame squarely at the feet of an amorphous group I've been taught to direct and focus my perperual aggreivement towards."
I noticed you couldn’t refute
By Kinopio
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 7:53am
I noticed you couldn’t refute anything said about Trumps hatred of the military so you deflected and brought up antifa for no reason instead.
There are claims...
By dmcboston
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 2:30pm
...that the Atlantic article is utter and complete bullshit. Given the state of reliability of today's media, I'd call the article utter and complete bullshit.
JFK, Elvis and Marylin Monroe
By Daan
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 2:38pm
There are claims all these folks are alive and well, albeit older. Given the state of humanity I would call these claims utter and complete silliness.
But if I read the National Enquire or Trump's friend who helmed the other crazy daisy tabloid these would be easily verified.
The state of today's media? For New York Times and The Atlantic excellent. Fox News - now that is where the bs is to be found.
Link to these claims please?
By Ron Newman
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 2:53pm
Who is making the claims?
There is corroboration...
By lbb
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 3:37pm
...of the Atlantic article's charges.
I'm frankly surprised that you can even smell bullshit any more.
didn't you know
By berkleealum
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 8:41pm
The Left called each of its news publications into a boardroom back in 2016 and decided they'd just fabricate 4 years (!) worth of absolutely ridiculous scandals in an effort to remove Trump from office, while making millions of dollars in clicks along the way...
hmm that actually sounds pretty reasonable now that I write it. now I just gotta find this The Left guy
The WWII Monument
By Pete X
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 8:24am
Literally commemorates antifa soldiers. Read a book.
Come on.
By Pete Nice
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 8:41am
Comparing anti nazi soldiers in WW2 to Antifa is like when right wingers say Democrats are the party of the KKK.
And yet, antifascism is still antifascism
By lbb
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 8:50am
Folks who screech and spray spit about "anTEEEEfa!!!11!!1!" are unlikely to be in possession of any actual facts about antifa, but at the same time, while every European theater soldier (on the US side) in WWII could be called an "anti nazi soldier", it certainly wasn't true that every US soldier was "anti nazi". Despite what people believe now, US military personnel in WWII contained nearly twice as many draftees as volunteers; they weren't all hard-charging "anti nazi" or antifascists. Those who were, were not unlike those who fight against fascism in the US today -- with the important difference that back then, they had government backing and support, whereas nowadays, antifascists are actively attacked by our government and by trained seals on the internet. How far we have fallen.
Yea I get that.
By Pete Nice
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 8:56am
But I'm willing to bet today's ANTIFA has zero in common with any sort of soldier of most Americans in general.
based on what?
By berkleealum
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 9:10am
??
You are joking right?
By Pete Nice
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 9:13am
have you ever talked to a member of the military and asked them what they think of Antifa?
Why don't you start there.
???
By berkleealum
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 10:15am
i don’t follow. leaving aside that antifa isn’t an organization, what does that have to do with anything?
Modern day "antifa" isn't associated with people who hate nazis
By Pete Nice
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 10:21am
Just google "antifa members" and you will see a certain demographic. It doesn't matter if they are organized or not organized, just like Phish fans, Oakland Raiders fans, or D&D fans aren't "organizations".
I mean would you consider Earth First! and organisation? It really just is what it is, its a group of people who do certain actions together.
Is this a "selfawarewolves" thing?
By fungwah
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 10:36am
You're right! These groups are people who have common interests - Phish fans are everyone who's a fan of Phish, Raiders fans are everyone who likes the Raiders, and D&D fans are everyone who is a fan of D&D.
And therefore, to continue your argument, Antifa is everyone who is against fascism. Thanks for playing!
Again no.
By Pete Nice
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 10:40am
Back to my original point. If you are a republican, does that mean you support aggressive anti-racist policies like the republicans in 1830? If you are a democrat, does that mean you are a racist POS since your party founded the KKK?
I know you are being sarcastically obtuse here which if fine, but I find it comical that people are trying to do this with antifa when they know it isn't right. Usually the left is much smarter than that.
I don't think that's a good analogy
By DrewD
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 11:08am
I don't think that's a good analogy. Perhaps you could argue that "antifa" isn't actually anti-facist, but you have to actually make that point, it doesn't come for free.
The reason it's silly to compare modern Democrats to the Democrats that started the KKK is that their ideology is the opposite. You're right that "antifa" and US soldiers in WWII aren't necessarily "on the same side", but it's not analogous to Dems/KKK unless you can show that they are actually fighting for the opposite thing.
While many WWII soldiers would probably disagree with "antifa" tactics, I bet they would also be pretty pissed to see people marching with literal Nazi flags (which doesn't happen all of the time, but has been happening too often). I bet they'd want to punch them, too. Frankly, I bet most of them would be pretty upset to see that this is what they fought for.
Yes that is true.
By Pete Nice
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 11:12am
But I think 99% of Americans disagree with nazi flags, and that same 99% probably don't support "Antifa" or their tactics.
Or the related arson
By dmcboston
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 2:49pm
Hey antifa that doesn't exist...we work to build and improve this country, you pricks are trying to burn it down and replace it with marxist bullshit and 'free stuff'.
Fuck you. See you in November.
Have a good and safe Labor Day holiday weekend.
Strange comaparison
By Daan
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 11:33am
The reference to political parties of the 1830s is way off the mark.
1. The Republican Party did not exist in 1830. So that comparison refers to a blank.
2. The Democratic Party of the Civil War era is completely different from the Democratic Party that arose from the 19th and 20th century urbanization and immigration.
3. The Republican Party which did evolve from the Whig Party is 180 degrees opposite it's namesake today. Donald Trump would have been set aside in a high chair with a dunce hat required to write on a chalk board a hundres times "I will act like an adult and not a petulant spoiled brat."
Before accuse people of being obtuse attempt to make sure that your facts are correct. One could say it is comical when a person attempts to sound smart and witty can't take the time to verify that there historical references are correct.
Again you know who I mean.
By Pete Nice
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 12:37pm
Radical Republicans, Whigs before that, etc. They aren't the republican party we know today. the fact is they are all different than the Republican Party is today, same as those who would called themselves "anti fascist" 50 years ago, wouldn't call themselves "antifa" today.
Fixed this For You
By Pete X
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 12:55pm
Isn't this a logical game?
By Pete Nice
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 12:59pm
All Antifa are anti-fascist
some anti-fascists are not Antifa
All anti-fascists are Antifa.
Is this what you are saying? I mean I'm going off precursor that Antifa is an actual thing. A movement who some "support" and would consider being a part of.
begging the question
By berkleealum
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 1:19pm
i guess i can see where you're coming from, but the imprecise language is more of a problem than you seem to accept. "Antifa" is used by the right to describe white agents of chaos when it's not convenient to outrightly denounce the larger movement.
It is indeed a game for right wingers
By Pete X
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 1:53pm
A propaganda game where the right is looking to paint ALL anti-fascism as something bad.
The consequences, where cops pepper spray and beat anti-fascist protesters with clubs but hand out water bottles and let right wing murderers walk home untouched are not a game
Not what they are doing.
By Pete Nice
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 2:00pm
Democracy in itself is anti-fascist. The Right wingers don't like protesters, people who block traffic, or those who dress in black and have pink hair in general (not saying antifa is made up of people like that).
Most people who hate fascism don't protest, block traffic, and they don't have pink hair (most fascists also don't have pink hair)
This is Incorrect
By Pete X
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 3:09pm
Democracy in itself is not automatically anti-fascist. You can voluntarily surrender and vote for a fascist. Of course in this country, fascists can also corrupt the democratic process through suppression, and/or weighting the minority of certain white votes over the majority through various constructs.
Thanks for agreeing with me that right-wingers are attempting to demonize the people protesting fascism, though.
Another logic game isn't it?
By Pete Nice
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 3:15pm
Right wingers do try to demonize anyone blocking traffic regardless of the cause.
This is Just Childish Gaslighting
By Pete X
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 3:33pm
Got it, right wingers aren't trying to demonize anti-fascists because of their political views, it's only because they're "blocking traffic!"
What about these protesters? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2020_United_States_a...
Stop playing the fool
Yea they march into buildings with guns....
By Pete Nice
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 3:35pm
Still different.
I just wanted to point out
By brianjdamico
Sat, 09/05/2020 - 7:42am
I just wanted to point out that it's rare for the nested comments to get *this* small on here! Good work.
Impossible comparison
By Daan
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 2:44pm
Where I disagree is that people who would call themselves anti fascist 50 years would not call themselves anti fascist today. That is a comparison that can not be made. The past is forever closed. It is impossible to what individuals who considered themselves anti fascist in the past would also consider themselves anti fascist in the present.
Not what I'm saying
By Pete Nice
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 3:06pm
but compare the Nazis then.
Is there a difference between trying to stop 1938 Fascism and 2020 Fascism?
A comparison of Nazis between today and 60 years ago
By Daan
Sat, 09/05/2020 - 3:42pm
60 years ago the idea of NAZI was still relatively new. For that matter it was a concept hijacked and changed by Hitler to follow fascism of Mussolini. While the idea of a state ruled by an absolute king was nothing new, the idea of a totalitarian nation-state using the apparatuses of industry, massive propaganda and the idea of nationalism were still fairly new or very new. So there we have major differences.
A major similarity however is the demand for some kind of purity. For Nazi beliefs that purity was based on false science of race. However, it also incoporated and rewrote the religious based hatred of Christians against Jews.
On the other hand fascism today still relies upon the deceit, lies and manipulation of their political ancestors. The basis of some kind purity also exists within modern fascism (Nazi, etc.) in the US. For some it is expressed in the language of pseudo-science of race. But it's expression is expressed in this nation in the form of religion, specifically by the various militant right wing religious, including Evangelical leaders.
Differences between stopping fascism in 38 versus today. That is a book unto itself.
A good comparison however between anti-fascists of the early part of the 20th century and today can be found by studying the writings of people who fought agains the fascist Franco. That includes Eric Blair (aka, George Orwell).
I believe that the underlying motivation of fascism remains largely the same. It is based on a power elite, a pure elite, extreme stratification and hierarchy and is free with condemning anyone who does not fit.
Anti-fascism opposed fascism and supports a society that is fundamentally free from oppression, absolutism or other forms of government that boils down to the powerful and the powerless.
The hard thing is that fascists never truly went away. They have grown and become far more prominent during the past 4 years. Anti-fascists have not been needed until the rise of Trump gave the call to American fascists to rise up to power.
Google "drinking the kool-aid"
By SwirlyGrrl
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 11:33am
Because that is what you are doing here.
THERE ARE NO ANTIFA MEMBERS.
Those websites you see - look up who owns them, dear.
Wow. You are gullible.
Ok then that makes it easy.
By Pete Nice
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 12:38pm
If there are no ANTIFA members, then Ike could not be ANTIFA or support it.
The websites on google are pretty consistent across the board.
The logic fails
By Daan
Sat, 09/05/2020 - 3:47pm
Antifa is not an organization; it is a belief. Antifa is a belief that fascism is bad. If Ike was anti-fascist then he would qualify as following antifa belief
Antifa is not an organization; never has been. Therefore it would be impossible for Ike to have been a member since there was not organization for him to be a member of.
To claim that Ike could not support antifa because it is not an organization is like saying an apple doesn't swim because it is not a fish. Completely unrelated. To say that Ike could not support anti-fascist beliefs is odd since he helped lead a war against fascists.
'THERE ARE NO ANTIFA MEMBERS.'
By dmcboston
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 2:00pm
Of course not. They're just teachers...
[img]https://i.imgur.com/zwpkptX.jpg[/img]
'Those websites you see - look up who owns them, dear.
Wow. You are gullible.'
Of course. All the burned out buildings...just reverse Potemkin Villages set up by Qanon, right?
Please don't bring active military into a domestic political
By bulgingbuick
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 10:30am
argument. They have opinions. They fight overseas and are routinely antagonized and confronted by Russian troops. Incidents ignored by Donald Trump. Happened again last week in Syria.
Yea but I know a few hundred of them
By Pete Nice
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 10:32am
They usually have similar opinions on lots of things. I'm not naming any names, don't worry.
Joe McCarthy and his infamous list
By Daan
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 11:34am
Joe McCarthy claimed he could identify every Communist and Homosexual in the US. He frequently waved a list of names. However no one ever saw that list.
And don't forget RFK helped
By anon
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 5:42pm
And don't forget RFK helped Roy Cohn with the list.
That says more about the
By Milwaukee Mike
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 1:11pm
That says more about the military getting radicalized by right wingers than it does anything else.
Oh Pete
By SwirlyGrrl
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 10:05am
I'm a veteran and an antifascist.
Your "bogeyman" organization isn't. Antifa is a philosophy, not group.
If you ever served, you would know that active duty service people are rather constrained when it comes to demonstrations, etc. So we don't know who they support or what they think because maintaining order and mission focus are considered more important (ever hear of the Ward Room Rules, dear? They teach you those in the Navy from day 1 ... or at least used to).
But those who have retired are supporting BLM and I know/know of a substantial number of vets who are active in the protests against the jackbooted CBP Pinkertons in Portland.
I leave you with this video of a career military man who dared confront the pinkertons about their oaths:
[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HQ_moOtDqvk[/youtube]
Yea I'm an antifascist too.
By Pete Nice
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 9:30am
Don't be obtuse here. If Ike were alive he would want 2020 Antifa members to be thrown in jail.
And you aren't Antifa. You know it and I know it.
I'm not the obtuse one
By SwirlyGrrl
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 10:05am
You are drinking the right wing kool-aid.
My fucking realtor in PDX was in the wall of moms, honey.
You are against facism? Really? Funny how you do nothing but aid, abet, and enable it here by making excuses for any and every exercise of it that conveniently doesn't fit your definition.
lol
By Pete Nice
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 10:13am
Again, you aren't Antifa. That was my only point.
Wow
By SwirlyGrrl
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 11:40am
You think antifa has leadership and members.
And all those Russian-government owned Antifa websites have convinced you of this.
LOL.
lol ok swirls..
By Pete Nice
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 2:02pm
https://www.cnn.com/videos/us/2020/06/16/who-is-an...
Here is a right wing website looking into this group and all of the people who aren't members because there is no such thing as an unorganized affiliation with something right?
Hey, Pete...
By dmcboston
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 2:06pm
Swirl is just about as leftie as it gets. Maybe she thinks she can keep her 'well paid' gigs when the revolution comes.
Perhaps, but any serious study of the French Revolution shows where that path leads.
A while back, the confused lady (that uses veiled insults like 'Dear' and 'Honey' which today would lead to charges under the UCMJ) was pushing these clowns...
[img]https://i.imgur.com/udr2Nkp.jpg[/img]
Any serious study of the French Revolution?
By Daan
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 2:53pm
Acknowledges that happened in the 18th century. The US can not be compared to a 18th century France. Although an irony of the French Revolution is that it was inspired by the "American Revolution," which was hardly a revolution. Insurrection, not revolution.
But the constant refrain of far left and leftie tells me that the speaker is showing their ignorance. The symbol of American left, labor unions, are no less conservative than corporate managers. They share in the competition for getting as much of the economic pie as possible. Social issues are secondary and usually only addressed when there is an economic interest.
Of the few, the less than .1% of Americans who would identify themselves as far left, they are vastly fewer in number than thousands of sovereign nationalists and other KKK, neo-Naze groups that are toting around weapons of mass destruction in places where they pretend to be the law and order.
In this nation fear of the far left is equal to another far word: farce.
yeah...
By berkleealum
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 10:16am
i don’t think you’re making the point you think you are
My point is that Ike isn't going to join an Anfifa group.
By Pete Nice
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 10:22am
And he wouldn't support their 2020 activities. That doesn't mean Ike loves fascists.
LOL
By SwirlyGrrl
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 11:35am
Antifa group?
Really?
Wow. Put down the Russian-owned propaganda websites pretending to be Antifa HQ. You have been duped, dear.
That reminds me, I was re
By Milwaukee Mike
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 1:25pm
That reminds me, I was re-reading the minutes of the last Antifa meeting--I was called-out because my dues were in arrears! I better get that squared away quickly or they'll stop mailing me the Antifa newsletter!
I'm not even saying that.
By Pete Nice
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 1:29pm
There are real people who say they are Antifa or support that group. I'm betting most people who hate fascism would not identify themselves with Anfifa or support the group (not some of the things you might see online anyway).
Can't read the minds of the dead
By Daan
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 11:24am
Peter: You can't read minds, much less of the dead. You do not know what Ike of the 50s would say about people who today are standing up against the political descendants of Joe McCarthy? Remember Senator Joe? One of America's contributions to alcoholic demagoguery and would be fascism.
You might remember that Ike also coined the term miliitary-industrial complex. An idea that just happened to be a strong element in helping Nazi Germany wage war. Such ironies.
You are right Daan.
By Pete Nice
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 11:33am
But I think you know what I mean.
I mean, McCarthy is tough because some of our far left Civil Rights leaders (JFK/RFK) were probably supporting McCarthy at many levels. These same democrats where pretty far left when it came to Civil Rights and other domestic issues so there are periods of American history which have so many different angles on this subject.
Disagree
By Daan
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 11:41am
Peter, I disagree. One it is impossible to deduce what Ike Eisenhower would think today. Not only because of assumptions about what constitutes "antifa" but also because Ike had direct observation of Germany Nazis and Italian fascists. We can not know whether he would look at Trump and his industrial, commercial and government supporters and see that as proto-fascist and therefore support and possibly guide the anti-fascist spirit that is antifa.
Your claim that JFK and RFK negates part of your statement. They are weak ad hominen attacks of using silly terms such as far left. That you associate Civil Rights as some kind of far left domestic issue (and far left is always a proxy for TOTALITARIAN COMMUNISTS) belies a belief that civil rights are somehow unAmeican.
Well we know how many traditionalists think today right?
By Pete Nice
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 12:48pm
Are we talking about 30 year old Ike today? 75 year old Ike? We know what most Americans think about "Antifa" (even though Swirrly says they don't exist) What would your guess be?
The mention of JFK is to show how "far left" in domestic circles could also mean "anti communist" in the same circle (70 years ago). And many Catholic Democrats and the Kennedy's who were supported by them also had these stances. Is that not true?
If you tell someone today that you were "Far Left" in 1960, you would probably be admired (today) as being a hero and pro civil rights (which 99% of Americans today would support). Tell someone you are "far left" in 2020? You might be seen as a Antifa freak. Mabye that changes in 2050? I'm guessing the people in 2050 would laugh at the characters seen in the images if you googled "antifa people".
Still disagree
By Daan
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 3:20pm
Calling JFK and RFK far left and now bifurcating the term into the far left of the 1960s and the far left of the 2020s is confusing if not bordering on misleading.
Far left of the 60s were people who questioned and challenged the assumption that Capitalism and American consumerist society were necessarily ideal. While some folks on the far left still foolishly looked to an ideal state of Marxian Communism, most of the left advocated (knowingly or not) an ideal society closer to early Christianity than the modern Totalitarian explication of the concept of Communism.
The far left of the 60s nevertheless challenged the assumption that the best kind of society is one where everyone is pitted against each other in a dog eat dog world of constant competition, where cooperation is secondary value but where competition, all all levels from individual to society as a whole, is treated as the best political-economic philosophy.
Far left and left of the 60s in the US included a presumed openness in society. Far right and right of the 60s presumed that society should be closed to only a set number, rejecting any who are different.
Today is mostly the same. Left means openness, big tent; right means closed, exclusive.
The nation as a whole has shifted to the more limited, restrictive philosophy over the past 60 years. That I believe reflects the changing of the US from the only super power to having to match wits with the Soviet Union. Today of course the US now has to match wits with a new super power, Communist China, which figured out how to maintain a totalitarian government while becoming an economic powerhouse.
That shift was encouraged and promoted by the anxiety and paranoia of Nixon, the validation of Great Greed and Selfishness by the Reagan administration, the economic vacuum that has put the most money into the fewest hands and the purchase and perversion of the Evangelical Christian community as the foot soldiers of the extreme right. By extreme right I mean not just politicians but, for example, the literal descendants of the founders of the John Birch society, the two Koch brothers who promoted rightwing organizations. Add to that the development and ascendancy of extreme right wing academic societies such as The Federalist Society, Cato Institute, Hoover Institute, George Mason University and it cabal extreme right wing academics. A painful example being James Buchanan who provided the philosophy justification for Augusto Pinochet's reign of terror in Chile.
A way to sum this up: In American there is far more blood and a present far greater threat to the positive American values of community, family, as nation of "the many," and the spirit of what the Founders started in the 18th century.
Another way of saying this is that while the nation is many ways has shifted leftward, that is toward "the many" in e pluribus unum, the people who are scared of the idea of the many, of diversity and difference, are fighting tooth and nail to create just the unum. In the case of today's far right, but much of the less extreme right, that includes white, male dominated, some kind of conservative Christian, with some allowance for Jews, and an economic stratification which begrudgingly allows for the presence of some women and non-whites in positions of power.
Leaving aside your contorted syntax...
By lbb
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 3:39pm
...there are quite a number of veterans who are active resisters of Trump's fascism.
Umberto Eco grew up in Fascist Italy
By tachometer
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 10:17am
Try reading his essay on "ur-fascism" and the traits those regimes share and see if you can really say that Trump and his cohorts don't fit the bill in what they're trying to do.
Whatever it takes to retain power is okay with republican voters
By bulgingbuick
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 8:33am
You are what you vote for.
Last Known Antifa Leader in his office
By SwirlyGrrl
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 9:16am
I think he's going to sign this and go get some soup.
[img]https://ca-times.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/default/d...
Given your age, how did you spend the Vietnam years?
Your comment borders on treason
By dmcboston
Fri, 09/04/2020 - 2:14pm
President Eisenhower was no more antifa than Pete Nice, you clown.
[img]https://i.imgur.com/tsrPcWG.png[/img]
They existed in pre-war Germany.
Maybe Greta, the Science Based Climate Expert didn't get the message.
[img]https://i.imgur.com/sN66DiH.jpg[/img]
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