Trump Timeline ... Trumpocalypse

Ben Carson: "Even if Donald Trump turns out not to be such a great president, which I don't think is the case, I think he's going to surround himself with really good people, but even if he didn't, we're only looking at four years as opposed to multiple generations and perhaps the loss of the American dream forever." http://www.newsmax.com/t/newsmax/article/719044
 
An Open Letter to Donald Trump:
An Open Letter to Donald Trump: Mr.... - Humans of New York | Facebook

Mr. Trump,

I try my hardest not to be political. I’ve refused to interview several of your fellow candidates. I didn’t want to risk any personal goodwill by appearing to take sides in a contentious election. I thought: ‘Maybe the timing is not right.’ But I realize now that there is no correct time to oppose violence and prejudice. The time is always now. Because along with millions of Americans, I’ve come to realize that opposing you is no longer a political decision. It is a moral one.

I’ve watched you retweet racist images. I’ve watched you retweet racist lies. I’ve watched you take 48 hours to disavow white supremacy. I’ve watched you joyfully encourage violence, and promise to ‘pay the legal fees’ of those who commit violence on your behalf. I’ve watched you advocate the use of torture and the murder of terrorists’ families. I’ve watched you gleefully tell stories of executing Muslims with bullets dipped in pig blood. I’ve watched you compare refugees to ‘snakes,’ and claim that ‘Islam hates us.’

I am a journalist, Mr. Trump. And over the last two years I have conducted extensive interviews with hundreds of Muslims, chosen at random, on the streets of Iran, Iraq, and Pakistan. I’ve also interviewed hundreds of Syrian and Iraqi refugees across seven different countries. And I can confirm— the hateful one is you.

Those of us who have been paying attention will not allow you to rebrand yourself. You are not a ‘unifier.’ You are not ‘presidential.’ You are not a ‘victim’ of the very anger that you’ve joyfully enflamed for months. You are a man who has encouraged prejudice and violence in the pursuit of personal power. And though your words will no doubt change over the next few months, you will always remain who you are.

Sincerely,
Brandon Stanton
 
For The First Time, National Support For Trump Rises Above 50%
For The First Time, National Support For Trump Rises Above 50% | Zero Hedge

With Trump preparing to steamroll the competition in today's all important primaries, where a victory in Florida is now all but assured and only a Kasich challenge in Ohio can potentially spoil the day for the Donald - if Trump wins Florida and Ohio, it's over - earlier today he got some more good news to propell him even further.

First, it was The week’s Economist/YouGov Poll which found Trump remaining at the top of GOP voters’ preference with an ever wider lead, while Florida Senator Marco Rubio seems most damaged by the two weeks of attacks and counter-attacks. In fact, this is the first time Trump has garnered the support of a majority of Republican primary voters nationwide, scoring an all time high of 53% in support at the national level. YouGov's February 24-27 survey marked his previous high, at 44% support.
 
Rubio’s Exit Leaves Trump With an Open Path to 1,237 Delegates
http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2016/03/16/upshot/trump-cruz-kasich-republican-delegate-lead.html

Donald J. Trump’s series of victories on Tuesday extended his delegate lead and forced Senator Marco Rubio of Florida out of the presidential race. Mr. Trump’s path to winning enough delegates to secure the Republican nomination is not assured, but he is in a strong position.

Here are some ways the Republican nominating contest could unfold.

 
More from Bionic Mosquito..

As Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn offers, Hitler presented nothing more than an extension of progressive thought – think eugenics, as merely one example common to both the US and Nazi Germany. Think of the acceptability of abortion as another – perfected in the land of the (supposedly) free. Consider “equality” and “liberty” and what these have come to mean in our era.


Trump is Hitler: Fiction and Fact
Bionic Mosquito
Wednesday, March 16, 2016


The press – mainstream and otherwise – is going over-the-top on Trump-Hitler comparisons. Some are direct, some more subtle. I offer an examination of this comparison – what is fiction, what is fact?

Fiction

Let’s look at the history of Hitler prior to becoming German Chancellor, and see how Trump measures up. Admittedly, this isn’t an exhaustive listing (just the highlights), but hopefully it will suffice:

In 1923, he attempted a coup in Munich to seize power.

What was this coup?

The Beer Hall Putsch, also known as the Munich Putsch, and, in German, as the Hitlerputsch or Hitler-Ludendorff-Putsch, was a failed coup attempt by the Nazi Party leader Adolf Hitler — along with Generalquartiermeister Erich Ludendorff and other Kampfbund leaders — to seize power in Munich, Bavaria, during 8–9 November 1923. About two thousand men marched to the centre of Munich, where they confronted the police, which resulted in the death of 16 Nazis and four policemen. Hitler himself was wounded.

After two days, Hitler was arrested and charged with treason.​

Trump? Any “coups” in his background – the deaths of dozens, charged with treason? Nope.

While in prison, Hitler wrote Mein Kampf:

Hitler wrote "the nationalization of our masses will succeed only when, aside from all the positive struggle for the soul of our people, their international poisoners are exterminated" and in another passage he suggested that "If at the beginning of the war and during the war twelve or fifteen thousand of these Hebrew corrupters of the nation had been subjected to poison gas, such as had to be endured in the field by hundreds of thousands of our very best German workers of all classes and professions, then the sacrifice of millions at the front would not have been in vain."
Has Trump called for extermination of anyone – “international poisoners” or otherwise? Nope. Has he called for poison gas for tens-of-thousands? Not to my knowledge.

Well, he has gone back and forth on possible war-mongering ways. But it isn’t for these that the Hitler comparison is made (well, they don’t like the “back,” just the “forth”).

In Mein Kampf Hitler openly stated the future German expansion in the East:

And so we National Socialists consciously draw a line beneath the foreign policy tendency of our pre-War period. We take up where we broke off six hundred years ago. We stop the endless German movement to the south and west, and turn our gaze toward the land in the east. At long last we break of the colonial and commercial policy of the pre-War period and shift to the soil policy of the future.

If we speak of soil in Europe today, we can primarily have in mind only Russia and her vassal border states.
Has Trump talked about invading Canada or Mexico? I don’t think so. Closer to the opposite, actually.

Trump is no Hitler; not even close. Those who suggest it are both ignorant of history and disrespectful of Hitler’s victims – Jew and Gentile alike.

So much for the fiction, what about the fact?


Fact

For “fact” I turn to Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn:

Erik Maria Ritter von Kuehnelt-Leddihn (born July 31, 1909 in Tobelbad (now Haselsdorf-Tobelbad), Austria-Hungary; died May 26, 1999, in Lans, Austria) was an Austrian Catholic nobleman and socio-political theorist. Describing himself as an "extreme conservative arch-liberal" or "liberal of the extreme right", Kuehnelt-Leddihn often argued that majority rule in democracies is a threat to individual liberties, and declared himself a monarchist and an enemy of all forms of totalitarianism.

Kuehnelt-Leddihn wrote for a variety of publications, including Chronicles, Thought, the Rothbard-Rockwell Report, Catholic World, and the Norwegian business magazine Farmand. He also worked with the Acton Institute, which declared him after his death "a great friend and supporter." He was an adjunct scholar of the Ludwig von Mises Institute.
Kuehnelt-Leddihn points to the progressivism of the west, the worship of democracy gaining full momentum at the turn of the last century and fully manifest by the time of the Great War. This is where the “fact” can be found regarding this comparison of Trump and Hitler. The fact can be laid right at the feet of the same “progressive” mouthpieces that are making this comparison.

From “The Menace of the Herd, or Procrustes at Large,” by Kuehnelt-Leddihn, written in 1943. Referring to Jefferson’s disdain for “democracy,” he offers:

Sometimes Jefferson's vocabulary was rather unfitting for "progressive" ears; this seems apparent when he deals with the possibility of a large urban proletariat in America which by destroying the agricultural character of the country would make even representative government unworkable.
What does Kuehnelt-Leddihn see in the future of “progressivism”?

What we experience in the realm of government control in "progressive" countries is nothing but the first clouds heralding a bigger storm. We have all the prospects of a total aerial war with bacilli, gas, and high-grade explosives and there is a possibility that mankind may unloose dark powers over which they will finally lose control like Goethe's sorcerers' apprentice.
One sign of those “dark powers” emerged two years later over the land of the rising sun. Twice.

In whom has he seen this manifest in his time?

The man to avenge the easy murder of Austria was an Austrian who got hold for this purpose of the most deadly and precise instrument in Europe — the German people. At one time he had turned his eye south of the Alps, as all Germans traditionally do. A superficial glance seemed enough. And then he started to create a superochlocratic, superidentitarian, monotonous, and monolithic state which was a synthesis of all ideas sprung from the French Revolution, a veritable reductio ad absurdum of "progressive" thought, a gorgonic mirror to the West. This man is Adolf Hitler.

National Socialism, as we have pointed out before, is not the result of the Treaty of Versailles. Nor has the movement as such anything to do with St. Germain, Trianon, and Neuilly, which were instrumental in laying the foundations for this war. Yet the present issue is, in the political and ideological sense a clear outcome of the political and ideological efforts of the victorious Allies in 1918-1919, and the result of their so-called order, which was (badly) organized disorder.
Replacing the previous order of monarchy.

The fatal thing which happened twenty-two years ago was the victory of the principles of national, identitarian, ochlocracy and a spurious concept of "democracy" in Central and Eastern Europe. There is only a very short step from national majoritarianism to National Socialism, a step as short as that from mortal disease to death.
As Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn offers, Hitler presented nothing more than an extension of progressive thought – think eugenics, as merely one example common to both the US and Nazi Germany. Think of the acceptability of abortion as another – perfected in the land of the (supposedly) free. Consider “equality” and “liberty” and what these have come to mean in our era.

Think about the government offered as the solution for every problem; consider that many have been brainwashed by progressive government schools to ensure they believe this.

Further: in every way those same mouthpieces have demonized “the other” – whoever was the convenient “other” of the moment. They have conditioned the people to believe that their problems are caused by or their security is threatened by “those guys.”

Finally, they have developed a political system where all power is focused on one individual, and they only complain when that one individual might not do their bidding.

Progressive thought has been the hallmark of US politics (and therefore much of the world, being “made safe for democracy” by that same United States) for over a century. Should we be surprised at the result?


Conclusion


Trump is no Hitler. Nothing in his background comes close to this comparison. Certainly every other candidate running in the two major parties has more in common with Adolf than does Trump – just count dead bodies and wealth destruction. Do you offer more relevant measuring sticks?

In any case, those who seem to be most concerned about this (the political class, the pundits, the newspaper and television mouthpieces) have ensured the preconditions for a “Hitler” to take the stage. They have been working on it for over 100 years.

They have designed and otherwise allowed for a position of almost absolute power. Trump just happens to be the first one to explicitly offer supposed “solutions” that implicitly recognizes this fact. He is saying loudly and clearly: the clothes on this emperor confer omnipotence and I will act accordingly.

They have designed this position for a person who will be compliant to their wishes. Trump seems to be upsetting this design (well, at least for a vocal subset).

They want their own Hitler – an absolute ruler, just as they have designed the office. They also want their Hitler on a string; sooner or later (and for better or for worse), this was going to prove to be impossible.

Our best bet? A combination of technology / communication and the inability of the state to meet their promises will move society toward a more decentralized condition. I believe this to be in our future. Otherwise, the path seems clear – the only question being time.
 
@flenser the hitler comparison can be viewed as over the top. But would you agree Trump does seem to be displaying racism ? Let's be real the world thrives on hate these days. But it shouldn't be supported by the leader of a country imo
 
@flenser the hitler comparison can be viewed as over the top. But would you agree Trump does seem to be displaying racism ? Let's be real the world thrives on hate these days. But it shouldn't be supported by the leader of a country imo

Have you seen any of Hillary's campaign ads? White males should be very afraid! That is, they should be if they expect her (or anyone else) to remain loyal to their campaign promises.

Racism IS rampant in this country, but it's NOT due to some "old boy's club" composed of conservative white males. It's due to the progressives and their class war mentality, their control of the education industry and their incessant brain washing of young minds in public schools.

Trump may be racist, I don't know or care. Nothing will be resolved at home until the US stops involving itself in foreign adventures. Trump is against those, and borders on being a full blown protectionist. That suits me just fine.

What doesn't suit me is another neocon, from either party, running the show, invading and occupying other countries, and generally stirring up shit for the benefit of a relatively small number of powerful corporations and countries who happen to know how to lobby. Hillary is a neocon, not to mention an evil spiteful bitch. She literally could turn out to be the next Hitler.
 
@flenser the hitler comparison can be viewed as over the top. But would you agree Trump does seem to be displaying racism ? Let's be real the world thrives on hate these days. But it shouldn't be supported by the leader of a country imo

I should also mention the Hitler comparison is not over the top, it's exactly backwards. Hitler was a progressive. The reason I copied the blog post was it addressed this very point elegantly.
 
Donald Trump just threatened more violence. Only this time, it’s directed at the GOP.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/plum-line/wp/2016/03/16/donald-trump-just-threatened-more-violence-only-this-time-its-directed-at-the-gop/ (Donald Trump just threatened more violence. Only this time, it’s directed at the GOP.)

Donald Trump romped to victory last night in Florida (effortlessly swatting Marco Rubio out of the race), North Carolina, and Illinois, and the resulting delegate count now means that Trump has a very plausible route to winning an outright majority of the delegates, securing the nomination. However, this is far from assured, and Trump’s latest vault forward has only intensified conversations among Republicans about how to stop him at a contested convention.

But no sooner had this chatter started, then Trump https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/post-politics/wp/2016/03/16/trump-youd-have-riots-if-contested-convention-results-in-a-different-nominee/ (dropped another bomb, by suggesting) this morning on CNN that if he finishes with a majority of the delegates, and the nomination goes to someone else, that violence could result:

Trump said Wednesday that a contested GOP convention could be a disaster if he goes to Cleveland a few delegates shy of 1,237 — and doesn’t leave as the party’s nominee.

“I think you’d have riots,” Trump said on CNN.

Noting that he’s “representing many millions of people,” he told Chris Cuomo: “If you disenfranchise those people, and you say, ‘I’m sorry, you’re 100 votes short’…I think you’d have problems like you’ve never seen before. I think bad things would happen.”

It’s hard to say whether this is intended as a threat or a prediction. But the unsettling fact of the matter is that there is no particular reason to rule out the former — that it was indeed intended as a tacit threat, as least of a certain kind. Trump has been playing a clever little game where he hints at the possibility of violence while stopping short of explicitly threatening it — yet he also doesn’t denounce such an outcome as acceptable, so his hints effectively function as a threat. And as Philip Klein detailed the other day, this could well emerge as an aspect of his convention strategy:

Political commentators now routinely talk about the riots that would break out in Cleveland if Trump were denied the nomination, about how his supporters have guns and all hell could break loose, that they would burn everything to the ground. It works to Trump’s advantage to not try too hard to dispel these notions. He wants Republican delegates who control his political fate to have it in the back of their minds…

Now Trump has made this explicit. Three more points about this. First, it comes right after Mitch McConnell made a very public show of the fact that he privately told Trump that it might be a good idea to “condemn” and “discourage” the idea of violence at his rallies. Trump basically just gave McConnell — and other GOP leaders who surely feel the same way — a big, fat middle finger.

Second, whether or not Trump intended to threaten violence, his latest comments are very significant in another way. Trump explicitly said that if he goes into the convention just shy of a majority of delegates, it would be “disenfranchising” to his voters if the delegates award the nomination to someone else in later balloting. As https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/plum-line/wp/2016/03/07/theres-a-big-problem-with-this-whole-gop-contested-convention-scenario/ (I’ve reported), some Republicans already worry that if more than one alternative to Trump stays in, it could workagainst the plot to stop Trump. It could mean the runner-up finishes fartherbehind Trump in delegates — which end up getting divided between Ted Cruz and John Kasich — thus making it harder to justify giving the nomination to someone else. Trump is essentially saying that if this were to happen, then — violence or not — he will do everything in his power to cast a contested convention as illegitimate, discouraging his supporters not to back the nominee and otherwise doing as much damage to the GOP as he possibly can.

And third, threats like like this could only make it harder for Senate Republicans to continue to refuse to act on President Obama’s Supreme Court nominee. Their implicit position is that President Trump should get to pick that nominee instead, if he wins the general election, a stance that will grow increasingly untenable as Trump looks more and more likely to win the nomination, and simultaneously looks more and more crazy and reckless. But that brings us to our next item.
 
Trump Is Gaslighting America
http://www.usnews.com/opinion/blogs/nicole-hemmer/articles/2016-03-15/donald-trump-is-conning-america-with-his-lies (Trump Is Gaslighting America)


 
Gotta love the people that commented on bankruptcy. Yeah cuz Trump knows nothing about that right ? Lol :rolleyes:
It is common knowledge and his enemies have used the bk's as a cudgel to keep him down but rarely that tactic works.
 
Back
Top