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					Originally Posted by txdot-guy  First of all are you sure about that statement?   “all previous GOP nominees and Presidents have been compared to Hitler”. That’s just not true.  
 And you’re right that the division in our country is not due to Trump.  But he surely ratcheted up the hateful rhetoric to eleven.
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what hateful rhetoric? calling out Hispanics for some of them and a large minority we are finding out are indeed bad hombres like Trump said? that's not hateful it's the truth. 
it's true enough. the Democrats have repeatedly referred to Republican presidents and nominees  as NAZI and Fascist. 
only Eisenhower for obvious reasons wasn't labeled a NAZI the rest over 60 years have been.
this is the tactic of your party. you know it. everyone knows it.
https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/o...minee-fascist/
To update a famous quote attributed to Benjamin Franklin: In this world, nothing is certain except death and taxes — and 
Democrats labeling the Republican presidential candidate a fascist for the last 60 years.
    It’s been an integral part of the Democratic political playbook,  utilized almost as much as calling the Republican nominee a racist. Yet,  somehow, after each warning, the Third Reich has yet to materialize in  the United States. This includes when former President 
Donald Trump  was president from 2017-2021. Despite six decades’ worth of Democratic  warnings of impending fascist doom failing to come true, it has never  prevented the left-wing party from engaging in 
Reductio ad Hitlerum. 
                                             
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    However, the constitutional republic’s appointed candidate for president, Vice President 
Kamala Harris, made headlines Wednesday when she stated that she believed
 Trump was a fascist. This tired, old, baseless trope lacks insight and intelligence. Most importantly, it is dishonest.
    Consider the facts.
    Let’s start with former Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-AZ) and his  acceptance speech at the Republican National Convention in 1964. Over 50  years before Trump decided to run for president, celebrities,  journalists, politicians, and other politicos warned that the GOP  presidential nominee was an extreme fascist who would cause considerable  harm to the country. Goldwater, who served as a pilot during World War  II, was likened to Nazis and fascists for promoting conservatism during  his presidential campaign. 
    For example, the then-Democratic governor of California, Edmund  Gerland “Pat” Brown, remarked about Goldwater’s acceptance speech,  claiming it “had the stench of fascism. All we needed to hear was Heil  Hitler.” It should be noted that Goldwater served as a pilot in the  military during WWII. Brown didn’t have any military service at all.
    Other comments about Goldwater included a scathing rebuke from civil rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. 
    “We see dangerous signs of Hitlerism in the Goldwater campaign,” King said. 
    Baseball legend Jackie Robinson, who broke Major League Baseball’s  color barrier, said of Goldwater’s speech, “I would say that I now  believe I know how it felt to be a Jew in Hitler’s Germany.” 
    The then-mayor of San Francisco, the city where the 1964 Republican National Convention was held, said the GOP “had 
Mein Kampf as their political bible.”
    The despicable comments continued the following election in 1968.  Then-Vice President Hubert Humphrey, and Democratic nominee for  president, remarked about the election, “If the British had not fought  in 1940, Hitler would have been in London, and if Democrats do not fight  in 1968, Nixon will be in the White House.” 
    Former President Richard Nixon won the election, but the Hitler,  Nazi, and fascist comparisons never stopped. For example, in 1970, a 
political poster featured an image of Adolf Hitler, wearing a Nazi armband, holding a mask of Nixon. 
    Meanwhile, 
a news article from October 1972,  available for viewing on the CIA’s website, referred to “Nixon’s Nazis”  as part of commentary criticizing Nixon. Then there is a 
photograph from October 1973 of someone wearing a Nixon mask with a crown, giving the Nazi salute.
    Gerald Ford followed Nixon as president and as a Republican who was  called a fascist. In 1974, a member of the American Civil Liberties  Union criticized Ford for his lack of punitive action against Nixon.
    “If  [President] Ford’s principle had been the rule in Nuremberg,” he said,  “the Nazi leaders would have been let off, and only the people, who  carried out their schemes, would have been tried,” the ACLU 
said at the time.
    Additionally, in the 
Gerald Ford Library Museum,  a document describes an interaction with a woman in 1975 in which Ford  was harassed and repeatedly called a “fascist” and a “fascist pig.”
    Surely, over a decade of accusations and allegations of fascism never  coming to fruition would stop Democrats from calling Republicans Nazis,  fascists, or comparing them to Hitler, right?
    Wrong.
    Former President Ronald Reagan was the next target in the Democrats’ line of unsubstantiated accusations of fascism.
    Rep. William Clay (D-MO) stated that Reagan wanted to “replace the  Bill of Rights with fascist precepts lifted verbatim from Mein Kampf.” 
    The 
Los Angeles Times cartoonist Paul Conrad drew a panel  depicting Reagan plotting a fascist putsch in a darkened Munich beer  hall. Harry Stein (later a conservative convert) 
wrote in 
Esquire that the voters who supported Reagan were comparable to the “good Germans” in “Hitler’s Germany.”
    American Enterprise Institute scholar Steven Hayward highlighted  another incident in which the intelligentsia and academia also  contributed to the Reagan fascist comparisons when John Roth, a  Holocaust scholar from the Claremont Colleges, commented about Reagan’s  election:
    “I could not help remembering how 40 years ago economic turmoil had  conspired with Nazi nationalism and militarism — all intensified by  Germany’s defeat in World War I—to send the world reeling into  catastrophe. … It is not entirely mistaken to contemplate our  postelection state with fear and trembling.”
    Former President George W. Bush might have been the Republican  politician who faced the harshest and most vile criticism before Trump.  Bush was regularly called every dirty name in the book, from racist to  Nazi to fascist to war criminal. There are many examples of linking Bush  to Hitler, Nazis, and fascists.
    In 2012, Sen. Mitt Romney (R-UT), the same Romney so many Democrats  love today, was also linked to Nazis and fascism. One delegate from  Kansas (at the time) said Romney was a habitual liar and 
likened him to Hitler “while criticizing the accuracy of Romney’s campaign talking points.” 
    A chairman of the California Democratic Party compared then-vice  presidential candidate (and eventual former Speaker of the House) Paul  Ryan, again, the same Ryan loved by many Democrats today, to Nazi  filmmaker and propagandist Joseph Goebbels. 
    Does any of this sound familiar? It should. It is the same line of attacks Democrats have used against Trump.
    
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    Democrats first warned Trump was a fascist in 2015 and 2016. They  repeated the attacks throughout his presidency and reelection campaign  in 2020 and are resurrecting it today. It’s indicative of how vile and  divisive the Democrats are, all the while claiming and portraying  themselves as civil and respectful. It’s nonsense. 
    It is pure, unadulterated, radical, extremist, left-wing propaganda.  The only people who believe these Nazi and fascist comparisons are the  massively brainwashed and indoctrinated Democrat voters and left-wing  sycophants. No one should believe any of these attacks. After all,  Democrats have a six-decade-long history of being proven wrong in  comparing Republicans to fascists and Nazis.