Manawatu Standard

Nazis flags in US an affront to us all

- PETULA DVORAK

Nazis? Been there, done that. Just ask the Greatest Generation.

The Nazi flags and salutes in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, US, over the weekend were a tough sight for anyone who had anything to do with the bloodiest war in human history.

‘‘I signed up to fight Nazis 73 years ago and I’ll do it again if I have to,’’ tweeted World War II veteran and former Michigan Representa­tive John Dingell. ‘‘Hatred, bigotry and fascism should have no place in this country,’’ he wrote.

And thousands of folks retweeted that, and military members liked it, some telling Dingell they’d be right behind him. The folks behind the World War II Memorial also gave Dingell’s message a thumbs-up.

At an assisted living facility in Provo, Utah, the World War II veterans who always sit at a lunch table together couldn’t stop talking about the rally-turned-riot in Charlottes­ville.

Even President Donald Trump finally joined in denouncing the neo-nazis and Ku Klux Klan by name on Monday.

The last time the red-black-andwhite flag was flown of a country, more than 407,000 American lives were lost, nearly half of them in Europe.

So seeing the swastikas, the T-shirts with Adoph Hitler, the torches in Charlottes­ville – that’s in a realm beyond civil political discourse and disagreeme­nt.

Have any of those men – mostly in their 20s and 30s – been to a World War II memorial? Have any of them visited one of the thousands of small graveyards in rural communitie­s across America that memorialis­e an entire generation of young men lost to that war? Couldn’t have.

The casual, weekend fascism practiced by newbie Nazis carrying Tiki torches and raising their arms in ‘‘Heil Trump’’ salutes is an egregious slap in the face to veterans, as well as about 60 million others who lost their lives in World War II. And there was bipartisan agreement on that.

Navy veteran Adam Weinstein posted a fantastic collection of American veterans and the Nazi flags they captured in war on his website Task and Purpose.

With photos of destructio­n and battle debris around them, these veterans showed the ‘‘proper way to display a Nazi flag’’. One was on fire.

‘‘Nazis in America are holding torch rallies, killing protesters and hanging out with other losers of US wars this week, begging the question: What is the appropriat­e way for a patriotic American to display the unmistakab­le, swastika-bearing flag of Adolf Hitler’s Third Reich?’’ he asked.

The neo-nazis are treading on wounds that still run deep in our country. Dingell is rare in his generation as a social media warrior.

Though the Greatest Generation may not be voicing its disgust with the new Nazis online, their kids and grandkids sure are.

Dozens of memes bringing back old World War II propaganda posters flooded social media by Monday. A film clip created by the US War Department in 1943 called Don’t Be a Sucker was shared thousands of times over the weekend.

It shows an angry man on a soap box holding court to an audience of fedora-wearing chaps as a way of warning against hatred and xenophobia.

‘‘I see negroes holding jobs that belong to me and you. Now I ask you, if we allow this thing to go on, what’s going to happen to us real Americans?’’ In that 1940s Jimmy Stewart cadence, he goes on to name immigrants, blacks, Catholics and even Free Masons for America’s woes.

But then it cuts to an older, wiser man with an accent. ‘‘I’ve heard this kind of talk before, but I never expected to hear it in America,’’ the immigrant says. ‘‘I have seen what this kind of talk can do,’’ he says. ‘‘I saw it in Berlin.’’

Here’s the scary part. Today, this video would quickly be slammed as liberal political propaganda. The world has been here before, people. Ask the veterans who put their lives on the line defending us from this evil.

The Washington Post.

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