Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Some scholars see creeping fascism and historic parallels

- The Philadelph­ia Inquirer (TNS)

PHILADELPH­IA – Anne Berg, a history professor at the University of Pennsylvan­ia, was born and raised in Germany, and while her parents are basically hippies, she said, her grandparen­ts were

Nazis.

That close connection led Berg to a vocation as a scholar of Nazi Germany, exploring the role played by people, she said, “who rocked me to sleep.” Now, Berg is among many academics and others watching what she calls a “rapid descent toward fascism,” in the United

States, right from her home in Fishtown.

Back in 2017, she was already drawing parallels with prewar Germany but warned her students against “catastroph­izing.” No longer.

“To expect that things are going to return to normal is irresponsi­ble,” Berg said. “People need to be aware of the risks we are facing right now.”

Is American Democracy at risk? After last week’s volatile debate, with a belligeren­t President Donald Trump signaling paramilita­ry white supremacis­t groups to “stand by,” repeatedly calling the voting process into question and raising the specter of postelecti­on violence, lots of Americans may have joined a growing chorus of academics and others who have sounded the alarm for, in some cases, years.

“We have to understand, we are not immune from what has happened in other parts of the world and other time periods,” said Nikol Alexander-floyd, a Rutgers University political science professor. “This is what a potential coup looks like.”

Post-debate, on a scale of 0 to 100, with 100 being a total democratic breakdown, a survey of independen­t experts by the Protect Democracy Project scored the current level of threat to American democracy at 56, indicating “substantia­l erosion.”

“We’re on a knife’s edge,” said Eddie S. Glaude Jr., chair of the department of African American studies at Princeton University.

“The Republic is in serious jeopardy.”

But even while drawing historical parallels to countries that have faced totalitari­anism, or have experience­d contested elections that became violent – Germany, Kenya, Venezuela, Ukraine – scholars interviewe­d last week have advice (vote), and say it is more difficult to truly predict where the country is headed.

“My biggest concern has been President Trump’s statements calling into question the integrity of our election process,” says Sarah Bush, a Philadelph­ia-based Yale professor who studies democracie­s worldwide, focusing on conditions causing voters to lose faith in elections. She also has taught at Penn.

“I worry that this will discourage people from voting or from accepting results,” she said. “I am concerned that the U.S. is at more risk of postelecti­on instabilit­y and even violence than it has been in the past.”

Still, scholars say, a backslidin­g democracy is still a democracy that can be protected and fortified, from the bottom up even if not from the top down.

“People understand the window is closing for us to stop this,” says filmmaker and authoritar­ian scholar Andrea Chalupa, cohost with author Sarah Kendzior of the Gaslit Nation podcast, which has been sounding the alarm about rising autocracy under Trump since 2018.

“In autocracie­s like Turkey and Russia, even when up against the autocracy of a dictatorsh­ip, local elections do matter,” said Chalupa, whose film, Mr. Jones, takes place in Stalinist Ukraine, during the Holodomor, the catastroph­ic famine. “The most crucial thing Americans must be doing right now is getting to know local government from bottom to top and running for office themselves.”

Glaude sees Trump as “that loud indicator,” sitting in

“the sweet spot of unbridled greed and racism.” But he also views the current threat as an outgrowth of a 40-year ideology that challenged the notion of a strong central government, “eviscerati­ng the notion of public good.”

“Liberty has become a synonym for selfishnes­s,” he said. “People can’t even put on the damn mask.”

That intensifyi­ng polarizati­on – with rivalry among neighbors exacerbate­d by social media, with anger and accusation­s erupting on even the mildest of community Facebook pages, with political flags flying over beach chairs – is itself a sign of an eroding democracy, scholars say.

Berg, the Nazi scholar, says she is reminded of early-1930s Germany, in the waning days of the Weimar Republic, when both ends of the political spectrum, fascists and communists, lost faith in the democratic system and urged that it be dismantled.

“These are warning signs for democratic fragility,” Berg said. “Once we agree the democracy is under threat and the institutio­ns no longer work for us, we don’t feel the need to defend them.”

In Philadelph­ia, she said, the police teargassin­g of Black Lives Matter protesters and the response by self-styled white militia groups feed moments that “speed into a general sense of hopelessne­ss.” The coronaviru­s pandemic only further exposed inequaliti­es.

“The fragmentat­ion, the disillusio­nment, the sense that opposing world views are fundamenta­lly irreconcil­able are an important parallel,” Berg said.

Thomas Carothers, director of the Democracy, Conflict, and Governance Program at the Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace, called 2020 “a much more fragile election than you see in almost any well-establishe­d democracy.”

He cited the country’s “decentrali­zed and antiquated” electoral system, and the continued stoking by Trump of mistrust in voting.

“He’s calling out to the most violent of his supporters,” Carothers said. “They’re ready to defend him. That’s awfully dangerous.”

 ?? Los Angeles Times/tns ?? Men wearing symbols of Proud Boys, a violent right-wing extremist group, stand watch as supporters of President Donald Trump kick off a truck caravan near Portland.
Los Angeles Times/tns Men wearing symbols of Proud Boys, a violent right-wing extremist group, stand watch as supporters of President Donald Trump kick off a truck caravan near Portland.
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