San Diego Union-Tribune

SCHWARZENE­GGER COMPARES ATTACK TO VIOLENCE BY NAZIS

- BY ALEX WIGGLESWOR­TH Wiggleswor­th writes for the Los Angeles Times.

Arnold Schwarzene­gger likened this week’s siege of the U.S. Capitol to Nazi attacks on Jews in Europe ahead of World War II in a scathing video in which the former California governor also called President Donald Trump “the worst president ever.”

Schwarzene­gger wasn’t yet alive when Nazis rampaged through Germany and Austria during Kristallna­cht, or the Night of Broken Glass, in 1938, attacking Jewish homes and businesses and taking thousands to concentrat­ion camps.

He was born in Austria two years after World War II ended. But the trauma inf licted by the violent collapse of democracy — and the complicity of some of those close to him — shaped his childhood, he said in the video released via Twitter early Sunday.

“Growing up, I was surrounded by broken men drinking away their guilt over their participat­ion in the most evil regime in history,” he said. “Not all of them were rabid anti-Semites or Nazis. Many just went along step by step down the road.”

Schwarzene­gger said that his father would often come home drunk and hit him and other family members, which didn’t seem remarkable because their neighbor was doing the same thing.

“They were in physical pain from the shrapnel in their bodies and in emotional pain from what they saw or did,” Schwarzene­gger said. “It all started with lies, and lies, and lies, and intoleranc­e.”

Similarly, he said, Trump misled his supporters with lies as he sought a coup to overturn the results of the presidenti­al election.

“Wednesday was the Day of Broken Glass right here in the United States,” he said.

Schwarzene­gger went on to decry Trump as “a failed leader” and said that those politician­s who stood behind him are “complicit with those who carried the f lag of self-righteous insurrecti­on into the Capitol.”

He called for elected representa­tives and citizens to look past their political parties and personal disagreeme­nts, put democracy first and work together toward healing by accepting Joe Biden as president-elect and wishing him success.

 ?? FRANK FASTNER AP ?? An image from a video released via Twitter on Sunday by former Gov. Arnold Schwarzene­gger.
FRANK FASTNER AP An image from a video released via Twitter on Sunday by former Gov. Arnold Schwarzene­gger.

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