SUBSCRIBE TO OUR FREE NEWSLETTER
Daily news & progressive opinion—funded by the people, not the corporations—delivered straight to your inbox.
5
#000000
#FFFFFF
To donate by check, phone, or other method, see our More Ways to Give page.
Daily news & progressive opinion—funded by the people, not the corporations—delivered straight to your inbox.
It’s not too late to stop this madness, although that task is being made harder every day as gutless Republicans, a spineless national media, and collaborating billionaire donors fall into line.
As we remember and honor the sacrifice of American GIs who died at Normandy in the battle against fascism, it’s vital to realize that the struggle against that evil form of government is once again before us.
From November 2020 until last week we lived in the era of Trump Big Lie 1.0, his assertion that he’d won an election he actually lost by over 7 million votes. It was a bold, audacious move, something no American politician had ever had the fundamental lack of integrity, decency, or shame to try.
While some of the most spineless, craven, and sold-out Republicans were quick to take his side with Big Lie 1.0 (139 of them in the House of Representatives and eight in the Senate)—even in the face of his throwing a deadly mob against the U.S. Capitol that tried to hang his vice president and murder the speaker of the house—there were still some who held to principle and didn’t vote to overthrow the election.
Trump has his own two big lies: that the election was stolen and he’s the victim of political prosecution.
Those Republicans are now mostly all gone, purged from the party or cowed into silence by fear of violence against their families or the end of their political careers.
And now, as of last week, we live in the era of Trump Big Lie 2.0: that Trump is the victim of a political prosecution.
It’s completely changed the political landscape. Trump and his spokesmen are now openly calling for the imprisonment and even the death of members of law enforcement, the FBI, and the judiciary. We’ve moved from the Beer Hall Putsch to the Night of the Long Knives.
Ironically, many of the Republicans who now compete to most fulsomely kiss Trump’s ass in public were the very same ones who, in 2015, first warned us against him. Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio, Nikki Haley, and Lindsey Graham, for example, all once referenced his long history of criminal and immoral behavior, unbefitting a politician of any party.
This was, after all, the man who before he ran for the GOP nomination in 2015:
Nonetheless, when Trump won the Republican primary most of his opponents fell in line. Those who didn’t go along were systematically purged from the party.
In the years between then and now, Trump has been:
Now that our criminal justice system has tried to hold him accountable for a small fraction of the crimes we’ve all watched him commit, he’s claiming that he’s the victim of political persecution. In response, he and his spokesmen are promising that if he again becomes president they will arrest and imprison those who tried to hold him to account, including judges, jurors, prosecutors, and even members of the media.
During his presidency, Trump tried to convince Attorney General Jeff Sessions, Deputy AG Rod Rosenstein, and White House attorney Don McGann to initiate prosecutions of Hillary Clinton. Each deferred, telling him it wasn’t possible.
That won’t happen with Big Lie 2.0; Trump has learned his lesson.
If reelected, he will be entirely unconstrained and has, in the past four years, surrounded himself with open fascists who are eager to create a “Unified Reich” right here in the United States. And, so long as his white followers believe the victims of his pogroms will be limited to Jews, Blacks, Hispanics, Gays, and Democrats, millions are openly eager for the “fun” to begin.
Hitler had two big lies: that Jews had stabbed Germany in the back in World War I, and that he had been imprisoned for his politics. Now Trump has his own two big lies: that the election was stolen and he’s the victim of political prosecution.
Where will this lead?
All we need do is look at how this same script played out in Germany in the 1930s.
The Night of a Long Knives, as Hitler was reinventing his chancellorship and consolidating his power. The middle-of-the-night arrests, detention camps, show trials, and mass deportations. The confinements and executions that extended to average citizens who dared speak out or were suspected of not being sufficiently white. The eventual wars to distract people from protests against domestic repression. The end of democracy.
It’s not too late to stop this madness, although that task is being made harder every day as gutless Republicans, a spineless national media, and collaborating billionaire donors fall into line either for political expediency, profits, or the promise of more tax cuts.
We are the last barrier to America being overwhelmed by this fascist tide that threatens to force upon the world the need for a repeat of D-Day. You, me, and average people like us. Nobody else is coming to our nation’s rescue.
Double check your voter registration, particularly if you live in a Red state. This may be our last chance.
Common Dreams is powered by optimists who believe in the power of informed and engaged citizens to ignite and enact change to make the world a better place. We're hundreds of thousands strong, but every single supporter makes the difference. Your contribution supports this bold media model—free, independent, and dedicated to reporting the facts every day. Stand with us in the fight for economic equality, social justice, human rights, and a more sustainable future. As a people-powered nonprofit news outlet, we cover the issues the corporate media never will. |
As we remember and honor the sacrifice of American GIs who died at Normandy in the battle against fascism, it’s vital to realize that the struggle against that evil form of government is once again before us.
From November 2020 until last week we lived in the era of Trump Big Lie 1.0, his assertion that he’d won an election he actually lost by over 7 million votes. It was a bold, audacious move, something no American politician had ever had the fundamental lack of integrity, decency, or shame to try.
While some of the most spineless, craven, and sold-out Republicans were quick to take his side with Big Lie 1.0 (139 of them in the House of Representatives and eight in the Senate)—even in the face of his throwing a deadly mob against the U.S. Capitol that tried to hang his vice president and murder the speaker of the house—there were still some who held to principle and didn’t vote to overthrow the election.
Trump has his own two big lies: that the election was stolen and he’s the victim of political prosecution.
Those Republicans are now mostly all gone, purged from the party or cowed into silence by fear of violence against their families or the end of their political careers.
And now, as of last week, we live in the era of Trump Big Lie 2.0: that Trump is the victim of a political prosecution.
It’s completely changed the political landscape. Trump and his spokesmen are now openly calling for the imprisonment and even the death of members of law enforcement, the FBI, and the judiciary. We’ve moved from the Beer Hall Putsch to the Night of the Long Knives.
Ironically, many of the Republicans who now compete to most fulsomely kiss Trump’s ass in public were the very same ones who, in 2015, first warned us against him. Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio, Nikki Haley, and Lindsey Graham, for example, all once referenced his long history of criminal and immoral behavior, unbefitting a politician of any party.
This was, after all, the man who before he ran for the GOP nomination in 2015:
Nonetheless, when Trump won the Republican primary most of his opponents fell in line. Those who didn’t go along were systematically purged from the party.
In the years between then and now, Trump has been:
Now that our criminal justice system has tried to hold him accountable for a small fraction of the crimes we’ve all watched him commit, he’s claiming that he’s the victim of political persecution. In response, he and his spokesmen are promising that if he again becomes president they will arrest and imprison those who tried to hold him to account, including judges, jurors, prosecutors, and even members of the media.
During his presidency, Trump tried to convince Attorney General Jeff Sessions, Deputy AG Rod Rosenstein, and White House attorney Don McGann to initiate prosecutions of Hillary Clinton. Each deferred, telling him it wasn’t possible.
That won’t happen with Big Lie 2.0; Trump has learned his lesson.
If reelected, he will be entirely unconstrained and has, in the past four years, surrounded himself with open fascists who are eager to create a “Unified Reich” right here in the United States. And, so long as his white followers believe the victims of his pogroms will be limited to Jews, Blacks, Hispanics, Gays, and Democrats, millions are openly eager for the “fun” to begin.
Hitler had two big lies: that Jews had stabbed Germany in the back in World War I, and that he had been imprisoned for his politics. Now Trump has his own two big lies: that the election was stolen and he’s the victim of political prosecution.
Where will this lead?
All we need do is look at how this same script played out in Germany in the 1930s.
The Night of a Long Knives, as Hitler was reinventing his chancellorship and consolidating his power. The middle-of-the-night arrests, detention camps, show trials, and mass deportations. The confinements and executions that extended to average citizens who dared speak out or were suspected of not being sufficiently white. The eventual wars to distract people from protests against domestic repression. The end of democracy.
It’s not too late to stop this madness, although that task is being made harder every day as gutless Republicans, a spineless national media, and collaborating billionaire donors fall into line either for political expediency, profits, or the promise of more tax cuts.
We are the last barrier to America being overwhelmed by this fascist tide that threatens to force upon the world the need for a repeat of D-Day. You, me, and average people like us. Nobody else is coming to our nation’s rescue.
Double check your voter registration, particularly if you live in a Red state. This may be our last chance.
As we remember and honor the sacrifice of American GIs who died at Normandy in the battle against fascism, it’s vital to realize that the struggle against that evil form of government is once again before us.
From November 2020 until last week we lived in the era of Trump Big Lie 1.0, his assertion that he’d won an election he actually lost by over 7 million votes. It was a bold, audacious move, something no American politician had ever had the fundamental lack of integrity, decency, or shame to try.
While some of the most spineless, craven, and sold-out Republicans were quick to take his side with Big Lie 1.0 (139 of them in the House of Representatives and eight in the Senate)—even in the face of his throwing a deadly mob against the U.S. Capitol that tried to hang his vice president and murder the speaker of the house—there were still some who held to principle and didn’t vote to overthrow the election.
Trump has his own two big lies: that the election was stolen and he’s the victim of political prosecution.
Those Republicans are now mostly all gone, purged from the party or cowed into silence by fear of violence against their families or the end of their political careers.
And now, as of last week, we live in the era of Trump Big Lie 2.0: that Trump is the victim of a political prosecution.
It’s completely changed the political landscape. Trump and his spokesmen are now openly calling for the imprisonment and even the death of members of law enforcement, the FBI, and the judiciary. We’ve moved from the Beer Hall Putsch to the Night of the Long Knives.
Ironically, many of the Republicans who now compete to most fulsomely kiss Trump’s ass in public were the very same ones who, in 2015, first warned us against him. Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio, Nikki Haley, and Lindsey Graham, for example, all once referenced his long history of criminal and immoral behavior, unbefitting a politician of any party.
This was, after all, the man who before he ran for the GOP nomination in 2015:
Nonetheless, when Trump won the Republican primary most of his opponents fell in line. Those who didn’t go along were systematically purged from the party.
In the years between then and now, Trump has been:
Now that our criminal justice system has tried to hold him accountable for a small fraction of the crimes we’ve all watched him commit, he’s claiming that he’s the victim of political persecution. In response, he and his spokesmen are promising that if he again becomes president they will arrest and imprison those who tried to hold him to account, including judges, jurors, prosecutors, and even members of the media.
During his presidency, Trump tried to convince Attorney General Jeff Sessions, Deputy AG Rod Rosenstein, and White House attorney Don McGann to initiate prosecutions of Hillary Clinton. Each deferred, telling him it wasn’t possible.
That won’t happen with Big Lie 2.0; Trump has learned his lesson.
If reelected, he will be entirely unconstrained and has, in the past four years, surrounded himself with open fascists who are eager to create a “Unified Reich” right here in the United States. And, so long as his white followers believe the victims of his pogroms will be limited to Jews, Blacks, Hispanics, Gays, and Democrats, millions are openly eager for the “fun” to begin.
Hitler had two big lies: that Jews had stabbed Germany in the back in World War I, and that he had been imprisoned for his politics. Now Trump has his own two big lies: that the election was stolen and he’s the victim of political prosecution.
Where will this lead?
All we need do is look at how this same script played out in Germany in the 1930s.
The Night of a Long Knives, as Hitler was reinventing his chancellorship and consolidating his power. The middle-of-the-night arrests, detention camps, show trials, and mass deportations. The confinements and executions that extended to average citizens who dared speak out or were suspected of not being sufficiently white. The eventual wars to distract people from protests against domestic repression. The end of democracy.
It’s not too late to stop this madness, although that task is being made harder every day as gutless Republicans, a spineless national media, and collaborating billionaire donors fall into line either for political expediency, profits, or the promise of more tax cuts.
We are the last barrier to America being overwhelmed by this fascist tide that threatens to force upon the world the need for a repeat of D-Day. You, me, and average people like us. Nobody else is coming to our nation’s rescue.
Double check your voter registration, particularly if you live in a Red state. This may be our last chance.