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    Fascism expert: Donald Trump has turned destructive and vindictive -- like all dictators

    Bandy X. Lee, DC Report @Raw Story
    December 01, 2020

    Thanks for your support!

    This article was paid for by reader donations to Raw Story Investigates.

    (AFP/File / Brendan Smialowski)

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    Bandy X. Lee, DC Report @Raw Story

    I have often dubbed “fascism” mental pathology in politics, and as a fascism scholar and author of the new book, Strongmen: Mussolini to the Present, Prof. Ruth Ben-Ghiat is as psychologically-minded as historians come.  The way mental health professionals have brought the context of our experience with patients to understanding the turbulent presidency of Donald Trump, she has brought the context of historical figures.  I interviewed her at our recent town hall.


    Dr. Ruth Ben-Ghiat is a professor of History and Italian Studies at New York University; a frequent commentator on CNN; an expert on fascism, authoritarian leaders, propaganda, and threats to democracy around the world.  She is also a World Mental Health Coalition Board member who has helped guide members in applying our mental health knowledge to the political domain as well as within the currents of history, to achieve our mission of bettering societal mental health.

    Lee: Your work and ideas have always impressed me for their psychological sensitivity, and here again you get straight to what many historians or political scientists miss, which are the commonalities, patterns, and personality consistencies across different leaders.  How have you come to such psychological awareness in your work?

    Ben-Ghiat: I grew up in Pacific Palisades, Calif., which is an idyllic seaside town.  It might seem a strange place to start thinking about fascism and pathologies, but it was a place where many anti-Nazis, Thomas Mann and others, came to settle.  So I was always aware of this pain of exile, and perhaps being a child of immigrants and the closest family member an eleven-hour plane ride away, perhaps I was interested in what kinds of regimes force people to flee their country.  So I started investigating individuals, Otto Klemperer or Schoenberg, who had had to resettle.  Then my first book out of my dissertation was on Italian fascist culture, but it was really a study in intellectual and cultural collaboration, how did the regime pressure people, intimidate people to work with them.

    There have been studies showing that many Americans ... would like to have the big, strong, statuesque male figure to tell them what to do.

    You were among the first to predict that Donald Trump would rule as an authoritarian once he gained power.  What were some early red flags for you, and what do his traits say about how dangerous he will likely be in these last 60 days of his presidency?  In other words, how does he resemble or differ from authoritarian cult leaders?

    In terms of the first question, I was already writing for CNN on war, and so I had that platform—and my second book was just published in 2015, a study of fascist film propaganda.  From a slightly different angle, I was thinking about how people are led to believe a fictional reality and the destruction that it causes.  So I turned this global lens onto my own country, and when I did that, coupled with my training in fascism, the figure of Donald Trump was very clear to me.

    His demonizing the press was a big sign.  Because Trump and Berlusconi and Putin have secrets and they are criminals, they have to start demonizing the press very early so that when secrets come out, his followers would already think of the press as partisan hacks.  And then the final component was the violence.  In the 21st century, we have fewer people with squadrons like the fascists a hundred years ago, and more people like Duterte in the Philippines who says he warned Filipinos not to vote for him, because if he won he said it would be bloody.  So here is Donald Trump who comes in and in January 2016 says, “I could shoot someone and not lose any followers.”  This is very unusual in a context of democracy.

    Donald Trump, as he loses power, is about to head toward serious financial and legal problems once he leaves the presidency.  What has attracted his followers, despite his pathology, criminality, and incompetence?  Astonishingly, he received more votes in 2020 than in 2016.  How do we explain the many Americans who continue to follow him and parrot him?

    There have been studies showing that many Americans are more authoritarian in their leanings, and they would like to have the big, strong, statuesque male figure to tell them what to do, but that is not the whole story.  I have many case studies.  It was very illuminating to look back over a hundred years of this and see the patterns.  When he acted in this rule-breaking way, because he started inciting violence or because he posed as the truth-teller who was not believed and ostracized by the mainstream media, and only he could tell the truth.  So this kind of personality who has a victim cult, who is kept down by the forces that be, who is attractive because he breaks the rules, this over and over has appealed to people.  Sadly, this is how they come on the scene, and they end up kind of energizing and legitimizing existing anti-democratic and extremist tendencies.  They coalesce and channel all these malcontents and extremists and people who felt the system was broken.

    As you have well pointed out, dangerous leaders must maintain themselves in office at all cost.  He is currently plunging the nation into tragedy and chaos because of his refusal to concede or to share intelligence and vaccination plans with the incoming administration.  What might be our recourse, if any?

    I had to turn my book in in the summer and had to write it for either outcome of the election, but his psychology lines up 100% with the other rulers—everyone.  The outcome is very different, of course.  He is not in a military junta, he is not in a fascist, one-party state.  Authoritarianism works differently today, but all of the style of governance they set up makes it more difficult for them to conceptualize leaving.  For example, they all create what I call inner sanctums, where you have flatterers and sycophants and family members.  They shield the leader from hearing things they just do not want to hear, and then you also have this chaos because he is always trying to find more and more flatterers.  Right now, there have been a lot of hiring and firing and moving people right now because he is upping the loyalty quotient, because stealing the election is the biggest game of all.  This is also part of the destruction—like Gaddafi would never surrender, so he was willing to drag his country into a civil war.  Pinochet in Chile had over a year before he had to leave office, and he spent that year doing as many destructive things as possible to sabotage the new democracy, from stacking the Supreme Court to passing edicts that protected his people and made it harder to find out to prosecute their crimes.  So one way or the other, they are always highly destructive to the last and vindictive.

    When criminals get into power ... the culture is going to reflect that, and people feel legitimated to threaten and intimidate.

    I remember your sharing with me how you were strictly an academic before, and you felt a special civic duty to write and speak publicly since this administration.  What in particular called you, and what has the experience been like?

    It is just something I felt I had to do.  I was in a very privileged position.  I am tenured and a full professor.  Because plenty of people do not like what you write, and they try and get you fired, they write to your provost, they write to your chair.  I think everyone has to do something, but this was what I could do, and I had all this training and a platform with CNN.  I would hear from people who had themselves fled dictatorships to come and settle in America, and they said, “I am so glad you are writing, because no one else is getting this.”  So this feedback from the public really spurred me on and told me that it was helping people.  You get a lot of hate mail, you get threats, and I had to move my office to a more secure location in 2017.  For a little while I had a guard, but it is just part of living through a culture where the model, the tone is being set by a brutal criminal.  When criminals get into power and have been associated with organized crime, the culture is going to reflect that, and people feel legitimated to threaten and intimidate.  But I have also been exposed to a whole community of people working to protect our democracy, and that has been absolutely wonderful.

    This article was paid for by Raw Story subscribers. Not a subscriber? Try us and go ad-free for $1. Prefer to give a one-time tip? Click here.

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    Report typos and corrections to: corrections@rawstory.com.
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    Survey: Should Donald Trump be prosecuted after he leaves office?

    Biden orders masks, travel clampdown in new war on Covid

    Agence France-Presse
    January 21, 2021

    President Joe Biden on Thursday tightened mask wearing rules and ordered quarantine for people flying into the United States, as he got to work on tackling the coronavirus pandemic on his first full day in power.

    Signing 10 executive orders in the White House, Biden told the nation that the Covid-19 death toll would likely rise from 400,000 to half a million next month -- and that drastic action was needed.

    "We're in a national emergency. It's time we treated it like one," he said, adding that he wants to restore public trust in the wake of the divisive Donald Trump era.

    Scientists, he said, will "work free from political interference" under his administration, and he pledged: "We will level with you when we make a mistake."

    In addition to needing a negative Covid test result before flying, travelers to the US will now need to quarantine upon arrival, Biden said. This toughened existing regulations under Trump.

    Biden's other orders included reenergizing a so far stumbling vaccination program and expanding requirements to wear masks on public transport.

    Wearing masks "has become a partisan issue, unfortunately, but it's a patriotic act," Biden said in a marked contrast to Trump, who for months gave mixed messages about whether or not to encourage the practice.

    100 million doses

    Although vaccines were produced at a blistering speed in Trump's final year in power, the rollout has been chaotic.

    "What we're inheriting is so much worse than we could have imagined," Jeff Zients, the new White House Covid-19 response coordinator, told reporters.

    Biden has announced a goal of 100 million vaccines administered in 100 days, with his top experts saying it remains possible. So far, only 16.5 million doses have been injected.

    When asked Thursday if he had been ambitious enough, Biden shot back: "When I announced it, you all said it's not possible. Come on, give me a break, man."

    Biden said the administration was expanding places where Americans will be able to get their doses, with new community centers and extra medical staff to administer the vaccine.

    He has also restored top infectious diseases doctor Anthony Fauci to a leading, visible advisory role in the White House, after Trump complained about the expert's warnings on Covid.

    Covid overshadows presidency

    The pandemic has overshadowed the Biden administration from its first moments.

    Only a few spectators were allowed to attend his swearing-in on Wednesday and everyone, from the military band to his wife Jill, looked on from behind face masks.

    Biden and his vice president, Kamala Harris, began their day on Thursday by participating in a traditional inaugural prayer service which also had to be conducted virtually, because of the coronavirus.

    The flood of executive orders and other directives which Biden began signing immediately on Wednesday has likewise focused mostly on his new national mask and vaccination strategy.

    In addition, he is bringing major firepower to trying to get a massive stimulus bill through Congress to help Americans.

    But in addition, he faces multiple other challenges including the aftershocks of a giant government computer hack blamed on Russia, and searing Trump-era political tensions -- an issue that could soon take center stage in a Senate impeachment trial of the ex-president.

    Other fronts that Biden has opened include new protections for so-called "Dreamers" -- children of illegal immigrants who have now grown up in the country and had been shielded from deportation.

    Yet another big blast at his predecessor's record was to immediately put the United States back into the Paris climate accord.

    Instant change

    Although Biden won comfortably at the polls on November 3, Trump's efforts to persuade tens of millions of followers that the election was stolen has left the veteran Democrat with a hostile opposition.

    Democrats now control both chambers of Congress, but the existing majority in the House of Representatives narrowed in the November election.

    In the Senate, the two parties are split 50-50, with a tie-break vote by the new vice president giving Democrats the most razor-thin of margins.

    That landscape ensures Biden's administration an uphill climb to get things moving. Even confirmation of his cabinet nominees risks getting tied up.

    Late Wednesday, the 78-year-old president got his first cabinet-level confirmation: Avril Haines, the director of national intelligence.

    And on Thursday, transportation secretary pick Pete Buttigieg, a former rival of Biden in the fight for the Democratic presidential nomination, appeared for a Senate confirmation hearing.

    Judge rules against Parler — says their claims are ‘inaccurate and unsupported’

    Sky Palma
    January 21, 2021

    A federal judge has denied the social media platform Parler's request to force Amazon Web Services to put its site back online while a lawsuit against the company is ongoing, Forbes reports. According to the court, the platform favored by right-wing users has "fallen far short" of proving the credibility of its legal claims.

    "The Court explicitly rejects any suggestion" by Parler that Amazon is obligated "to host the kind of abusive, violent content at issue in this case, particularly in light of the recent riots at the U.S. Capitol," U.S. District Judge Barbara Jacobs Rothstein wrote in her ruling. "That event was a tragic reminder that inflammatory rhetoric can—more swiftly and easily than many of us would have hoped—turn a lawful protest into a violent insurrection."

    Amazon removed Parler from its servers after similar actions were taken by Apple and Google.

    Read the full report over at Forbes.

    'A hugely consequential first move': Biden offers to extend nuclear START treaty with Russia

    Common Dreams
    January 21, 2021

    In a move applauded by anti-war activists, U.S. President Joe Biden on Thursday reportedly offered Russian President Vladimir Putin a five-year extension of the New START treaty just days before the pact—the only remaining nuclear arms control agreement regulating the two largest nuclear arsenals in the world—is set to expire.

    "President Biden's offer signals a welcome return to serious diplomacy that provides a path to a safer and more secure future for all."
    —Derek Johnson, Global Zero

    If the White House and Russia cannot settle on a mutually agreed-upon plan to extend the New START treaty, which caps the number of offensively-deployed nuclear weapons that each country is allowed to have at 1,550, the deal will expire on February 5, 2021.

    Letting the treaty expire could unleash "a full-blown nuclear arms race that exposes the whole world to an intolerable level of risk," Derek Johnson, chief executive officer of Global Zero, an international movement for the elimination of nuclear weapons, said in a statement on Thursday.

    "After four years of efforts to kill arms control and chase the false security of nuclear dominance, the U.S. is coming back to its senses," said Johnson. "Extending New START is a hugely consequential first move by the Biden administration."

    In response to Biden's proposed extension of the New START treaty, Paul Kawika Martin, senior director for policy and political affairs at Peace Action, said in a statement that after years of former President Donald Trump "putting Americans in harm's way by decimating international agreements, we can all breathe a bit easier now that he cannot start a nuclear war within minutes."

    Trump "tried to conclude a shorter extension with Moscow in the final months of his presidency, but he failed to reach an agreement after his nuclear envoy spent months trying to persuade China to join the accord before dropping that demand," The Washington Post reported Thursday.

    As The Moscow Times reported on Wednesday, the Russian Foreign Ministry accused the Trump administration of "'deliberately and intentionally' dismantling international arms control agreements," interpreting "its 'counterproductive and openly aggressive' approach in talks" as an indication that Washington was not interested in extending New START.

    Now that Biden is in office, Moscow expects the U.S. to "take a more constructive approach in its dialogue with us," the Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement. "We are ready for such work on principles of equal rights and taking mutual interests into account."

    According to The Moscow Times:

    The Russian Foreign Ministry said the treaty should be extended in its current version and "without any pre-conditions," adding that prolonging the arms pact for five years would be "preferable."
    "This would allow Russia and the United States to seriously begin a joint search for responses to the issues of international security and strategic stability that are now arising," the ministry said in the statement.
    "At the same time the current level of transparency and predictability in relation to New START would remain in place which would be in the interests of security of both our countries and the whole world."

    While Putin is seeking an unconditional extension of the treaty, The Post reported that the Biden administration "is preparing to impose new costs on Russia pending a newly requested intelligence assessment of its recent activities."

    Two senior U.S. officials, speaking on the condition of anonymity due to the sensitive nature of the topic, told the newspaper that "Biden is ruling out a 'reset' in bilateral relations with Moscow as many new U.S. presidents have done since the end of the Cold War."

    The Post noted that "Biden's plans for potential punitive actions toward Russia at the outset of the administration is unique among his recent predecessors, all of whom attempted to turn a new page with the Kremlin in the hopes of encouraging a more productive relationship."

    While the White House's specific terms are not yet clear, The Post reported that unlike his predecessor, Biden "is not interested in holding an extension of New START hostage to China."

    Johnson of Global Zero said that "the treaty is an essential guardrail against nuclear arms-racing that imposes equal limits on U.S. and Russian strategic nuclear weapons. Both countries are in full compliance with the agreement, and its intrusive verification provisions ensure neither side can cheat without detection."

    "President Biden's offer signals a welcome return to serious diplomacy that provides a path to a safer and more secure future for all," Johnson added. "Unless you're a defense contractor, this is good news for everyone."

     
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