Gullible Jones wrote:Thanks very much, Sigma. It's helpful to see an outsider's view, from someone already used to authoritarianism.
My concern at the moment is whether this stay at Chavez/Putin levels, or spiral into fullblown disaster dictatorship a la Hitler. I think the latter is more likely than you think; if the Trump Administration tries to declare martial law, I expect a Republican congress to go right along with it. (A few Democrats will probably go along as well.)
Also there's the issue of mass surveillance; PATRIOT Act and suchlike allowing indefinite imprisonment without charges; the President being able to direct deportation efforts, as Pres. Obama did extensively; the President being able to order assassinations of US citizens (c.f. drone strikes); the FBI apparently being full of Trumpists... And on top of all that, Trump's alt-right fans are a bunch of sadistic creeps, who have already repeatedly engaged in violence against the opposition. (A typical mode of operation seems to involve bullying people into committing suicide.)
Also, re protests and violence - in the US, police have a history of attacking protesters without provocation, followed by the media blaming the protesters for whatever ensues. Likewise, they could always use agents provocateur. Or carry out a false flag operation of some kind. With Trump's support base, they wouldn't even need the cooperation of intelligence people; they could just get some skinheads to leave a bomb somewhere, and blame lefties/Muslims/etc.
Basically, I'm not convinced that professionalism would be much of a barrier. The Trump Administration's powers to persecute the opposition are vast, and mostly quite legal now. Unlike Obama, or even Bush, Trump has no professional sense of respect; I think he would be quite willing to imprison political opponents en mass, as he has repeatedly said he'd do to Clinton. Congressional Republicans have at this point made it clear that they either don't care, and are naked slaves to power; or are religious zealots who want people like me deported and/or dead.
I do have hope that the military, and maybe defense and intelligence people, would resist attempts to abuse their power. But it's not much hope. To be extremely blunt, I am still getting used to the idea that I and my family may not survive this.
Gullible Jones wrote:Yes, I'll give you that. OTOH... Not sure about the armed forces, but there are plenty of "nice" racists among the police. And historical Fascist regimes seem to have carried out oppression as much through peer pressure and fear of retribution as through encouraging sadism.
Gullible Jones wrote:Just FWIW, I'm 100% with you on not calling for riots and armed response. Problem there is more that, historically, police have not needed a real excuse to get violent with protesters.
Gullible Jones wrote:Foreign policy... I don't know. I realize that a lot of things on that level involve trying to salvage the most from an awful situation. (Something that Trump clearly doesn't understand at all.) OTOH, it seems to me like too much emphasis on Doing What Needs To Be Done can lead to difficulty thinking outside that box of military intervention and abstraction of civilian lives.
Gullible Jones wrote:Also, I'm gonna post this:
http://www.slate.com/blogs/outward/2016 ... ified.html
I'll grant that some of the reactions from the US Jewish community may come from shock - "Hey, what happened to our white privilege?!" - but to a lot of us, this is all looking quite disturbingly familiar.
It’s going to be a long time in the wilderness, and it’s going to be awful. If I sound calm and philosophical, I’m not — like everyone who cares, I’m frazzled, sleepless, depressed. But we need to be stalwart
Gullible Jones wrote:Hey, I also follow Krugman. I will note that his opinion may be influenced, at least somewhat, by the vast amount of anti-Semitic hate spam that he receives every day on Twitter.
Re Ashkenazi Jews, yes, that's what I meant with the "white privilege" quip. This time around I think we're pretty far down the hit list, as a group, though not necessarily off it entirely. But more vulnerable groups could really be fucked over, and I don't want to stand by and let that happen.
BTW, I'd spare some rage for Jewish people who kept supporting the far right, out of supposed loyalty to Israel. But right now, I'm too full of nausea and emptiness to feel much in the way of anger.
Jonathan Greenblat, of the Anti-Defamation League civil rights group, said: "It is a sad day when a man who presided over the premier website of the 'alt-right' - a loose-knit group of white nationalists and unabashed anti-Semites and racists - is slated to be a senior staff member in the 'people's house'."
Richard Cohen, President of the Southern Poverty Law Canter told CNN's "New Day" on Monday that there have been more that 300 incidents that their organization has recorded.
"He needs to take a little bit more responsibility for what's happening," Cohen said.
Sigma_Orionis wrote:
I know, Jews had the "very questionable privilege" of being the first minority that faced extermination in modern times. And that man is gay as well, It's understandable to be afraid. On the plus side, distasteful as it sounds, Ashkenazi Jews look very similar to what the average "privileged whites" look like. So I am sure that the application of Godwin's Law is not going to be an issue here. Again, the thing is NOT to let the nutjobs destroy your institutions, that means, RIGHT NOW, working public opinion without panicking. Yes. the man's Grandmother said "don't worry this can't happen here". But nobody in their right mind, is saying that. The ones I hear say "We HAVE to make sure THAT WON'T happen here".
SciFi Chick wrote:Sigma_Orionis wrote:
I know, Jews had the "very questionable privilege" of being the first minority that faced extermination in modern times. And that man is gay as well, It's understandable to be afraid. On the plus side, distasteful as it sounds, Ashkenazi Jews look very similar to what the average "privileged whites" look like. So I am sure that the application of Godwin's Law is not going to be an issue here. Again, the thing is NOT to let the nutjobs destroy your institutions, that means, RIGHT NOW, working public opinion without panicking. Yes. the man's Grandmother said "don't worry this can't happen here". But nobody in their right mind, is saying that. The ones I hear say "We HAVE to make sure THAT WON'T happen here".
No. They like to make you think that, but it was the Armenians and Greeks that suffered the first modern attempt at genocide at the hands of the Turks. They called it a holocaust, but the Jews appropriated that word for themselves, so now it "merely" gets referred to as a genocide. It came closer to succeeding than Hitler did with the Jews.
SciFi Chick wrote: They called it a holocaust, but the Jews appropriated that word for themselves, so now it "merely" gets referred to as a genocide.
squ1d wrote:SciFi Chick wrote: They called it a holocaust, but the Jews appropriated that word for themselves, so now it "merely" gets referred to as a genocide.
That sounds a bit anti semetic!
Raphael Lemkin coined the term "genocide" in 1943 to describe what happened to the Armenians.
The Turks are the ones to blame for the obscurity of the Armenian genocide.
squ1d wrote:SciFi Chick wrote: They called it a holocaust, but the Jews appropriated that word for themselves, so now it "merely" gets referred to as a genocide.
That sounds a bit anti semetic!
Raphael Lemkin coined the term "genocide" in 1943 to describe what happened to the Armenians.
The Turks are the ones to blame for the obscurity of the Armenian genocide.
SciFi Chick wrote:To respond to Sigma's point - they weren't as successful at killing the Greeks, which is probably why that doesn't pop up on the radar as much.
Sigma_Orionis wrote:SciFi Chick wrote:To respond to Sigma's point - they weren't as successful at killing the Greeks, which is probably why that doesn't pop up on the radar as much.
But it helps explain why Greeks and Turks hate each other since forever.
Meanwhile, the head of the LAPD has said his police department would not cooperate with Trump's administration on mass deportations. Which is... unexpected, and heartening. I had expected complete capitulation from the get-go from law enforcement brass.
Gullible Jones wrote:... The American Physical Society? Seriously?
But yeah, I think that goes hand-in-hand with normalization/rationalization.
Edit:
Re capitulation, for me it might come down to personality. I expect other people not to be bullies and sadists, because I am generally not one. However, I do expect other people to be cowards, because I am usually a coward. I'm not sure though what reality and cognitive science would have to say about either case though (c.f. Zimbardo).
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