Louisville Medicine Volume 63, Issue 11 | Page 28

SPEAK YOUR MIND If you would like to respond to an article in this issue, please submit an article or letter to the editor. Contributions may be sent to [email protected] or may be submitted online at www.glms.org. The GLMS Editorial Board reserves the right to choose what will be published. Please note that the views expressed in Doctors’ Lounge or any other article in this publication are not those of the Greater Louisville Medical Society or Louisville Medicine. NOTE: Due to the intensity of the current political environment, we remind readers that this section (Doctors' Lounge) is reserved for unadulterated opinion. The following article is not the opinion of GLMS. Its important for members to have open, insightful dialogue and debate on issues far and wide. If you are stirred by this article or any other article, whether in agreement or disagreement, please respond with a letter to the editor. FASCISM NEVER DIES Mary G. Barry, MD Louisville Medicine Editor [email protected] O ne of the most disturbing parts of this year’s presidential campaigns has been Donald Trump’s shouts to his supporters to lay hands on his protestors. “Get’em out of here – get’em the hell out!” he has yelled repeatedly from the podium. His supporters eagerly obey, pushing and shoving the anti-Trump faction, ripping signs from their hands, and screaming curses at them. Sometimes they are aided by the official security teams. As I write this, rallies have been cancelled for fear of violent confrontations. No one on either side has yet been killed or seriously injured, yet the candidate stands at the podium and yells, “These are the people who are destroying our country!” and his crowds roar. Mobs are fueled by many things, but hatred and revenge are the most flammable tinder. Hitler understood how to engineer hero-worship and a blind devotion to his state, by making people feel exalted and superior. They were citizens made desperate by the inflation and economic losses after World War I and the Depression. They wanted scapegoats, and a savior. Hitler supplied both. He told them they were the Chosen, the master race, that he would punish the people who had cheated them. He built a fortress of emotional superiority for them to shelter in, a place of seeming privilege, as he systematically destroyed all power 26 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE to oppose him. The Chosen would be safe from pogroms, but their Jewish neighbors would die: 6 million, in the Holocaust, in Europe. The Aryan people would be safe from arrest, but not if they hid or helped anyone, or any group, who protested; not if they spoke out; not if they refused to walk in lockstep. Dissent meant arrest, labor camp, death. Many dissented, many tried to help those marked for death, and many died themselves. Hitler engineered religious and ethnic mass murder by giving voice to their xenophobia, and machine guns to their storm troopers. Within five years his promised Aryan utopia had become a police state. The Museums of Documentation, in Nuremberg and Munich particularly, trace the day to day trajectory of the Nazis’ rise, their specific signed orders for personal and mass killings, and finally their ruin. Today in Germany, the huge influx of refugees and the constant fear of terrorists, plus the resentment of the ordinary person for Germany’s economic bailouts of other UH