Highlights: Former President Donald Trump’s rhetoric has regularly bordered on the incitement of violence. Lately, however, it has become even more violent. Yet both the press and the public have largely just shrugged their shoulders.
As a political philosopher who studies extremism, I believe people should be more worried about this.
Mark Milley, the outgoing chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, is guilty of “treason,” Trump said in September 2023, just for reassuring the Chinese that the U.S. had no plans to attack in the waning days of the Trump administration. And for this, Trump says, Milley deserves death.
But it is not just government officials whom Trump suggests be targeted for extrajudicial killings. Mere shoplifters should be killed too. “Very simply, if you rob a store, you can fully expect to be shot as you are leaving,” Trump said to cheers at the California Republican Party convention in September.
This rhetoric may seem like crazy bluster, which is no doubt why many people appear prepared to ignore it. But put in its historical context, what Trump is doing is echoing views that are part of a long tradition of illiberal and outright fascist thought. For fascists have always seen the use of violence as a virtue, not a vice.
As I said to another person, it speaks to his motive. He’s motivated by money, and one can’t effectively fight an enemy they pretend is something else.
A fascist is a fascist, I agree, but it’s best that we know what drives him.
Money is just a means to power, and that’s what fascists crave. It may be a circuitous route, but he gets there in the end.
I agree that it’s self-feeding, and fascists will get to the causing of suffering in the end, but what drives that cycle is different, and how you break that cycle is different.
For Trump, it’s Money at all costs. For ideological fascists, it’s Power at all costs.