Germany is right. Opposition parties must be forbidden or firewalled. Political criticism must be criminalized. The public sphere must be firmly controlled by government, with guardrails against disagreement and heterodoxy. If we don’t do these things, we might descend into authoritarianism.
Margaret Brennan’s bizarre response to JD Vance’s speech in Munich — free speech? but that’s the weapon the Nazis used to commit the Holocaust! — wasn’t mere ignorance or accident. It’s a maneuver. You’re going to see more of it, in an urgent wave of moral inversion. Case in point, from the New Republic today:
Remember that Vance said things like this:
The good news is that I happen to think your democracies are substantially less brittle than many people apparently fear.
And I really do believe that allowing our citizens to speak their mind will make them stronger still. Which, of course, brings us back to Munich, where the organisers of this very conference have banned lawmakers representing populist parties on both the left and the right from participating in these conversations. Now, again, we don’t have to agree with everything or anything that people say. But when political leaders represent an important constituency, it is incumbent upon us to at least participate in dialogue with them…
I believe deeply that there is no security if you are afraid of the voices, the opinions and the conscience that guide your very own people.
So governments should live in dialogue with the populations they govern; citizens should speak freely; banning or limiting political parties makes society less free and less open. From start to finish, Vance spoke for liberty and openness, for free expression and societies organized through unfettered debate.
The calculated response — the calculated response, a deliberate deflection — is: Oh no, he’s saying we should turn into Nazis! Look at the subhed to the thing in the New Republic: arguing for freedom is aligning ourselves with international fascism.
Openness is genocide. Freedom is fascism. Speech is violence. Free societies arrest people for saying the wrong thing. Free speech — you mean like ADOLF HITLER!?!?
Read the piece in the New Republic, and look closely at Michael Tomasky’s language, which is full of Stasi-adjacent framing: “The Alternative fur Deutschland (AfD) has been declared a ‘suspected extremist’ organization by the German domestic intelligence agency.”
The security agencies have spoken! This political party is declaratively engaged in crimethink, and must therefore be shunned and suppressed!
Do people authentically arguing against fascism present the declarations of the state security apparatus as the final word that ends political debate?
Look at Tomasky’s penultimate paragraph, in which he warns that the authoritarian Trump is…making government smaller. Cutting Medicare! Firing government employees! Smaller government is fascism. Less power is more power.
The narrative pivot is in operation. Fascism is openness. Freedom is repression. We must arrest those who disagree, so we can preserve our liberty.
Michael Tomasky is evil, full stop. Clumsy and stupid, yes, but casually and cheerfully evil. This is societal poison. The argument that freedom is fascism is exceptionally dangerous. Fight this. Be rude about it.
Another great post, Chris!
Two thoughts: 1) Isn’t what the Regime is doing the modern day expression of what George Orwell described in “1984?” The article you describe could have been part of Orwell’s book. 2) Although DOGE has revealed the connections, money trail, and “ being paid to play” schemes between USAID and the media and the NGOs, those connections are not yet severed and the players haven’t quit. With articles like this, they are clearly doubling down on their tactics. It’s really the only play they have.
I hate to say it, but it sure looks like another coordinated, inorganic messaging campaign has started. The legacy media is trying, with articles like these and CBS's egregious display on Sunday, to invert popular understanding of foundational liberties. I'm still not sure what the play is, but you generally don't burn what's left of your credibility like this on short term counter messaging.