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Politics

Donald Trump" The "fascist" who cut taxes - Deleted by accident - apologies

Posted: Oct 24th, 2017 - 2:32 pm In Reply to: Dems Are Playing Russian Roulette With Investigations - TakeThemOut

Everybody knows by now that President Trump is a fascist. He's a Nazi just like the white supremacists who marched in Charlottesville, Va., on Aug. 12. We know this because the mainstream media, a host of dimwit celebrities, various Democratic politicians and the highly reputable antifa tell us he is. What we really know, though, is these groups don't know anything except how to shriek louder and longer than everyone else. A few also well know how to break other people's property and set things that don't belong to them on fire. But they don't know their history, and therefore don't know what they're talking about. But we're here to help them out, so let's make some comparisons. First, take a look at taxes. Trump wants to cut them. But the Nazis were no tax-cutters. "These Nazi radicals think of nothing except 'distributing the wealth,' " a German businessman wrote in a letter that was mentioned in "The Vampire Economy: Doing Business Under Fascism," a book written in 1939 by German author Guenter Reimann. "Some businessmen were studying Marxist theories, so that they will have a better understanding of the present economic system. ... You cannot imagine how taxation has increased." The Nazi regime doubled the corporate tax rate from 20% to 40% between 1936 and 1939, according to "Hitler's Beneficiaries: Plunder, Racial War, and the Nazi Welfare State" by Gotz Aly. The Nazi government then soaked the rich during the war, doubling their taxes, says Aly. Which modern-day U.S. political party does that sound more like? Trump's or the party of his most vocal critics'? Meanwhile, Benito Mussolini's Fascist government in Italy raised taxes in 1936, and when he "introduced new taxes in October 1937 ... his popular support faded with the economy," Jude Wanniski wrote in "The Way The World Works." Fuel taxes were raised in the 1930s, according to Generation History, with the additional revenue spent on programs such as "state bureaucracy, prestige projects" and "welfare measures." We move on. While Trump hasn't yet gotten the tax cuts he wants, he has lifted government rules. "Since he took office on Jan. 20," Money/CNN reported this month, "Trump has swiftly moved to eliminate hundreds of regulations." Politico earlier said that Trump's deregulation efforts "may be the administration's biggest untold success." Again, this just the opposite of the way that Nazis and Fascists behaved. In the "The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich: A History of Nazi Germany," William Shirer wrote that German businesses had to deal with "mountains of red tape," and were told "what they could produce, how much and at what price." "Steep and never ending 'special contributions' to the party," were also required of them. In "The Third Reich in Power, 1933-1939," Richard Evans wrote of Hermann Göring, a powerful party member, "taking control of all privately owned steelworks and setting up a new company, known as the Hermann Göring Works." R.J. Overy wrote in "War and Economy in the Third Reich" that Hitler was "an enemy of free market economics." This lines up perfectly with antifa's position. Mussolini's regime herded businesses into syndicates, which scholar Thomas DiLorenzo writes "were 'coordinated' by a network of government planning agencies called 'corporations,' one for each industry." He described it as a "Byzantine regulatory arrangement," one intended to serve the national interests "as defined by government bureaucrats." Doesn't this sound more like the system that Trump's Democratic enemies prefer? Well, yes it does. The self-proclaimed anti-Fascists and Nazi-punchers, as well as their media apologists and political abettors, are also more closely aligned with historical Nazis and Fascists than Trump and his supporters through their devotion to mob violence, identity politics, forced conformity and efforts to silence critics. What we're seeing, then, is a widespread case of psychological projection. We hope that most of the country recognizes this.

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