Trump's Washington DC takeover is straight out of a fascist playbook [View all]
Moustafa Bayoumi
Akey chapter in the fascist playbook has always been to convince the public that it is living in such a state of mortal danger and unbridled chaos that the only chance of survival is to cede individual rights to the determined will of the Dear Leader. Thats why fascist leaders have constantly demanded that their populations venerate all violence performed in the service of the state and revere the apparatuses of state violence, such as police forces and the military. In this scenario, state violence is not only necessary for the nations survival. State violence is understood as even beautiful, something the public can and must believe in.
Buying into state violence this way produces something historian Robert Paxton has called a mobilizing passion. In his book The Anatomy of Fascism, Paxton described how the beauty of violence and the efficacy of will is produced and then mobilized by fascists by creating a sense of overwhelming crisis beyond the reach of traditional solutions. In other words, theres always a grave, existential threat lurking around every corner, and only fascist violence can restore order to a lawless world. To the fascist, as Umberto Eco once put it, life is a permanent war.
Enter Donald Trump. Whether its an existential threat of wokeness run amok in American universities, or the extraordinary danger of unauthorized immigrants picking our vegetables, Trump is prepared to battle everyone and everything, including his own windmills, to restore the country to some illusory past glory that we are all supposed to believe in, and be willing to sacrifice ourselves for.
But the sad truth is that many, if not most, of Trumps justifications for his policies, are unsurprisingly based on bald-faced lies or gross exaggerations simply to further his pursuit of absolute power. Yet it doesnt seem to matter. With each new announcement, Trump continues to prove how excellent he is at crafting the illusion of problems where there basically are none and leading his followers down an often-violent path of retribution. (Remember January 6, DCs most violent day in recent history?) By doing so, he seeks to constantly expand his authority while also deflecting from all the substantial problems that are staring him in the face. And these problems are not insignificant. Think of the Jeffrey Epstein scandal or the continuation of global conflicts that he promised months ago he would uniquely be able to end.
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/aug/13/trumps-washington-dc-takeover-is-straight-out-of-a-fascist-playbook
This is what I've been saying.