Thanks!
 
The links are very good and makes one think!
 
Jonathan

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
[1]= 31 Similarities Between Hitler and President Bush
by Edward Jayne
[2]www.dissidentvoice.org
August 29, 2004
(revised from an earlier version posted March 29, 2003)

When President Bush decided to invade Iraq, his spokesmen began
comparing Saddam Hussein to Adolph Hitler, the most monstrous figure
in modern history.  Everybody was therefore shocked when a high
German bureaucrat turned the tables by comparing Bush himself with
Hitler.  As to be expected, she (the bureaucrat) was forced to
resign because of her extreme disrespect for an American president. 
However, the resemblance sticks--there are too many similarities to be
ignored, some of which may be listed here.

Like Hitler, President Bush was not elected by a majority, but was
forced to engage in political maneuvering in order to gain office.

Like Hitler, Bush began to curtail civil liberties in response to a
well-publicized disaster, in Hitler's case the Reichstag fire, in
Bush's case the 9-11 catastrophe.

Like Hitler, Bush went on to pursue a reckless foreign policy without
the mandate of the electorate and despite the opposition of most
foreign nations.

Like Hitler, Bush has increased his popularity with conservative
voters by mounting an aggressive public relations campaign against
foreign enemies.  Just as Hitler cited international communism to
justify Germany's military buildup, Bush has used Al Qaeda and the
so-called Axis of Evil to justify our current military buildup. 
Paradoxically none of the nations in this axis--Iraq, Iran and North
Korea--have had anything to do with each other.

Like Hitler, Bush has promoted militarism in the midst of economic
recession (or depression as it was called during the thirties). 
First he used war preparations to help subsidize defense industries
(Halliburton, Bechtel, Carlyle Group, etc.) and presumably the rest of
the economy on a trickle-down basis.  Now he turns to the very same
corporations to rebuild Iraq, again without competitive bidding and at
extravagant profit levels.

Like Hitler, Bush displays great populist enthusiasm in his patriotic
speeches, but primarily serves wealthy investors who subsidize his
election campaigns and share with him their comfortable lifestyle. 
As he himself jokes, he treats these individuals at the pinnacle of
our economy as his true political "base."

Like Hitler, Bush envisages our nation's unique historic destiny
almost as a religious cause sanctioned by God.  Just as Hitler did
for Germany, he takes pride in his "providential" role in spreading
his version of Americanism throughout the entire world.

Like Hitler, Bush promotes a future world order that guarantees his
own nation's hegemonic supremacy rather than cooperative harmony under
the authority of the United Nations (or League of Nations).

Like Hitler, Bush quickly makes and breaks diplomatic ties, and he
offers generous promises that he soon abandons, as in the cases of
Mexico, Russia, Afghanistan, and even New York City.  The same goes
for U.S. domestic programs.  Once Bush was elected, many leaders of
these programs learned to dread his making any kind of an appearance
to praise their success, since this was almost inevitably followed by
severe cuts in their budgets.

Like Hitler, Bush scraps international treaties, most notably the
Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, the Biological Weapons Convention, the
Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, the Convention on the Prohibition of
Land Mines, the Chemical Weapons Convention, the Kyoto Global Warming
Accord, and the International Criminal Court.

Like Hitler, Bush repeats lies often enough that they come to be
accepted as the truth.  Bush and his spokesmen argued, for example,
that they had taken every measure possible to avoid war, than an
invasion of Iraq would diminish (not intensify) the terrorist threat
against the U.S., that Iraq was linked with Al Qaeda, and that nothing
whatsoever had been achieved by U.N. inspectors to warrant the
postponement of U.S. invasion plans.  All of this was false.  They
also insisted that Iraq hid numerous weapons it did not possess since
the mid-190s, and they refused to acknowledge the absence of a nuclear
weapons program in Iraq since the early nineties.  As perhaps to be
expected, they indignantly accused others of deception and
evasiveness.

Like Hitler, Bush incessantly shifted his arguments to justify
invading Iraq--from Iraq's WMD threat to the elimination of Saddam
Hussein, to his supposed Al Qaeda connection, to the creation of Iraqi
democracy in the Middle East as a model for neighboring states, and
back again to the WMD threat.  As soon as one excuse for the war was
challenged, Bush advanced to another, but only to shift back again at
another time.

Like Hitler, Bush and his cohorts emphasize the ruthlessness of their
enemies in order to justify their own.  Just as Hitler cited the
threat of communist violence to justify even greater violence on the
part of Germany, the Bush team justified the invasion of Iraq by
emphasizing Hussein's crimes against humanity over the past
twenty-five years.  However, these crimes were for the most part
committed when Iraq was a client-ally of the U.S.  Our government
supplied Hussein with illegal weapons (poison gas included), and there
were sixty U.S. advisors in Iraq when these weapons were put to use
(see NY Times, Aug. 18, 1992).  U.S. aid to Iraq was actually
doubled afterwards despite disclaimers from Washington that our nation
opposed their use.  President Reagan's special envoy Donald Rumsfeld
personally informed Hussein of this one hundred percent increment
during one of his two trips to Iraq at the time.  He also told
Hussein not to take U.S. disclaimers seriously.

Like Hitler, Bush takes pride in his status as a "War President," and
his global ambition makes him perhaps the most dangerous president in
our nation's history, a "rogue" chief executive capable of waging any
number of illegal preemptive wars.  He fully acknowledges his
willingness to engage in wars of "choice" as well as wars of
necessity.  Sooner or later this choice will oblige universal
conscription as well as a full-scale war economy.

Like Hitler, Bush continues to pursue war without cutting back on the
peacetime economy.  Additional to unprecedented low interest rates
bestowed by the Federal Reserve, he has actually cut federal taxes
twice by substantial amounts, especially for the top one percent of
U.S. taxpayers, while conducting an expensive invasion and an even
more expensive occupation of a hostile nation.  As a result,
President Clinton's $350 billion budget surplus has been reduced to a
$450 billion deficit, comprising an unprecedented $800 billion decline
in less than four years.  At the same time the U.S. dollar has
steadily dropped against currencies of both Europe and Japan.

Like Hitler, Bush possesses a war machine much bigger and more
effective than the military capabilities of other nations.  With the
extra financing obliged by the defeat and occupation of Iraq, Bush now
relies on a "defense" budget well in excess of the combined military
expenditures of the rest of the world.  Moreover, the $416 billion
defense package passed last week by Congress will probably need to be
supplemented before the end of the year.

Like Hitler, Bush depends on an axis of collaborative allies, which he
describes as a "coalition of the willing," in order to give the
impression of a broad popular alliance.  These allies include the
U.K. as compared to Mussolini's Italy, and Spain and Bulgaria, as
compared to, well, Spain and Bulgaria, both of which were aligned with
Germany during the thirties and World War II.  As a result of their
cooperation, Prime Minister Blair's diplomatic reputation has been
ruined in England, and a surprising election defeat has produced an
unfriendly government in Spain.  The Philippines have withdrawn
their troops from Iraq to save the life of a hostage, and other
defections can be expected in the near future. 

Like Hitler, Bush is willing to go to war over the objections of the
U.N. (League of Nations).  His Iraq invasion was illegal and
therefore a war crime as explained by Articles 41 and 42 of the U.N.
Charter, which require two votes, not one, by the Security Council
before any state takes such an action.  First a vote is needed to
explore all possibilities short of warfare (in Iraq's case through the
use of U.N. inspectors), and once this has been shown to be fruitless,
a second vote is needed to permit military action.  U.S. and U.K.
delegates at the Security Council prevented this second vote once it
was plain they lacked a majority.  This was because other nations on
the Security Council were satisfied with the findings of U.N.
inspectors that no weapons of mass destruction had yet been found. 
Minus this second vote, the invasion was illegal.  Bush also showed
in the process that he has no qualms about bribing, bullying, and
insulting U.N. members, even tapping their telephone lines.  This
was done with undecided members of the Security Council as well as the
U.N. Secretary General when the U.S.-U.K. resolution was debated
preceding the invasion.  

Like Hitler, Bush launches unilateral invasions on a supposedly
preemptive basis.  Just as Hitler convinced the German public to
think of Poland as a threat to Germany in 1939 (for example in his
Sept. 19 speech), Bush wants Americans to think of Iraq as having been
a "potential" threat to our national security--indeed as one of the
instigators of the 9-11 attack despite a complete lack of evidence to
support this claim.

Like Hitler, Bush depends on a military strategy that features a
"shock and awe" blitzkrieg beginning with devastating air strikes,
then an invasion led by heavy armored columns.

Like Hitler, Bush is willing to inflict high levels of bloodshed
against enemy nations.  Between 20,000 and (more probably) 37,000
are now estimated to have been killed, as much as a ro-1 kill ratio
compared to the more than 900 Americans killed.  In other words, for
every U.S. fatality, probably as many as forty Iraqi have died.

Like Hitler, Bush is perfectly willing to sacrifice life as part of
his official duty.  This would be indicated by the unprecedented
number of prisoners executed during his service as governor of
Texas.  Under no other governor in the history of the United States
were so many killed.

Like Hitler, Bush began warfare on a single front (Al Qaeda quartered
in Afghanistan), but then expanded it to a second front with Iraq,
only to be confronted with North Korea and Iran as potential third and
fourth fronts.  Much the same thing happened to Hitler when he
advanced German military operations from Spain to Poland and France,
then was distracted by Yugoslavia before invading the USSR in 1941. 
Today, Bush seems prevented by the excessive costs of the Iraqi
debacle from going to war elsewhere if reelected, but not through any
lack of desire.

Like Hitler, Bush has no qualms about imposing "regime change" by
installing Quisling-style client governments backed by a U.S. military
occupation with both political and economic control entirely in the
hands of Americans.  It is no surprise that Iyad Alawi, Iraq's
current temporary prime minister, was once affiliated with the CIA and
has been reliably reported by the Australian press to have executed
six hooded prisoners with a handgun to their heads just a day or two
before his appointment a couple weeks ago.

Like Hitler, Bush curtails civil liberties in captive nations and
depends on detention centers (i.e., concentration camps) such as a
Guantanamo, Abu Ghraib, and any number of secret interrogation centers
across the world.  Prisoners at the camps go unidentified and have
no legal rights as ordinarily guaranteed by the Geneva Conventions. 
They have also been detained indefinitely (for 2 ½ years already at
Guantanamo Bay), though there is mounting evidence that many are
innocent of what they have been charged--some, for example, having
been randomly seized by Northern Alliance troops in Afghanistan for an
automatic bounty from U.S. commanders.  Moreover, many Iraqi
prisoners have been tortured, in many instances just short of
death.  Recent U.S. documents disclose that as many twenty have died
while being tortured, and twenty others have died under unusual
circumstances yet to be determined.

Like Hitler, Bush uses the threat of enemies abroad to stir the
fearful allegiance of the U.S. public.  For example, he features
public announcements of possible terrorist attacks in order to
override embarrassing news coverage or to crowd from headlines
positive coverage of Democratic Party activities.  He also uses the
threat of terrorism to justify extraordinary domestic powers granted
by the Patriot Act.   Even the books we check out of public
libraries can be kept on record by federal agents.

Like Hitler, Bush depends on a propaganda machine to guarantee
sympathetic news management.  In Hitler's case news coverage was
totally dominated by Goebbels; in Bush's case reporters have been
almost totally "imbedded" by both military spokesmen and wealthy media
owners sympathetic with Bush.  The most obvious case is the Fox news
channel, owned and controlled by Rupert Murdoch. Not surprisingly,
recent polls indicate that the majority of Fox viewers still think
Hussein played a role in the 9-11 attack.

Like Hitler, Bush increasingly reduces the circle of aides he feels he
can trust as his policies keep boomeranging at his own expense. 
Just as Hitler ended up isolated in his headquarters, with few
individuals granted access, Bush is now said to be limiting access
primarily to Attorney General Ashcroft (who also talks with God on a
regular basis) as well as Karl Rove, the Vice President, Karen Hughes,
and a few others.  Both Secretary of State Powell and Secretary of
Defense Rumsfeld are now said to be out of the loop.

Like Hitler, Bush has become obsessed with his vision of conflict
between good (U.S. patriotism) and evil (anti-Americanism).  Many in
contact with the White House are said to be worried that he is
beginning to lose touch with reality--perhaps resulting from the use
of medication that seriously distorts his judgment.  Possibly
symptomatic of this concern is the increasing number of disaffected
government officials who leak embarrassing documents.

Like Hitler, Bush takes pleasure in the mythology of frontier
justice.  As a youth Hitler read and memorized the western novels of
Karl May, and Bush retains into his maturity his fascination with
simplistic cowboy values.  He also exaggerates a cowboy twang
despite his C-average elitist education at Andover, Yale, and Harvard.

Like Hitler, Bush misconstrues Darwinism, in Hitler's case by treating
the Aryan race as being superior on an evolutionary basis, in Bush's
case by rejecting science for fundamentalist creationism.

Of course countless differences may be listed between Hitler and
President Bush, most of which are to the credit of Bush. 
Nevertheless, the resemblances listed here are striking, especially
since Bush's first term in office must be compared with Hitler's
performance as German Chancellor through the year 1937, preceding the
chain of events immediately preceding World War II.  In any case,
George W. Bush seems the worst and most dangerous U.S. president in
recent memory (for me since Roosevelt)--if not in the entire history
of the United States.

Edward Jayne is a retired English professor with experience as a '60s
activist. He can be contacted at: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Demian
[3]www.knoton.com

References

1. 3D"http://www.dissidentvoice.org/Articles3/Jayne_Hitler-Bush.htm";
2. 3D"http://www.dissidentvoice.org"/
3. 3D"http://www.knoton.com"/
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