America Is Rehearsing Authoritarianism In Plain Sight

Americans like to believe that tyran­ny always announces itself with jack­boots and ban­ners, that it arrives ful­ly formed, unmis­tak­able, and for­eign. That belief is com­fort­ing — and cat­a­stroph­i­cal­ly dan­ger­ous. History shows that author­i­tar­i­an­ism almost nev­er begins with a coup. It begins with nor­mal­iza­tion. With excus­es. With insti­tu­tions slow­ly repur­posed from pub­lic ser­vice into instru­ments of loy­al­ty. With cit­i­zens insist­ing, right up until the end, that “this isn’t the same thing.”

Germany in the ear­ly 1930s did not wake up one morn­ing as Nazi Germany. It slid there, step by step, as demo­c­ra­t­ic mech­a­nisms were hol­lowed out and enforce­ment arms of the state were redi­rect­ed away from law and toward obe­di­ence. What made the trans­for­ma­tion pos­si­ble was not mere­ly Adolf Hitler’s dem­a­goguery, but the will­ing­ness of exist­ing insti­tu­tions — police, courts, bureau­cra­cies, and even­tu­al­ly the mil­i­tary — to accept polit­i­cal cap­ture in the name of order.

It is pre­cise­ly this his­tor­i­cal les­son that makes cur­rent devel­op­ments in the United States so alarming.

Donald Trump does not need brown­shirts. He has some­thing far more pow­er­ful: the largest domes­tic secu­ri­ty appa­ra­tus in the world, and a polit­i­cal move­ment increas­ing­ly com­fort­able with the idea that fed­er­al pow­er should be used to pun­ish ene­mies rather than serve the law.


The Authoritarian Playbook Is Old — and Well-Documented

The com­par­i­son to Nazi Germany is often dis­missed as hys­ter­i­cal. But the com­par­i­son is not about gas cham­bers or World War; it is about process. About how demo­c­ra­t­ic sys­tems are dis­man­tled from the inside while their forms remain intact.

The play­book is familiar:

  1. Define inter­nal ene­mies
    Authoritarian move­ments require scape­goats. In Weimar Germany, it was Jews, com­mu­nists, jour­nal­ists, and “degen­er­ates.” In Trump’s America, it is immi­grants, Muslims, jour­nal­ists, judges, civ­il ser­vants, aca­d­e­mics, pro­test­ers, and polit­i­cal oppo­nents — rou­tine­ly labeled as “ver­min,” “trai­tors,” or “the ene­my with­in.” Dehumanization is not rhetor­i­cal excess; it is a func­tion­al pre­req­ui­site for repression.

  2. Politicize law enforce­ment
    Hitler did not abol­ish the police; he cap­tured them. Trump has spent years open­ly argu­ing that fed­er­al law enforce­ment should exist to pro­tect him per­son­al­ly and pun­ish those who oppose him. His repeat­ed attacks on the FBI, DOJ, and intel­li­gence agen­cies are not demands for account­abil­i­ty — they are loy­al­ty tests. Agencies that inves­ti­gate him are “cor­rupt.” Those that serve his nar­ra­tive are praised and elevated.

  3. Weaponize selec­tive enforce­ment
    Authoritarianism does not require uni­ver­sal repres­sion — only tar­get­ed repres­sion. When immi­gra­tion enforce­ment agen­cies like ICE are framed not as neu­tral admin­is­tra­tors of law but as ide­o­log­i­cal shock troops defend­ing the nation against “inva­sion,” the door opens to abuse. The more enforce­ment is dri­ven by polit­i­cal sig­nal­ing rather than legal pro­por­tion­al­i­ty, the more it resem­bles a pri­vate army in func­tion if not in name.

  4. Threaten dis­sent with state pow­er
    Trump has repeat­ed­ly float­ed the use of fed­er­al force — up to and includ­ing the mil­i­tary — to sup­press protests, pun­ish cities, or over­ride local author­i­ty. These are not abstract mus­ings. They are tri­al bal­loons meant to test pub­lic resis­tance. In author­i­tar­i­an sys­tems, the mil­i­tary does not need to fire a shot to be effec­tive; its mere politi­cized pres­ence chills dissent.


ICE and the Danger of Personalized Power

ICE is not inher­ent­ly fas­cist. But no insti­tu­tion is immune to capture.

In author­i­tar­i­an tran­si­tions, the most dan­ger­ous agen­cies are not secret police cre­at­ed from scratch; they are exist­ing bod­ies repur­posed to serve a sin­gle leader’s polit­i­cal needs. When immi­gra­tion enforce­ment becomes a sym­bol­ic weapon — deployed to ter­ri­fy com­mu­ni­ties, per­form cru­el­ty for polit­i­cal the­ater, and sig­nal dom­i­nance — it stops being about law and starts being about power.

The dan­ger lies not only in what ICE does, but in how it is talked about. When a polit­i­cal leader prais­es bru­tal­i­ty, demands “total loy­al­ty,” and frames enforce­ment as a bat­tle against sub­hu­man ene­mies, the moral guardrails erode. Officers are encour­aged to see them­selves not as ser­vants of law but as sol­diers in an ide­o­log­i­cal war.

This is exact­ly how Germany’s police forces were trans­formed — from civ­il insti­tu­tions into enforcers of racial and polit­i­cal puri­ty — long before the Holocaust began.


The Military as a Political Threat

One of the most chill­ing aspects of Trump’s rhetoric is his repeat­ed insis­tence that he alone rep­re­sents the “real” nation, and that oppo­si­tion to him is ille­git­i­mate. This fram­ing is essen­tial to author­i­tar­i­an­ism. If the leader is the nation, then any resis­tance becomes trea­son by definition.

In this con­text, Trump’s flir­ta­tion with using the U.S. mil­i­tary for domes­tic polit­i­cal pur­pos­es is not blus­ter — it is a warn­ing sign. Democracies sur­vive because the mil­i­tary remains apo­lit­i­cal. The moment it is treat­ed as an exten­sion of a leader’s will rather than a con­sti­tu­tion­al insti­tu­tion, the repub­lic is in mor­tal danger.

Germany learned this too late. By the time the Wehrmacht real­ized it had been absorbed into a crim­i­nal polit­i­cal project, resis­tance was near­ly impossible.


It Can’t Happen Here” Is the Most Dangerous Lie

The United States is not Nazi Germany. History nev­er repeats itself exact­ly. But his­to­ry rhymes, and the rhyme scheme is unmistakable.

What mat­ters is not whether Trump has recre­at­ed the Third Reich, but whether he is fol­low­ing the same author­i­tar­i­an log­ic: loy­al­ty over law, force over con­sent, ene­mies over cit­i­zens, pow­er over accountability.

Democracy does not end when elec­tions stop. It ends when elec­tions no longer mat­ter — when the win­ner claims total immu­ni­ty, demands obe­di­ence from insti­tu­tions, and treats dis­sent as a crime.

By the time author­i­tar­i­an­ism is unde­ni­able, it is usu­al­ly irreversible.


The Moral Test of the Moment

The ques­tion fac­ing Americans is not whether com­par­isons to Nazi Germany are com­fort­able. They are not meant to be. The ques­tion is whether we rec­og­nize the warn­ing signs while there is still time to act through law­ful, demo­c­ra­t­ic means.

History does not for­give soci­eties that saw the dan­ger and chose silence because con­fronta­tion felt impo­lite or “divi­sive.” It records only whether insti­tu­tions held — - or whether they bent until they broke.

A repub­lic does not col­lapse all at once. It col­laps­es when enough peo­ple con­vince them­selves that loy­al­ty to a man is more impor­tant than loy­al­ty to the law.

And by then, it is already too late.