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Opinion

You might hate Trump but it’s wrong to compare him to Hitler

To express revulsion at Trump, the language used to describe Nazi Germany is cavalierly appropriated

July 25, 2024 07:51
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A placard during a protest outside the US Embassy in London in November 2016 after Trump's election victory. (Photo by BEN STANSALL/AFP via Getty Images)
3 min read

Even though it seems like there’s an almost continuous churn of big world events at the moment, the bullet snicking President Trump’s ear felt uniquely shocking. I sensed that strange vibration you get with moments of lasting global significance, when you’re not just watching future footnotes burst into existence but whole shelves of history books.

Yet for me, the truly unforgettable aspect was what I heard the following morning. Among the serious voices analysing the impact of that world-shifting bullet, there were a handful expressing – guardedly but genuinely – a real regret that the would-be assassin had failed.

A few of the people saying this were friends of mine, and hearing it caused me a sadness deep down in my very soul.

Because these friends are otherwise bright and considerate people. Many are activists solidly invested in any number of social justice causes, the kind who’d view themselves as being on “the right side of history”. But, it seems, underneath the ideals, their bitter repugnance for Trump has been growing like a foul weed, until it twisted all their principles and they find themselves actually wishing a man had been shot in the head. They saw his rhetoric, his bragging cruelties and nonchalant abuses and felt a hatred that simply overrode their basic moral consciousness.