
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Over the last few weeks, the Trump administration has explicitly or implicitly borrowed from the Nazi tradition on social media.
Specific passages or iconography from the Third Reich have been repurposed in the context of the government’s own legislative program today. The adoption of these extreme symbols, dog whistles and phrases is part of a re-mainstreaming of fascist and Nazi ideas more broadly.
Ali Breland, a staff writer at The Atlantic, explains why he sees it as part of an attempt to remake the U.S. from a country defined by ideas like liberty and equality, to one defined by bloodline and heritage.
By CBC3.9
223223 ratings
Over the last few weeks, the Trump administration has explicitly or implicitly borrowed from the Nazi tradition on social media.
Specific passages or iconography from the Third Reich have been repurposed in the context of the government’s own legislative program today. The adoption of these extreme symbols, dog whistles and phrases is part of a re-mainstreaming of fascist and Nazi ideas more broadly.
Ali Breland, a staff writer at The Atlantic, explains why he sees it as part of an attempt to remake the U.S. from a country defined by ideas like liberty and equality, to one defined by bloodline and heritage.

414 Listeners

393 Listeners

111 Listeners

151 Listeners

236 Listeners

210 Listeners

207 Listeners

77 Listeners

69 Listeners

112 Listeners

87 Listeners

27 Listeners

273 Listeners

92 Listeners

116 Listeners

270 Listeners

14 Listeners

74 Listeners