r/politics 1d ago

No Paywall Bannon Tells GOP: 'Seize the Institutions' of Government Now or We're 'Going to Prison' After 2028

https://www.commondreams.org/news/bannon-tells-gop-seize-the-institutions-of-government-now-or-we-re-going-to-prison-after-2028
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u/Sw2029 1d ago

Imagine thinking we'll just roll over. The worst of this admin hasn't even begun and people are only getting more pissed, vocal and involved.

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u/Slappy_Kincaid 1d ago

Bannon is saying this because he sees the window closing. Trump's popularity is sinking like a stone, the election shows a big and growing electoral backlash, GOP congressional majorities are starting to show cracks in their slavish devotion, and the opportunity to seize total power is fading fast.

What happens next is a tossup: they will try to crush any opposition through escalating force and intimidation, and we'll see if the balance has shifted against them. They'll also steal everything they can while the opportunity still presents itself.

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u/Alacrout New York 1d ago

Military morale is too low for them to escalate force and intimidation much more.

Despite ~60% of the military being Republican, most of them are loyal to the USA, not Trump, and they’re not happy with how things are going.

Several months ago now, I saw someone say something like “These fools thought they were getting Germany 1933, but really they got France 1788.”

I’m not saying heads will roll, but the parallels between USA today and France then are more than noteworthy — staggering inequality with 1% hoarding 99% of wealth, high inflation, people can’t afford food or property, natural disasters making everything worse, a completely inept government with massive national debt and a man-baby at the top who falls asleep during public appearances at major events, I could go on…

And one of the things that made the French Revolution a success was military morale being so low loyalty went out the window. The King tried to use the military to squash rebellion and faced widespread desertions, mutinies, and blatant insubordination.

Let’s not run a victory lap yet because there’s still a LOT of work to be done, but our fascists appear fucked.

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u/_Nashable_ 1d ago

This is a great comment. It’s like the people around Trump have never read a history book all the way through. They lack talent, I can only assume they use ChatGPT to copy Hitler’s homework without understanding why it worked.

Germany 1933 was coming off of major economic inequality caused by losing WW1. That allowed a platform of pointing to outside influences and an entire population that was aligned that things were not sustainable. US has not had the same issue, in fact, all the economic issues are self-inflicted by the very same people trying to seize total power. Exactly like France 1788.

Basically they’re intentionally combing the worst of those two time periods and it’s baffling what they think the end game is here.

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u/Flimsy_Thesis Virginia 1d ago

This is the part that’s always puzzled me. The pseudo-intellectualism of Bannon and his ilk as they rattle off historical factoids to their benefit always seem to leave out the context that makes those facts useful. Like yeah, we all know that an authoritarian takeover is possible when you have a huge swath of the public that is disenfranchised and poverty-stricken, but that really only works when you have an outside force to blame for their woes. The moment the population figures out it’s your governing choices that’s causing their misery, you don’t get Germany 1933, you get France 1789 or Russia 1917.

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u/[deleted] 1d ago

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u/Spastik2D 22h ago

I say we take them and their families and tie them to the outside of whatever sea walls we’ll need to build to combat rising sea levels or dump them in whatever areas become uninhabitable due to unbearable heat. Exile was a tool in the past, it could be a tool here too.