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Joyce Vance published this on her substack this am:
Donald Trump wants to make domestic terrorists out of everyone who is standing up for democracy in this moment. But really, that’s a badge of honor.
We’re in this together,
Joyce
History did not fall apart in Germany with a single shock. It collapsed through fear dressed up as law, silence sold as order, and people convincing themselves the danger was not real yet. I traced exactly how it unfolded in Nazi Germany and why the same pattern is unfolding here right now.
You have probably heard people ask how something so horrific ever took hold in Germany. You may have wondered how ordinary people failed to stop it. You may have assumed warning signs would feel obvious or dramatic. History shows something far more unsettling.
The policies that led to catastrophe began fast, stayed legal, and wrapped themselves in the language of order and stability. Millions lived inside the process without recognizing where it led.
Here is what happened, step by step, and why so many people stayed silent.
When Nazi policies took hold
Nazi rule did not creep in decades after Adolf Hitler rose to power. The shift began the moment he became Chancellor of Germany on January 30, 1933. From the outside, government still looked familiar. From the inside, rights vanished quickly.
The 1933 Reichstag Building Fire
One month later, in February 1933, the Reichstag building burned. The government blamed enemies of the state. Officials used fear to push emergency decrees that wiped out basic freedoms. Speech, assembly, privacy, and due process disappeared almost overnight. Police gained sweeping powers. Arrests followed.
Today, I see Donald Trump’s immigration campaign as his burning Reichstag building, a manufactured emergency used to unlock fear and demand obedience. Fear sits at the center of the message. He names enemies and stretches the label until it reaches anyone who refuses loyalty to his agenda. Immigrants, judges, journalists, protesters, and political opponents fall into one target list. Emergency language fills speeches and posts.
He talks about invasion, internal threats, and national survival. He calls for expanded enforcement powers, mass removals, surveillance, and punishment framed as protection. Due process weakens through rhetoric treating disagreement as disloyalty. Speech chills when people fear being targeted. Assembly draws suspicion. Privacy erodes under promises of security. Arrests and investigations turn into signals meant to warn others.
This is how fear clears the path. This is how authority demands compliance. This is how a modern Reichstag moment unfolds without flames, using words to justify power and pressure people into silence.
1933 Enabling Act
In March 1933, the Enabling Act passed. Parliament handed Hitler the authority to rule without legislative approval. The vote followed intimidation, arrests, and threats. Democracy ended through a legal vote. Courts remained open. Laws still carried official seals. Power concentrated in one place.
A modern version of the Enabling Act is playing out right now through the Mike Johnson and a MAGA controlled Republican Congress that refuses to act as a coequal branch of government. Legislative power no longer checks executive power. Oversight fades through loyalty, fear of retaliation, and political obedience. Congress hands authority to Donald Trump by choosing silence, delay, and procedural cover instead of accountability.
Sure, laws still pass and votes still happen. But they help those in power, not you and me. Hearings exist without teeth. The Constitution remains on paper while its guardrails weaken in practice. Courts stay open and rulings carry official seals.
The Supreme Court steps away from its duty to protect all Americans and instead shields presidential power and favored interests. Judicial restraint turns into judicial permission. Separation of powers collapses without a formal repeal. Power concentrates through inaction. Democracy narrows through compliance. This is how control centralizes without announcing itself. This is how a system looks intact while its core function disappears.
The 1933-34 Coordination
From 1933 through 1934, the German regime forced society into line through a process known as coordination. Independent trade unions dissolved. Political parties shut down. Newspapers fell under state control. Judges aligned rulings with party goals. Teachers taught approved ideas. Dissenters lost jobs or freedom.
The same coordination is at work today through different players and the same result. Power once held by trade unions now sits with billionaires and their corporations, amplified by unlimited political spending after Citizens United. Wealth buys access, silence, and control.
Major television networks, newspapers, platforms, and algorithms fall under ownership or pressure from people whose interests align with Donald Trump. News coverage bends through omission, repetition, and reward.
Trump appointed judges issue rulings that protect his power and favor corporate allies while ordinary Americans absorb the cost. What students read and learn narrows as the Trump administration pressures schools and reshapes curricula. Public history disappears as exhibits vanish from the White House and museums. Government websites rewrite events, blur facts, and recast January 6 as something harmless or misunderstood.
Universities face threats and investigations. Law firms face retaliation. Careers end in the public and private sectors when loyalty tests replace professional judgment. This is how society lines up without formal bans. This is how power teaches obedience. This is how control spreads when money, media, courts, and education move in the same direction.
The 1935 Nuremberg Laws
In 1935, the Nuremberg Laws stripped Jewish Germans of citizenship and rights. Discrimination moved from social pressure into written law. Marriage bans and racial definitions entered the legal code. Everyday life changed in visible ways that officials described as orderly and necessary.
Right now, citizenship and belonging narrow through executive orders, agency rules, and court approved policies that decide who counts and who does not. Immigration status becomes a tool to strip people of rights tied to work, travel, health care, family unity, and legal protection. Birthright citizenship faces open attack. Naturalized Americans hear leaders question their loyalty. Muslim, Latino, Black, LGBTQ, and political dissenting communities feel the weight of rules written to target them without saying their names.
Databases, watchlists, registries, and expanded enforcement define people by category instead of conduct. Family separation reappears as policy. Marriage rights and reproductive choices weaken through rulings and regulations framed as moral order. Daily life shifts in visible ways as people lose jobs, benefits, safety, and status through paperwork signed in offices far from public view. Officials describe each step as lawful, orderly, and necessary, but in truth, this is how discrimination hardens. This is how identity becomes a legal condition. This is how rights disappear without announcing their end.
1938 Kristallnacht
In November 1938, Kristallnacht erupted across Germany. Synagogues burned. Jewish businesses shattered. Homes were destroyed. Police stood aside. Thousands were arrested. Violence no longer hid behind paperwork. The state openly targeted a group of people.
Today I see a different modern kind of Kristallnacht unfolding in plain sight across the United States. Antisemitism rises openly at rallies, online, and in daily life, fed by rhetoric that normalizes hate and treats threats as noise. Masked men in full body armor move through American streets with weapons, authority, and protection, conducting raids, arrests, and show of force operations that terrify communities. United States citizens get swept up, detained, injured, and killed during enforcement actions framed as security.
Homes get entered without warrants. Businesses get disrupted. Families watch loved ones taken away. Violence no longer hides behind paperwork or court filings. The state targets groups through enforcement patterns, public language, and selective outrage. Fear becomes visible. Harm becomes public. Power stops pretending. This is what happens when hatred gains cover, when force replaces restraint, and when a government decides some people exist outside protection.
By the time war began in 1939, Germany had lived under normalized repression for six years. Each step felt smaller than the outcome. Each step prepared the next.
Today, because of the internet and social media, things happen much more quickly. The tools to mislead and force everyone to step in line are more effective. Trump and the powerful groups that support him do not need six years to take democracy down. All they need is for MAGA Republicans to win this year’s midterms and for Trump to remain in office for three more years.
Why people did not stop it
This history raises a painful question. Why did so many people fail to act? The answer lives in human behavior more than ignorance.
First, everything moved in small steps. No announcement warned of moral collapse. Each change felt temporary or necessary. Each new rule followed another already accepted. People adapted day by day.
Second, economic fear shaped choices. Germany suffered from inflation, unemployment, and national humiliation after World War One. Promises of stability felt urgent. Many accepted harsh policies in exchange for relief.
Third, propaganda filled daily life. State messaging blamed minorities and political opponents for social problems. Newspapers, radio, schools, and public events repeated the same story. Repetition shaped belief. Silence followed.
Fourth, legality disguised harm. Decrees passed through courts and legislatures. Official stamps created comfort. Many believed law defined morality. When injustice wears legal clothing, resistance weakens.
Fifth, fear enforced obedience. The government arrested journalists, professors, clergy, and political critics early. Public punishment sent a message. Speaking out risked prison or worse. Survival shaped behavior.
Sixth, social pressure closed ranks. Neighbors joined the party. Employers demanded loyalty. Institutions echoed the same language. Standing alone felt dangerous. Belonging offered safety.
Seventh, distance numbed conscience. Bureaucratic language hid suffering. Victims became categories. Harm felt abstract. Looking away felt easier than confronting reality.
Does this sound uncomfortably familiar?
The lesson history leaves you
The most disturbing truth lives here. This story of Nazi Germany did not rely on monsters alone. Ordinary people carried out roles. Fear, conformity, and rationalization did the work. Hope that events would settle down kept many quiet.
Authoritarian systems grow through laws, routines, and participation. They thrive when silence spreads. By the time consequences feel undeniable, resistance carries a high price.
I’m sharing this not to shame people from the past. I’m writing this to speak to you now. The warning does not arrive with alarms. The warning arrives through paperwork, normalized language, and daily adjustments.
Pay attention to small changes. Pay attention to fear used as a tool. Pay attention when legality replaces morality. History shows where those roads lead.
Staying awake matters. Speaking early matters. The past leaves a clear message. Waiting feels safe until it no longer is.
Mitch Jackson, Esq.


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