BUCKNACKT'S SORDID TAWDRY BLOG
We should not be a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in an attractive & well preserved body, but rather to skid in sideways, chocolate, bier or wein in hand, body thoroughly used up, totally worn out and screaming "WHOO-HOO, WHAT A RIDE!!!!!!"
NORTON META TAG
13 April 2024
Nazi Town, USA | Full Documentary | AMERICAN EXPERIENCE | PBS 2APR24
Stormtroopers subdue a heckler on the platform at New York’s Madison Square Garden, February 20, 1939. Police who rescued and later arrested the man, whose clothing was torn from him in the struggle, identified him as Isadore Greenbaum, 26, a hotel worker. Fritz Kuhn, National Bund leader, stands on the rostrum, his back turned as he regards the struggle which interrupted his Denunciation of Jews during the Bund rally. Scenes like this have been documented at Drumpf/Trump rallies.
CONSIDERING the threat America is facing this election year from the Drumpf/Trump campaign and his neo-nazi, fascist evangelical apostate supporters this film needs to be shared with everyone across the country. Please send this link https://youtu.be/g9HmV_-EE8g to everyone you know who isn't registered to vote or doesn't want to vote for Joe Biden & Kamala Harris because they are disgusted with the administration's support for Israel's war and Israel's immoral and illegal occupation and annexation of West Bank territory. Yes the Biden / Harris ticket is the lesser of two evils but the evil that is Donald Drumpf/Trump and his supporters is much more dangerous to everyone in this country. If elected his administration will go after Muslim immigrants first, and once they are deported or imprisoned he will start on immigrants from the "shit" countries, and then American minorities, opposition political parties, librarians, intellectuals, educators, in short anyone who opposed his election. And you can be sure he will turn on his base too, by the time you realize what he is doing it will be too late.....
ANNOUNCER: The following program includes derogatory images and language in historical context for educational purposes.
0:12
Viewer discretion is advised.
0:26
♪ ♪
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NEWSREEL NARRATOR: In ever-increasing numbers, the nation's youth has been going away to camp.
0:38
This year has seen more boys and girls at camp than ever before.
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All of them have enjoyed common experiences, common adventures. ♪ ♪
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Building muscle, learning fellowship, acquiring camp spirit. ♪ ♪
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(rifle shot) ARNIE BERNSTEIN: It looked like any summer camp in America. It looked normal.
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But it wasn't normal. It was Nazi camp.
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In the 1930s, there were these camps all across the country.
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SARAH CHURCHWELL: They were indoctrinating centers. That's what they were for.
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As well as for protecting the purity and the health of your superior breed.
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HART: The camps were the creation of something called the German American Bund. The Bund's vision was an America ruled by white Christians,
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and they thought that Nazism was entirely consistent with American ideals.
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RALLY LEADER: My fellow Americans, what would George Washington think and do
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were he alive today? Would he not plead with the thinking, the loyal
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and law-abiding people, the true Christian Americans? LEAH WRIGHT RIGUEUR: The German American Bund is after power,
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they're after influence, within the very fabric of the United States.
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They want their ideas to become mainstream, and they want people to embrace those ideas.
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WILLIAM HITCHCOCK: They were against democracy. And thought that America would be a kind of star in a constellation
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of pro-Nazi governments around the world. ♪ ♪
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RIGUEUR: We assume that democracy is something that all Americans embrace.
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But in the 1930s, there were people in the United States who were ready to try something different.
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ANNOUNCER: At Liberty Mutual, we believe progress happens when people feel secure. That's why we exist-- to help people embrace today
2:58
and pursue tomorrow. ♪ Liberty, liberty, liberty ♪ ♪ Liberty ♪ Liberty Mutual Insurance is a proud sponsor
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of "American Experience."
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(crowd chanting)
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BEVERLY GAGE: In the 1930s, lots of Americans thought the whole social order was about to collapse.
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Capitalism, democracy, they were done for, and something else was going
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to have to come along to take its place. And a lot of people thought that was going to be fascism.
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SINGERS (on radio): ♪ Gave proof through the night that our flag ♪ ♪ Was still there ♪
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♪ O say does that ♪ ♪ Star-spangled banner yet wave? ♪
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♪ O'er the land ♪ ♪ Of the free... ♪
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HITCHCOCK: In the 1930s, the largest fascist group in the United States was the German American Bund.
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"Bund" simply means organization. But, fundamentally, this is an American organization.
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They believe in a pure nation. They believe in a strong nation. They believe that government
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is best when it is organized in a hierarchical way with a powerful dictator at the top, and that this would improve America.
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We have no time, nor excuse, to be idle, so march along with the Bund!
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GAGE: The popularity of the Bund showed that there were certain elements of the fascist vision
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that had real appeal in the United States. BUND SPEAKER: We have to fight for our rights!
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CHURCHWELL: When you look at American fascism in the 1920s and '30s, the outcome of German fascism
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had not yet happened and was not known. We have the benefit of hindsight,
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but Americans at the time didn't know where it was going to go.
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(crowd singing) HART: As foreign as this might seem, fascist ideology
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tapped into some deep historical realities, dark realities, in America.
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So the United States was fertile ground for groups like the German American Bund to emerge.
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GAGE: The United States in the 1920s is a place of powerful divisions.
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It is a place of deep antisemitism and it is a place that has very formal racial segregation.
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HITCHCOCK: The separation of races was something that Americans have been doing for centuries, but they've been doing it legally
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since the end of the Civil War through Jim Crow, the body of laws, as well as habits and customs,
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that kept white and Black people apart in public spaces. In fact, the whole structure of racism in America
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had broad popular support. GAGE: In the 1920s, one of the biggest organizations
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in the United States was the Ku Klux Klan, which was not only anti-Black,
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it was anti-Jew, it was anti-immigrant, and those weren't marginal ideas.
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HITCHCOCK: In 1924, five million people were in the Ku Klux Klan,
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including a couple of dozen senators and congressmen. The Klan's basic message was a combination
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of white Christian nationalism combined with family values, which was a message that was appealing to millions of people.
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STEVEN ROSS: Father Coughlin, Charles Coughlin, known as the radio priest, every week went on the air to 14 million listeners,
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basically warning the country that Jews were destroying it. COUGHLIN (over radio): We are Christian
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in so far as we believe in Christ's principle of love your neighbor as yourself.
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And with that principle, I challenge every Jew in this nation to tell me that he does not believe in it.
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(cheers and applause) ROSS: Antisemitism is rife in the United States, and at this point, it's out in the open.
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The most famous antisemite in America was probably Henry Ford.
7:28
HITCHCOCK: Henry Ford was an inventor, an extraordinary capitalist, but he used his wealth to promote
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some of the most virulent antisemitic conspiracy theories. He published a notorious book called "The International Jew,"
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and had it distributed widely around the country. Millions of people might have heard of this book,
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but never actually seen it. Well, Ford took care of that.
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CHURCHWELL: At that time, antisemitic and white supremacist ideas were supported
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by a pseudo-scientific movement that was wildly popular in Europe and in the United States called eugenics.
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What is the bearing of the laws of heredity upon human affairs? Eugenics provides the answer so far as this is known.
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Eugenics seeks to apply the known laws of heredity so as to prevent the degeneration of the race
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and improve its inborn qualities. CHURCHWELL: Eugenics said that white supremacy was biologically determined and could be proven.
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As could the identities of the inferior, you know, so-called inferior races.
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It rationalized white supremacism by apparently giving it a scientific basis.
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Laws were based on these ideas.
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RIGUEUR: In 1924, the United States passes the Johnson-Reed Act, which puts a quota system
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on people immigrating into the United States from Europe. Under this new law,
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roughly 90% of them are going to come from northern European countries;
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a.k.a., white. (man shouting commands) ROSS: All this led right wing groups
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like the German American Bund to believe that they would actually have a receptive audience in America.
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Because, look, Americans had cast themselves as a white nation. (cheers and applause) RALLY LEADER: We are decidedly not preaching
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un-Americanism or anything basically new. We have an Asiatic exclusion act,
9:36
Jim Crow laws, and a complicated system of immigration quotas differentiating even between
9:42
the various white peoples. It has then always been very much American.
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(cheers and applause) HART: The leader of the Bund
9:53
was a naturalized American citizen named Fritz Julius Kuhn. Kuhn had some bold ambitions.
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He presented himself as an American führer, and his vision was to become the absolute leader,
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the absolute dictator, of this organization he claims is going to take control of the United States.
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Let me welcome you, in the name of our local unit of the German American Bund of Brooklyn.
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And I'd like to tell you a few words about our purpose and aims. HITCHCOCK: He imagined that he was going to build
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a distinctively American version of Nazism. Because America's problem is that
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it has too many differences, it has too many races all mingled together, too many languages.
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This country can't possibly survive for a long time in such a crazy state. It should be organized, it should be disciplined,
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and it should be unified by one charismatic leader.
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HART: Kuhn's path to the United States was somewhat typical for men of his generation who had lived through World War I...
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(explosion) ...only to experience the economic ruin that Germany went through in the early 1920s.
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European society was devastated after World War I, and Germans, as the losing side of the war,
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were especially affected. You had hyperinflation.
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You had unemployed soldiers, unemployed workers, all desperate.
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Everyone was looking for a solution. (newsreel music playing)
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NEWSREEL NARRATOR (in Russian):
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♪ ♪ CHURCHWELL: A lot of people thought that communism was the answer.
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But others were very, very worried that revolutionaries were coming. That property would be abolished
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and this infection would spread. In Europe, one main ideological counter to communism was fascism.
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GAGE: Our association of fascism with the Second World War, and particularly with the Holocaust,
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isn't a set of associations that anyone had in the 1920s.
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HITCHCOCK: People looked at the fascist Italian dictator Mussolini and said, Mussolini has solved Italy's economic crisis
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by suppressing the communists, by getting rid of parliament, getting rid of divisive political parties.
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And he's basically asked Italians to trust him and his vision of a united country.
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CHURCHWELL: Fascism was a word that was coined by Mussolini to identify his political movement.
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It says that in order to reclaim the strength and the purity and the nobility of your country,
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you need to purify your nation of "the wrong people" to get back to what the nation is supposed to be.
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It's essentially a white nationalist movement, so a lot of Americans were intrigued by fascism,
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at least in its Italian form. I am very glad to be able to express my friendly feelings
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towards the American nation. My fellow citizens, who are
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working to make America great.
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ROSS: In Germany, Adolf Hitler's Nazi party is first seen as a very marginal group of thugs.
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Hitler rises to power on one promise: to save Germany.
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And to save Germany, he's going to get rid of the communists and the Jews.
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CHURCHWELL: Fritz Kuhn was involved in the early days of the Nazi party.
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He claimed that he had been part of Hitler's failed coup attempt in 1923.
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HITCHCOCK: Kuhn is emblematic of this generation of young German men who feel
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that they are the victims of the outcome of the First World War. They want unity,
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they want comradeship, but most of all, they want employment. ROSS: So in 1924, he decides to do what many other Germans do:
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leave the country and come to America. HART: German Americans and their descendants
14:10
had been in the United States for a long period of time at this point. There were actually multiple waves of German immigration to the U.S.
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BERNSTEIN: So Kuhn went to Detroit and got a job at the Henry Ford Hospital as an X-ray technician.
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It was a hospital that had a policy of no Jewish doctors.
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CHURCHWELL: It's an era of deep antisemitism, of legalized racism,
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of growing inequality across the United States. And then
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the Great Depression begins. ♪ ♪
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RIGUEUR: In October 1929, the stock market crashed with the subsequent onset of a massive depression.
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GAGE: The stock market lost about 90% of its value.
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In places where you had a largely foreign-born, industrial, working-class population,
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as many as 80% of those workers were out of work. CHURCHWELL: In the depths of the Depression,
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a great many Americans started to ask themselves whether the American experiment was failing.
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ROSS: In one poll of conservative professionals, something like a third of them said it was time
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for a revolution; some kind of change. Whether it was going to be democracy,
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whether it was going to be communism, whether it was going to be fascism,
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all these ideas were finding supporters. (cheers and applause)
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(crowd clamoring) (whistle blowing)
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RIGUEUR: The 1930s is a period that can be characterized by fear.
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Fear of the other. Fear of want.
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Fear of losing everything. ROOSEVELT: The only thing we have to fear
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is fear itself! HITCHCOCK: Franklin Roosevelt comes into the White House
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in March of 1933 in the midst of the biggest economic and social crisis since the Civil War.
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My most immediate concern is in carrying out the purposes of the great work program
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just enacted by the Congress. RIGUEUR: His solution is to introduce a series of programs that come to be known as the New Deal.
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There has not been another president that has introduced more legislation
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than Roosevelt did in his first 100 days. ♪ ♪
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CHURCHWELL: American right-wing groups were rabidly opposed to Roosevelt's New Deal,
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which they saw as a communist plot, as a redistribution of property, and began calling it "the Jew Deal"
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because they said that Roosevelt was being manipulated by Jewish financiers who were pulling the strings.
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GAGE: 1933 was also the year that Adolf Hitler came to power in Germany.
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So there was a sense not only that there was a crisis at home, but that fascism
17:37
was really beginning to take root around the world.
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HART: Hitler puts Germany on what appears to be a very successful course. Inflation is under control,
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and according to the Nazis' official figures, unemployment has all but disappeared.
17:54
Americans who see their own system in crisis are looking at fascism and Nazism
17:59
as perhaps models that could be emulated in the United States. So extremist groups pop up all over the country
18:05
inspired by what's going on in Europe.
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There was the Order of '76, there was the Black Legion, there was the Liberty League. There were the White Shirts,
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the Black Shirts, and Brown Shirts. There were the Silver Shirts. PAPERMAN: Free speech stopped by Jew riot!
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CHURCHWELL: They just proliferated. ♪ ♪
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HITCHCOCK: In its earliest expressions, fascism was thought by many Americans
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to be a suitable answer to America's problems. But there were others who opposed fascism
18:48
from the beginning. CHURCHWELL: Dorothy Thompson was one of the first female
18:54
foreign correspondents for American newspapers and was working in Europe during the rise of fascism.
19:02
She could see the danger that it posed and she was very outspoken
19:08
about it from very early on. She had the honor, I think, of being the first American foreign correspondent
19:16
to be ejected from Germany after Hitler came to power. There seems to me to be a certain misunderstanding about,
19:23
about the antisemitic end of the Hitler movement. A great many people didn't believe
19:30
that if they came to power they would carry this, carry this program out, but as a matter of fact they are doing what they have said
19:35
for 13 years that they would do if they came to power. HITCHCOCK: Another one of the great public figures of that era,
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Rabbi Stephen Wise, steps forward and says we are going to act.
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We're going to mobilize against Nazism. ROSS: Wise called for a boycott of all German products
19:57
until Hitler stopped persecuting all minorities; not just Jews, but all minorities.
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It led to a big decline in German imports. This presents a challenge to Berlin,
20:12
which is "How do we improve our reputation in the United States "while also pursuing our policies
20:18
against the Jews here in Germany?" ROSS: Rudolf Hess, the number two Nazi leader,
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was looking at the American situation and saying, "How are we going to offset this?" And so he helped create the Friends of New Germany.
20:32
NEWSREEL NARRATOR: The membership card in the Friends of the New Germany. Note the American emblem, and over it the Nazi swastika.
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ROSS: People join the Friends of New Germany in the same way you would join the Masons, or the Odd Fellows, or the Elks.
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HITCHCOCK: So Kuhn joins the Friends of New Germany and becomes the head of the Midwest district.
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ROSS: It was one thing for Americans to say, well, Hitler's doing great things for Germany,
20:58
um, from a distance. But Americans didn't actually like
21:03
seeing swastikas in their neighborhoods. This began to turn American public opinion
21:11
against the Friends of New Germany and against the Nazis.
21:19
BERNSTEIN: In the 1930s, there was a very strong Jewish presence in the mafia,
21:24
and they had an army of Jewish prizefighters, guys who knew how to work their fists.
21:31
ROSS: At the time, about a third of professional boxers were Jewish.
21:37
And many of those Jewish boxers were very proud of their heritage and they had Stars of David on their trunks.
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BERNSTEIN: They saw it as their duty to take on the Friends of New Germany.
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In New Jersey, this army of boxers was called the Minutemen-- because they could be there in a minute.
21:58
ROSS: They would burst into open meetings of the Friends of New Germany
22:04
and they would beat the stuffing out of them. In Newark, New Jersey,
22:10
they were so angry there was a massive brawl that lasted for hours until the police were able to get it under control.
22:19
The government in Berlin starts to feel that it's more of a problem than it is an asset, and in late 1935
22:26
they disband the organization. The Friends of New Germany was no more, and Fritz Kuhn saw his opportunity, and seized it.
22:35
He said, you know, we have to re-form this group. We have an infrastructure already in place
22:40
with chapters all over the country. HITCHCOCK: So in early 1936,
22:47
Fritz Kuhn founds the German American Bund. And Kuhn was trying to sell it as an American organization.
22:54
ROSS: What you begin to see in 1936 with the creation of the Bund
23:00
is what I would call the beginning of star-spangled fascism. The German American Bund is a patriotic,
23:07
law-abiding and honor-bound fighting organization of loyal Americans of German extraction,
23:14
fighting to exterminate Jewish, international, atheistic Bolshevism.
23:20
RIGUEUR: The German American Bund starts very deliberately cloaking itself in the explicit symbols of Americanness--
23:29
George Washington, the American flag.
23:35
HART: You have these bizarre mixtures of American symbols with the symbols of Nazism.
23:41
People dressed as Minutemen from the American Revolution standing on stage next to these Bund members
23:46
in their own uniforms, or a man dressed as a Native American chief.
23:54
HITCHCOCK: Kuhn is trying to change the conversation a little bit by saying, "You can be a patriotic American and you can be proud of the Nazi government as well."
24:02
So he is going to try to square the circle, which is to make Americans and American citizens
24:08
a part of an organization that is basically designed to propagate Nazism. (people chattering)
24:15
ROSS: The National Bund establishes its headquarters on the Upper East Side of Manhattan
24:21
in the Yorkville neighborhood. German was spoken in the streets.
24:27
The shops had signs in German. If you walked through Yorkville in 1936,
24:33
you could think you were in a German city. The Bund also had a fairly extensive business arm.
24:40
New York City had beer halls where its members would gather, and these were often owned and operated by the Bund.
24:47
(singing in German)
24:54
(singing continues) CHURCHWELL: Nationally,
24:59
most German Americans were not supporters of the Bund, but the German American Bund had a great presence in New York,
25:08
so it was deliberately provocative for the Jewish community because they were literally holding parades
25:14
in front of Jewish people's homes. We are American citizens
25:20
and we demand our rights to be American citizens! ROSS: Like Hitler, Kuhn wanted to establish
25:27
a Reich that would last for a thousand years. So he gets to work expanding the group.
25:34
HITCHCOCK: In 1936 and '37, the Bund has a period of real growth.
25:40
There were three big districts of the Bund in America, but there were 45 regional districts
25:45
and then 80 smaller little branches. They're all over the place in the West Coast, Midwest, and East.
25:52
HART: At its peak, the Bund attracts as many as 100,000 members. And there were thousands of people
25:57
who were also sympathetic to the Bund who were attending its events.
26:03
RIGUEUR: One of the best ways to get people on board is to target their children.
26:08
People can say, "Well, this is a good organization. "It teaches them about the beauty of nature. "It teaches them vital skills in life.
26:15
"And it's family friendly and family oriented. "By the way, we hate Jews, we hate Blacks, we hate Catholics."
26:23
(singing in German)
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(singing in German continues)
26:45
(song ends) CHURCHWELL: You get kids out of unhealthy city environments
26:52
and put them into these summer camps. It's all about making sure that your superior breed
26:57
is kept separate from pollutants-- people of inferior races and ethnicities.
27:03
HART: Children are essential to the future of the movement. They have to be physically primed to become
27:10
the leaders of this Nazi Reich. So there was a camp in upstate New York, Milwaukee, Chicago,
27:16
Los Angeles, San Francisco, the Pacific Northwest. There were camps located all over the country.
27:25
♪ ♪ BERNSTEIN: The grand opening for Camp Norland
27:30
was July 18, 1937, and it was an event to be seen.
27:36
♪ ♪ There were more than 10,000 people there.
27:41
And this was in New Jersey, 60 miles outside of Manhattan.
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♪ ♪ MAN (over speaker): I call upon all of you to join us in the battle
27:56
for a socially just, financially independent,
28:03
and Jew-free America.
28:10
HITCHCOCK: The biggest camp that the Bund built was Camp Siegfried, in Yaphank, Long Island.
28:18
It was a destination for lots of people from the New York area, not just during summer camp, but for rallies and picnics
28:25
and gatherings throughout the year. BERNSTEIN: There was a train every Friday
28:31
direct from Penn Station to Long Island called "The Siegfried Special,"
28:36
and it would be packed with people getting away for the weekend. ♪ ♪
28:41
HITCHCOCK: Camp Siegfried was so popular, the Bund created a front organization called the German American Settlement League,
28:48
which bought property so that they could establish, not only camps, but actual planned communities.
28:55
And at Yaphank, they did build a German-American settlement called German Gardens.
29:02
CHURCHWELL: The town that they set up named streets on Long Island after prominent Nazis.
29:08
So there was Adolf Hitler Street and there was Goering Street. They had laws on the books restricting ownership.
29:17
So, unsurprisingly, this community was not willing to admit Jewish homeowners.
29:24
♪ ♪ HART: It was designed around the idea of creating an idealized sort of Nazi town.
29:30
♪ ♪ In the late summer of 1936, President Roosevelt calls J. Edgar Hoover,
29:38
who's the head of the FBI, asking him to look into the activities
29:44
of Nazis in the United States. One of the first things
29:49
that the FBI sets out to investigate is the German American Bund.
a thousand-page report which really lays out some of the more outrageous aspects of this organization.
30:11
The pro-Nazi imagery, the pro-Hitler sentiments, the antisemitism-- all of it's there,
30:19
but Hoover was not terribly interested in taking this on.
30:25
Why is Hoover sitting on his hands doing nothing with the Nazi fascist threat?
30:32
The answer is actually pretty simple. It's because he was a rabid anti-communist.
30:39
HOOVER: The Communist Party of the United States is not a political party. It is a way of life,
30:45
an evil and malignant way of life. HITCHCOCK: Like many Americans, Hoover thought "Well, I don't really like fascism,
30:52
but I do like its anti-communist credentials." So, people tolerated organizations like the German American Bund
30:58
that were explicitly anti-communist. RALLY LEADER: We stand beside you as Christian soldiers in your valiant fight against Jewish communism.
31:05
(applause) There is a movement to stop hate speech.
31:11
And, in fact, the New Jersey legislature passes the race libel law.
31:16
You can't libel somebody because of their race, their religion, their color.
31:24
HART: This is, in some ways, a novel concept in law. The problem with this is that groups
31:29
like the ACLU immediately become involved and raise the obvious constitutional objection of how can you possibly outlaw speech
31:36
that is offensive to a particular group. For all of the kind of horror
31:43
of the idea of pro-Nazi forces acting in the United States, it's really not clear that they were breaking
31:51
any particular federal law that existed at that point by engaging in the activities they were engaged in.
32:00
HART: Ultimately, the big test for the race libel law comes because of Camp Nordland, the German American Bund camp in the state of New Jersey,
32:07
because of speeches that were defamatory towards the Jewish community. RALLY LEADER: We know that the Jew is most concerned
32:14
with maintaining his stranglehold on the financial systems of the world. (crowd cheering)
32:21
HART: Ultimately, there is a conviction of nine Bund members for violating the race libel law, but that's struck down
32:28
by the New Jersey State Supreme Court. In the end, the ACLU publishes a pamphlet
32:33
defending their decision to defend the free speech of Nazis.
32:39
RIGUEUR: This is the double-edged sword of the First Amendment. It is a fundamental American right to be allowed
32:45
to say horrible things, but the protection of the right to be hateful
32:50
is what allows these ideas to proliferate. ♪ ♪
33:02
(car horns honking) HITCHCOCK: In early 1937, a Chicago newspaper, the "Chicago Daily Times,"
33:10
decides it's going to send reporters incognito into the world of the German American Bund.
33:15
♪ ♪ BERNSTEIN: John and James Metcalfe were brothers, born in Germany,
33:20
were both reporters for the "Chicago Daily Times." They were assigned to go undercover
33:26
and infiltrate the Bund. They had German birth certificates and they could speak German.
33:32
So they had the perfect credentials. HITCHCOCK: John had a little toothbrush mustache,
33:37
if that might be a little familiar, and looked the part.
33:42
He approaches the Bund headquarters in New York and works his way into the organization.
33:48
Metcalfe goes by an alias, Helmut Oberwinder, and very quickly ingratiates himself with Fritz Kuhn.
33:55
♪ ♪ HART: Because he's willing to dedicate himself to the cause,
34:02
within just a few months, John Metcalfe becomes Kuhn's right-hand man. And Kuhn dispatches Metcalfe as a personal emissary
34:10
to local and regional Bund chapters. So Metcalfe travels all over the country, visiting with various Bund leaders.
34:18
And, all along the way, he's filing reports back to his paper. Everything from how a local Bund chapter
34:26
might be completely inept-- they were more interested in having drinking parties than politics-- to Bund leaders scoffing at Kuhn's authority,
34:35
all the way to individual rank and file members talking about their ambitions to actually overthrow the U.S. government
34:40
and establish a Nazi dictatorship.
34:47
♪ ♪ HITCHCOCK: In September of 1937,
34:55
the "Chicago Daily Times" drops the bomb. They publish a series of articles
35:01
on the German American Bund and they don't hold back. ♪ ♪
35:15
ROSS: These stories came out one after the other. These exposés of how
35:20
the Nazis in America are trying to undermine the American people,
35:26
the American government, and the American way of life. HART: The Metcalfes heard whispers
35:31
inside the Bund's inner circle of something called Der Tag, which translates to "the day."
35:38
The day when the Bund believes there will be a fascist revolution in the United States.
35:44
BERNSTEIN: This would be the day that there would be an insurrection. They would take over the United States government, and the swastika would fly above the Capitol.
35:55
The Metcalfe scoop really galvanizes public opinion against the Bund, and Congress begins to enter the discourse
36:01
about what should be done about subversive groups in the United States. Congressman Martin Dies, Jr. becomes the chairman
36:07
of what will come to be called the House Un-American Activities Committee, or HUAC. Tactics of communists, Nazis, and fascists
36:15
are now endangering this country. America must wake up to its danger.
36:21
HUAC PROSECUTOR: To whom were you sending these letters? I sent that to a list of approximately 150 people.
36:29
GAGE: HUAC was very much in the mindset that there were an array of
36:34
subversive organizations that needed to be investigated, and that a lot of them actually were on the right.
36:42
HART: John Metcalfe was the first witness called before the committee. And there's incredible images of him giving Martin Dies
36:47
and the committee the Nazi salute from the witness table, and then he showed them photos
36:52
of how the Bund was preparing some sort of military coup.
36:58
ROSS: What were we going to be as a nation? Because what the Bund wanted America to be
37:04
was a nation that was proud of its white Aryan past. But there were people who stood up for the right cause,
37:12
who stood up for what we think of as American ideals.
37:17
CHURCHWELL: Dorothy Thompson had interviewed Hitler in 1931, and was very clear about the risks that he posed,
37:26
and not just to Europe. THOMPSON: The classical end of all pure democracy
37:33
is the popular tyrant. And incidentally, all successful tyrants throughout history
37:39
have been popular idols. CHURCHWELL: In 1938 alone, she gave more than 50 speeches
37:45
about the importance of democracy and fighting fascism. And her radio broadcasts
37:51
reached more than five million people. THOMPSON: The tyrant, said Machiavelli,
37:56
must pose as the friend of the people, as their champion against the rich and aristocratic,
38:03
as the incorporation of the people's will. They must be made to feel that through him,
38:09
in his person, they are actually ruling. This was the formula of Caesar,
38:16
and it's the formula of Stalin, Mussolini, and Hitler.
38:21
Her point was, "Never be complacent." Her point was, "This can happen anywhere,
38:27
and you have to be on your guard." ♪ ♪
38:32
ROSS: On November 9, 1938, in hundreds of cities across Germany,
38:38
we have Kristallnacht-- "Night of the Broken Glass." ♪ ♪ (crowd clamoring)
38:47
(glass shattering)
38:53
For two nights, Jewish businesses are destroyed. ♪ ♪
39:01
Their homes ransacked. ♪ ♪
39:07
Synagogues are burned. ♪ ♪
39:14
30,000 Jewish men are rounded up and sent to concentration camps.
39:22
HITCHCOCK: Americans now knew that Nazi Germany wasn't just a normal country with a fascist dictator.
39:30
It was a malevolent force. HART: In the aftermath of Kristallnacht,
39:35
the Bund's tactics are very provocative in the eyes of most Americans. Hut!
39:41
HART: But rather than disappear from the public eye, the German American Bund decides on mass provocation.
39:54
HITCHCOCK: By the end of 1938, the Bund made it clear that what they wanted to do was to show "That we are popular,
40:02
"that we are relevant, "that we're fulfilling our ambition "of making German Americans into
40:08
"good Nazis and Americans at the same time. How can we do that? Let's have a rally." ♪ ♪
40:19
BERNSTEIN: People appealed to Mayor LaGuardia, and said, "How can you allow this to happen?" LaGuardia said they have every right to do it,
40:26
and he wasn't going to stand in the way. It was the First Amendment.
40:31
ROSS: In those days, just like today, New York City had the largest Jewish population in America.
40:39
Of course there had been fascist demonstrations before all around the country, but the Bund was going to Madison Square Garden
40:47
in the center of the Jewish-American world. (indistinct chatter)
40:52
BERNSTEIN: Over 20,000 Bundists were admitted inside the Garden that night. Outside were tens of thousands of anti-Bundists
41:02
wanting to get inside. (indistinct shouting) (drum and bugle corps marching)
41:22
(drumming continues)
41:31
MAN: O.D.s. Attention! I pledge undivided allegiance
41:41
to the flag of the United States of America
41:46
and the Republic for which it stands, one nation, indivisible,
41:53
with liberty and justice for all. (applause)
41:59
HART: Because of the visibility of this event, there had been a sort of general assumption that the Bund speakers
42:04
would refrain from their most hateful speech, especially against Jews. But that proves not to be the case.
42:11
GERHARD KUNZE: The Jew is a thousand times more dangerous to us than all the others by reason of his parasitic nature.
42:18
(cheers and applause) CHURCHWELL: Also present that night was the indomitable Dorothy Thompson,
42:26
who was furious that this rally was taking place. And amidst 22,000 fascists,
42:33
she started shouting "Bunk!" BERNSTEIN: Dorothy Thompson didn't hold anything back.
42:39
She went there to heckle. She went there to cause a fuss. (crowd shouting)
42:49
CHURCHWELL: There is footage of Dorothy being hustled out.
42:54
Bodily thrown out of Madison Square Garden.
42:59
(car horns honking) ROSS: Inside the Garden,
43:06
the final speaker is Fritz Kuhn himself. KUNZE: We love him for the enemies he has made.
43:14
Ladies and gentlemen, Mr. Fritz Kuhn. (cheers and applause)
43:30
KUHN: Ladies and gentlemen, fellow Americans, American patriots.
43:36
If you ask what we're actively fighting for under our charter--
43:43
first, a socially just, white gentile-ruled United States.
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