They called him everything they call Trump, and everything they called Goldwater, because it's the same anti-establishment revolution at work.
Goldwater never got elected president. Reagan was subverted in his second term. Trump was subverted in his first term and still managed major success.
That's really the strange thing here. Trump is fighting a uni-party as aggressive as the one Goldwater faced, but he's been pushing on the level of success that Reagan had.
I remember seeing a stat before that literally every Republican candidate for president has been compared to Hitler or saying that they would empower "far right" forces since Wendell Willkie in 1940. The only exception being Eisenhower, and only because it would probably be a bridge to far for even the most smooth brained of normie to believe the guy who defeated Hitler actually liked him.
Yeah, you actually couldn't call people Nazis during the post-war period. Nazis were so viscerally hated in the US by the 50's that it would have been understood to be fighting words. You'd actually get physically beaten up for it. The early (post-war) American National Socialists would get attacked pretty regularly for showing swastikas or the like off in public.
Calling Dwight D. Eisenhower a Nazi? Someone's probably gonna stab you. You literally can't talk shit about the president like that as a social taboo.
My dad was telling me that in the 80 election they painted him a dangerous.
They called him everything they call Trump, and everything they called Goldwater, because it's the same anti-establishment revolution at work.
Goldwater never got elected president. Reagan was subverted in his second term. Trump was subverted in his first term and still managed major success.
That's really the strange thing here. Trump is fighting a uni-party as aggressive as the one Goldwater faced, but he's been pushing on the level of success that Reagan had.
I remember seeing a stat before that literally every Republican candidate for president has been compared to Hitler or saying that they would empower "far right" forces since Wendell Willkie in 1940. The only exception being Eisenhower, and only because it would probably be a bridge to far for even the most smooth brained of normie to believe the guy who defeated Hitler actually liked him.
Yeah, you actually couldn't call people Nazis during the post-war period. Nazis were so viscerally hated in the US by the 50's that it would have been understood to be fighting words. You'd actually get physically beaten up for it. The early (post-war) American National Socialists would get attacked pretty regularly for showing swastikas or the like off in public.
Calling Dwight D. Eisenhower a Nazi? Someone's probably gonna stab you. You literally can't talk shit about the president like that as a social taboo.