What makes you say that? Because the coup in 23' failed when Hitler wasn't nearly as well known and popular as in 33'?
Don't make the mistake of thinking what was possible in a 'democracy' a hundred years ago is possible today. The only thing elections are good for is to expose what a monumental scam the system is. You can't work within a system to change the system. Not even Hitler did that. He abolished the system.
And you're making the mistake of thinking that the right would come out on top.
In America, there is no question, the right would win.
In Europe... I don't take that as a given. Let's do a hypothetical. Suppose the Dutch succeed in getting a far right government, pull out of the Schengen area, and start mass deporting immigrants.
You're asking me to believe two things:
That the Germans WON'T assemble an EU army and invade them Donetsk style.
That there won't be a significant fifth column of Dutch who welcome them (again, Donetsk style).
The problem in Europe is that the far right is not an outright majority, but rather barely a plurality. In the US, the right as both enormous real power and enormous territorial dominance; the left is divided in a few city-state enclaves, but two thirds of the states have bright red, outright majority conservative governments. We've won before we've started, we're just telling California and New York to get on with it and secede already.
That isn't the case in Europe. The only territorial concentration of the far right is East Germany.
What makes you say that? Because the coup in 23' failed when Hitler wasn't nearly as well known and popular as in 33'?
Don't make the mistake of thinking what was possible in a 'democracy' a hundred years ago is possible today. The only thing elections are good for is to expose what a monumental scam the system is. You can't work within a system to change the system. Not even Hitler did that. He abolished the system.
And you're making the mistake of thinking that the right would come out on top.
In America, there is no question, the right would win.
In Europe... I don't take that as a given. Let's do a hypothetical. Suppose the Dutch succeed in getting a far right government, pull out of the Schengen area, and start mass deporting immigrants.
You're asking me to believe two things:
The problem in Europe is that the far right is not an outright majority, but rather barely a plurality. In the US, the right as both enormous real power and enormous territorial dominance; the left is divided in a few city-state enclaves, but two thirds of the states have bright red, outright majority conservative governments. We've won before we've started, we're just telling California and New York to get on with it and secede already.
That isn't the case in Europe. The only territorial concentration of the far right is East Germany.