The Blaze/ Tiffany Gabbay
For
roughly half of the country, or at least those who strongly following
both politics and history, the 2012 election serves as a harbinger of
the fundamental transformation expedited by Barack Obama that will,
ultimately, cause the sun to set on America and its exceptionalism.
Those who recall the not-so-distant past recognize a number
of similarities in present-day America and European countries that
ultimately succumbed to the devices of Socialism or Fascism. During his
Wednesday evening broadcast, Glenn Beck examined these similarities,
particularly as it relates to the Weimar Republic.
For those unfamiliar, the term “Weimar Republic” refers to Germany
between the years 1919 and 1933 when the country was a parliamentary
democracy, governed by a true constitution which had been drafted in
the city of Weimar. While the Weimar Constitution technically survived
until 1945, its last vestiges were truly snuffed out with the
installation of Adolf Hitler and his Third Reich.
Under the Weimar Republic, German citizens enjoyed rights not so
dissimilar to those found in modern-day America, including the freedom
to vote. Thus, Weimar was Germany’s first foray into the concept of
democracy. Before World War I, Germany was relatively prosperous, with a
gold-backed currency and a burgeoning manufacturing industry.
Even from the start, however, the Weimar’s days were likely numbered,
as by 1923 the country was in the throes of severe
hyperinflation. While difficult to imagine, by this time, the currency
exchange rate between the dollar and the German Mark was one trillion to one.
TheBlaze’s Becket Adams authored an informative primer Wednesday
discussing hyperinflation — what it is, how it is triggered and what its
long-term effects are. The article can be read in its entirety here.
Of course with such mind-boggling numbers, needless to say, the Republic embarked on a rapid downward trajectory.
During his program, Beck examined some of the crucial elements that
led to the collapse of the Weimar and solidified the Third Reich’s place
in history. Among them were the country’s abandonment of a gold
standard, tremendous debt and entitlements coupled with inadequate
revenue streams that ultimately led to printing money and devaluing the
nation’s currency. Soon, riots and overall societal decay. Given the
meme that had been perpetuated in Nazi propaganda painting the Jews only
as money-hoarding bankers who were robbing Germany of all its wealthy,
of course the most notable form of this societal decay was manifest
through anti-Semitism.
The rest, as they say, is history.
Watch below as Beck relives this dark chapter in history and draws some sobering comparisons to present-day U.S.:
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