Godwin’s Law and the Kaiser Korollary 0
Richard Cohen thinks that those who would compare Donald Trump to Hitler, amongst other dictators of the past and present, are missing the mark. He suggests that a different German leader is a more apt comparison.
That war, more than the greater one that followed, continues to intrigue historians because its cause is so hard to isolate. By Armistice Day, four empires were no more, about 17 million people were dead and the stage was set for a further calamity. But what started it? There are many explanations, but one factor, certainly, was the bellicosity and idiocy of the German kaiser.
Anyone who turns to Christopher Clark’s book about the run-up to WWI, “The Sleepwalkers,” will recognize a Trump-like figure. The kaiser was a tweeter before his time, firing off letters, telegrams and orders without pausing to wonder about contradictions or policy or even common sense. (He demanded plans for invasions of Cuba, Puerto Rico and New York.)
Afterthought:
Cohen’s comparison gives me no comfort.