Seeing Echoes of 1938 in Trump Administration

Published in Providence Journal on Oct. 18, 2025

As the nation-wide “No Kings” protest looms, I write with urgency and deep concern about the growing threats to America’s democratic institutions. At this point, expressions of worry are not enough to stop our 259-year-old democratic republic from drifting toward authoritarian rule. We see attacks on voting rights, efforts to weaken the independence of the courts, court rulings being ignored, and attempts to discredit the press—warning signs that cannot be brushed aside. Finally, we will see bold, visible action take place on Oct. 18th, with protests taking place in over 1,650 communities across all the United States, the District of Columbia and International. 

It was reported that the previous “No Kings” protest in June attracted about 5 million participants. Some say that this number could double, mobilizing up to 10 million people to participate. Elected officials – at local state and federal levels should join the protest in their local communities.

During an 80-minute press event in the Oval Office to announce the federal government’s tighter control of law enforcement inside the Beltway, President Donald Trump startled many Americans with a comment suggesting that perhaps the country might “like a dictator” in the White House. He quickly added that he was not a dictator, but rather a man of “great common sense.” 

Despite Trumps denials, his actions and the tone of his speeches and social media posts stroke division in ways that resemble the stages of the Nazi’s autocratic takeover of Germany.  It’s hard to believe his denials with his behavior of undermining democratic institutions that he claims to defend.

Still, the idiom “a wolf in sheep’s clothing” comes to mind. Americans should be forewarned.

Trumps sending the National Guard into Democratic cities, without the consent of state governors, who oppose his policies, clearly is a sign of autocratic behavior.  Governors and federal and state lawmakers in these states call these actions political over reach and the weaponization of the Justice Department.

History reminds us of the danger of hesitation. In the late 1930s, as the Nazi regime consolidated power, by taking control of the Reichstag (the German parliament) and enacting legislation that significantly undermined democratic processes.  

At that time too many German leaders just stood by.  Their silence fueled violence and oppression and allowed it to grow unchecked. That tragic failure shows the cost of waiting until it is too late.

Does this not sound familiar today?

I often wonder what I would have done during Kristallnacht—the “Night of Broken Glass” in November 1938—when mobs attacked Jewish homes, synagogues, and businesses even desecrating cemeteries. Would I have stepped forward to protect my neighbor or even attempt to stop the destruction? The horror of that night was enabled not only by the Brown Shirts or SA (Sturmagteilung), SS (Schutzstaffel), local police, and ordinary German citizens who carried out the rampage but also by the many who just looked away in the face of destruction.

Today we see disturbing echoes: immigrants packed into detention centers, families torn apart, and even U.S. citizens taken by masked ICE agents without warrants. These actions weaken our nation’s constitutional protections and send a chilling message that no one’s rights are secure. Such practices do not belong in a free society and push us closer to authoritarian control.

Eighty years later, I have the opportunity to raise my voice, to sound the alarm, to draw the similarities between then and now. The responsibility to resist does not rest solely on the shoulders of elected officials, but also with citizens who can no longer remain silent. This is our time to defend our constitutional democracy with courage and clarity. Future generations will remember whether we stood firm—or stood by and watched.

 Albert Einstein so aptly observed: “The world will not be destroyed by those who do evil, but by those who watch them without doing anything.”

The millions of Americans participating in the “No Kings” protest have united to resist authoritarianism and defend our democracy. Will you join this movement, or will you remain silent.