There is a new meme making the rounds on Twitter. It is a quote from a WWII psychological profile of Adolf Hitler commissioned by the Office of Strategic Services, forerunner of the CIA. The quote says, “His primary rules were: never allow the public to cool off; never admit a fault or wrong; never concede that there may be some good in your enemy; never leave room for alternatives; never accept blame; concentrate on one enemy at a time and blame him for everything that goes wrong; people will believe a big lie sooner than a little one; and if you repeat it frequently enough people will sooner or later believe it.”
Obviously, the quote has gone viral because many people believe it applies as easily to Donald Trump as it does to Der Fuhrer. But a close reading of the full OSS report, “A Psychological Analysis of Adolf Hitler: His Life and Legend,” reveals many more similarities between the Nazi dictator and America’s wannabe fuhrer—so many that one could believe they were one and the same man.
Family: Both Hitler and Trump had authoritarian fathers. Alois Hitler was described by Hitler’s British-born nephew, William Patrick Hitler, as a drunk and tyrant who regularly beat his children. Trump’s father, Fred, was also an authoritarian parent, demanding daily reports from his wife on the children’s conduct and dictating disciplinary actions. According to Trump’s niece, Mary L. Trump, Fred pushed his eldest son, Fred Jr., to become as ruthless as he was so he could take over the family business. Fred Jr., however, wanted to be an airline pilot. After that, Fred Sr. “dismantled [Fred Jr.] by devaluing and degrading every aspect of his personality." Mary Trump blames her grandfather’s treatment of her father for the alcoholism that eventually killed him.
In Awe of Authority: Despite
his media persona as a man of strength and resolute courage, Hitler was humbled
by persons of authority. “From the weight of evidence, it seems certain that
Hitler does lose his self-confidence badly when he is brought face-to-face with
an accepted authority of high standing…” Yet, he was in constant search for a
male figure he could use as a guide. “[T]hroughout his later life we find him
searching for a strong masculine figure whom he can respect and emulate.”
Hitler was drawn to strong, authoritarian historical figures such as Caesar,
Napoleon, and Frederick the Great. According to the OSS report, Hitler was
confused by leaders such as President Franklin D. Roosevelt who could lead a
country and “still act like a gentleman” without “a great deal of name-calling,
shouting, abusing, and threatening.”
It’s well known Trump has never
met a dictator he didn’t submit to. Vladimir Putin of Russia, Xi Jinping of
China, Rodrigo Duterte of the Philippines, Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey, Kim
Jong Un of North Korea are all authoritarian leaders Trump has praised and, in
most cases, provided with preferential treatment over his own country. (See: Nine
Notorious Dictators, Nine Shout-Outs From Donald Trump). At home, Trump
openly suggests he wants to wield such power and attempts to do so by
threatening and abusing anyone who stands up to him.
Young—Very Young—Women:
Throughout his political career, Hitler portrayed himself as a man alone whose
only mistress was Germany. Trump, on the other hand, has extravagantly
exaggerated his prowess as a playboy. Neither depiction is true. Hitler, like
Trump, had a penchant for very young, even underage girls.
Hitler’s first tryst was with
Henny Hoffman, the daughter of his official photographer. Hitler first met
Henny when she was nine. Henny was about 17 when her mother died and she began
dating Hitler. He was in his thirties. “The relationship continued for some
time until Henny … got drunk one night and began to talk about her relationship
with Hitler,” according to the OSS report.
Henny was followed by a
mysterious relationship with Geli Raubal, the daughter of Hitler’s half-sister,
Angela. Geli lived with Hitler, 19 years her senior, in his Munich apartment.
According to the OSS profile, Hitler spent lavishly on Geli and was extremely
jealous of any men who paid attention to his niece. The affair did not end
well. In September 1931, Hitler traveled to Nuremburg for a party meeting. The
next day, Geli was found dead in his apartment of a gunshot wound to the lung.
Hitler’s personal pistol laid next to her. Despite suspicions otherwise, her
death was ruled a suicide.
Eva Braun was only 17 when she first
caught Hitler’s eye, 23 years younger than Der Fuhrer. Theirs was Hitler’s
longest relationship with a woman though he tried to hide it from the German
people. It, too, was tumultuous, with Braun twice unsuccessfully attempting
suicide. They finally married days before the German surrender, then committed
suicide inside the Fuhrer Bunker.
Two of Trump’s wives were much
younger than he when they married. Marla Trump was 17 years younger than Trump,
and Melania 24 years younger. Trump frequently partied with Jeffrey Epstein, a
financier and convicted child molester who was charged with sex trafficking
minors in 2019 shortly before he allegedly committed suicide in a jail cell. In
2016, a woman accused Trump in a Manhattan federal court of raping her at one
of Epstein’s parties when she was only 14 years old. The alleged victim dropped
her suit after receiving multiple death threats from Trump supporters.
Trump has repeatedly made
lascivious comments about his own daughter, Ivanka. During a 2003 Howard Stern
Show interview, he said Ivanka had “the best body.” On the television show The
View, Trump said, “I’ve said if Ivanka weren’t my daughter, perhaps I’d be
dating her." He also once allegedly asked a friend, “Is
it wrong to be more sexually attracted to your own daughter than your wife?”
Ivanka was 13 at the time.
Hitler and Trump may have shared
another sexual aberration—golden showers. It has long been suspected that Russia’s
Putin has video of Trump engaging in sexual urination with two prostitutes in a
Moscow hotel. According to the OSS report, Hitler engaged in the same sex
games. “His sexual pervasion has quite a different nature that few would have
guessed,” it says. “… [A]n extreme form of masochism in which the individual
derives sexual gratification from the act of having a woman urinate or defecate
on him.”
Draining the Swamp and Other
Christ-like Things: Donald Trump ran for office claiming only he could
“drain the swamp” in Washington, DC. Hitler, too, came to power claiming he
would drain the Berlin swamp. “When I came to Berlin … and looked at the
traffic… the luxury, the perversion, the wanton display… disgusted me so
thoroughly, that I was almost beside myself,” Hitler said in a speech. He saw
himself as a new Messiah who would clean up Berlin the way Christ cleared the moneychangers
from the temple.
A Messiah complex is something
else both men share. “As time went on,” the OSS report says, “it became clearer
(Hitler) was thinking of himself as the Messiah and that it was he who was
destined to lead Germany to glory. … Comparisons between Christ and himself
became more frequent.” Trump, too, frequently refers to himself with Biblical
references, claiming he is “the Chosen One,” “the King of Israel,” and “the
second coming of God.”
Unfortunately, both men’s e most
loyal followers only encouraged such thinking. It was not unusual for Hitler’s
most zealous followers—good Christians all—to hail him with “Heil Hitler, our
Savior,” according to the OSS profile. Trump’s biggest group of supporters,
white Christian evangelicals, have been all too willing to buy into his
egomaniacal self-aggrandizement. A 2019 article in Psychology Today,
reported, “a significant portion of his supporters literally believe the
president was an answer to their prayers. He is regarded as something of a messiah,
sent by God to protect a Christian nation.” (See: The
Belief That Trump Is a Messiah Is Rampant and Dangerous.)
Know-It-Alls: Both Hitler’s
and Trump’s fragile egos compelled them to act as know-it-alls when, in fact, a
better description would be “know-nothings.” In 2018, Trump infamously referred
to himself as “a very stable genius” and he repeatedly insists he knows more
than his advisors and generals. (See: Everything
Donald Trump is an Expert In, According to Him.) Even after contracting
Covid-19 and receiving millions of dollars in specialized treatment, Trump
still maintained he knew more about the virus than the health experts.
According to the OSS report,
Ernst Rohm, head of the Nazi Brown Shirts, said of Hitler, “You try to tell him
anything, he knows everything already.” Another of Hitler’s associates is
quoted saying, “He has always been a poseur. He remembers things that he
has heard and has a faculty for repeating them in such a way that a listener is
lead to believe they are his own.”
Normal conversation never takes
place around either man. “It is well-known he (Hitler) cannot carry on a normal
conversation or discussion with people,” says the OSS profile. “Even if only
one person is present, he must do all the talking.” Trump too must dominate
every conversation, as seen in the first presidential debate. When he can’t, he
sits with tightly cross arms and a scowl on his face.
For both men, this overconfidence
in their own “genius” falls apart when confronted by an honest news media
asking the kind of hardball questions reporters should ask of a country’s
leadership. “Hitler becomes nervous and tends to lose his composure when he has
to meet newspapermen,” says the OSS profile. Hitler was unable to answer
questions for which he was not prepared and insisted any interviews questions
be submitted in advance. “Even then he gives no opportunity to ask for further
clarification … he immediately launches into a lengthy dissertation, which
sometimes turns into a tirade. When this is finished, the interview is over.”
Trump has never been at ease with
the media, criticizing their work as “liberal,” “left wing,” and “fake news.”
He does not do well in press conferences when reporters are allowed to ask
questions and so rarely holds them. When asked for clarification, he becomes
surly and insults the person asking the question, and frequently simply ends
the conference. In an August face-to-face broadcast interview Trump tried to
convince Australian journalist Jonathan Swan with statistics that under his
leadership the U.S. was controlling the coronavirus better than any other
country. Swan then proved to Trump that he didn’t understand his own statistics.
Trump was left befuddled and speechless. (See: Trump’s
attacks on media are influencing Republicans’ attitudes toward press.)
Bring In the Clowns: Neither
Hitler nor Trump were taken seriously at first. According to his OSS profile,
“Earlier in his career the world watched him with amusement. Many people
refused to take him seriously on ground that ‘he could not possibly last.'”
Despite the faux persona of a
successful businessman that he built with the help of his pseudo-reality series
“The Apprentice,” Trump was never taken seriously as an entrepreneur or a
politician. Nowhere was this more evident than his hometown of New York where
he was largely considered a clown. On Election Day in 2016, Trump was greeted
with laughter and jeers as he arrived at his polling place.
Unfortunately, in both cases Hitler and Trump should have been taken seriously. Hitler’s reign of terror left Germany a country of smoking rubble, devastated by Allied bombings and artillery. In less than four years, Trump’s reign of error has cost the United States its world standing, its economy, and the lives of more than 200,000 American lives.
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