Rick Santorum sees Nazis everywhere: in the Middle East, in doctor’s offices and medical labs, in the Democratic Party, and now in the White House.
The Republican presidential candidate told a group of supporters Sunday night that this year’s election was like the time between 1940 and 1941 when Americans didn’t act against Adolf Hitler because they thought he was “a nice guy” and not “near as bad as what we think.”
“It’s going to be harder for this generation to figure this out. There’s no cataclysmic event,” he explained, but similar urgency. “Is anybody reminding us who we are, what made us great, and what these assaults are all about?”
The obvious implication — later denied by the candidate — was that Santorum is some modern-day Churchill and President Obama is der Fuhrer. It was outrageous and yet, for Santorum, routine.
Six years ago, in his losing bid for re-election to the Senate from Pennsylvania, Santorum had a remarkably similar take on the stakes. “If we are not successful here and things don’t go right in the election, there’s a good chance that the course of our country could change,” he said, according to an account in the Lebanon (Pa.) Daily News. “We are in the equivalent of the late 1930s, and this election will decide whether we are going to continue to appease or whether we will stand and fight while we have a chance to win without devastating consequences.”
His opponent, Democrat Bob Casey, won the election, and yet the country somehow did not fall to the brownshirts.
In explaining why his remark over the weekend wasn’t linking Obama to Hitler, Santorum said that “the World War II metaphor is one I’ve used a hundred times.” This is not an exaggeration — and that’s Santorum’s problem.
Nazi comparisons are the most extreme form of political speech; once one ties his political opponents to the most deplorable chapter in human history, all reasoned argument ceases.
Yet this is where Santorum exists, in a place of binary extremes of good and evil, where his political foe isn’t just wrong but adheres to a “phony theology” not found in the Bible. His frequent tendency to go from zero to Nazi over ordinary political disagreements is typical of the emotional appeal he has to conservative primary voters, but it also shows why he’s outside the bounds major political parties have applied to their past presidential nominees.
Some of Santorum’s opponents have suggested that his Hitler tic reflects his own autocratic tendencies; his opponent’s campaign manager in 2006 called Santorum “one notch below a Nazi.”
But while Santorum favors more coercive government — one that could, for example, ban birth control pills — he isn’t a Nazi. He worked against anti-Semitism in the Senate and tried to get a German physician prosecuted for Nazi war crimes. The problem is Santorum is such a stranger to democratic give-and-take that he thinks it’s OK to label everybody else as Nazis.
His most famous episode came in 2005, when Democrats criticized Senate Republicans for threatening to do away with the filibuster. “The audacity of some members to stand up and say, ‘How dare you break this rule?’ — it’s the equivalent of Adolf Hitler in 1942 saying, ‘I’m in Paris. How dare you invade me? How dare you bomb my city? It’s mine.’”
That same year, Santorum published a book, “It Takes a Family,” in which he tied fetal genetic testing, evolution theory and embryonic stem-cell research to Nazism. He quoted with approval the view that diagnosing and aborting fetuses with genetic malformations “can be considered an earlier phase” of the “German negative eugenics movement.”
Of the Darwinian view of a “purposeless universe,” Santorum wrote that “the Nazis built their pseudoethics with its grim logic on precisely this Nietzschean cosmological view.” Embryonic stem-cell research, he added, makes him “wonder if we have merely been momentarily delayed in our slide” toward the Nazi ethics.
In his unsuccessful 2006 campaign, he often invoked Churchill’s “gathering storm” phrase and compared Iran’s Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to Hitler. He also called for more active use of the term “Islamic fascism.” Last year, Santorum warned that if the Muslim Brotherhood prevails in Egyptian elections, it would be like the Nazis winning in 1933: “That was the last democratic election.”
When used on Ahmadinejad or the Muslim Brotherhood, the Nazi talk is provocative, but defensible. When used on an American president and a rival political party, it shows an alarming lack of perspective.
Dana Milbank’s email address is danamilbank@washpost.com.



Isn’t Santorum the Latin word for Loony – Tune?
He is not called “Mad Dog” for nothing!
I though it was Sanitarium!
You absolutely do have that right, and if you make less than 75k a year you don’t even have to pay a fine (which it would be your right to do).
So my rights are determined by how much I earn. Welcome fellow facists
No, you still maintain the right not to have insurance, however due to your irresponsibility, you will have to pay a small fine to cover your liability cost to society.
So, what rights are you losing?
They’re loosing the right to have no insurance and when hit by a catastrophic medical bill that they can’t possibly pay to force the rest of us to pay for it through our insurance premiums and our medical bills.
Now if they’d really like the option to have no health insurance then they should be willing to sign off on a proviso that they accept no health care that they can’t afford to pay for, even if it means dying from lack of care …. shouldn’t they?
Not talking about their rights who have no insurance. They have the right, like me, to work and provide insurance for me and my family.
The government has no right to force me to purchase a commercial product against my will.
In 2008 Sanitarium was concerned that the Devil was taking over America!
When asked about it in 2012 his reply was,
We have more pressing things to worry about today!
http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-503544_162-57382008-503544/santorum-in-08-satan-is-attacking-america/
Liberals always get it wrong. That’s because they measure with their own standard. See, when they attack Republicans, they do it by outright name calling: Fascist, Nazi.
Santorum, in all the examples above, is not calling anyone a Nazi. He is using an incredibly vivid period in history to illustrate the dangers of the present time, according to him. It’s not as simplistic as Obama is Hitler and he is Churchill. It is using a series of events and rationalizations that occurred in the WWII era to illustrate how people become complacent. America was complacent in the 1930s as far as foreign policy was concerned. We had suffered a dreadful world war. We had suffered a severe depression. We didn’t want to care about the evil in Europe.
Today, Americans are similarly complacent. We think Obama is a nice guy who is going to pay our mortgage and give us health care. So who cares about the trillions of dollars of debt? We are going to get free contraceptives, abortion is safe, gays can serve openly in the military. So what is there to fear about losing those other Constitutional rights such as the right to a trial by jury where you are confronted by the witnesses against you? Obama is going to soak the rich guys. He’s not to blame for soaring gas prices that are devastating the middle class.
Notice that the one example where someone is actually called a near-Nazi is when Santorum’s opponent’s campaign manager said Santorum was one notch below a Nazi.
What about the trillions of dollars spent on useless wars in the Middle East that are doing absolutely nothing for Americans other than increase the number of middle eastern who hate us, increase our national deficit and therefore debt and drive up the price of oil?
I have never been in favor of going to war, but to have the attitude that Bush “dragged” us into these wars is a clear case of buyer’s remorse. Back in 2001, people were all in favor of the war and claiming that they were lied to is disingenuous. I wasn’t so naive back then, and I knew a whole lot less than the Congress did. The general public wanted to punish someone for 9-11, and most Congresspeople were not going to go against popular sentiment.
That being said, I think you are going off topic.
“Notice that the one example where someone is actually called a near-Nazi is when Santorum’s opponent’s campaign manager said Santorum was one notch below a Nazi.”
Jumped off the page at me.
“But while Santorum favors more coercive government — one that could, for example, ban birth control pills”
The latest Really Big Lie concocted by liberals is that conservative resistance to Obamacare’s infringement on religious freedom is really an attempt to ban contraceptives. The coercion is solely on the left here.
You are right. The left wants to argue the issue of a woman’s right to use birth control. And the press is going along for the most part. But this is a non-issue and Santorum should not fall into this trap. He should have the sense to end this controversy by simply stating that he personally follows his church’s teaching on birth control, but he is not in the business of telling everyone else what they should do. As Romney said in the NH debate when confronted with the question of whether a state could ban birth control: Nobody wants to do that. Nobody is proposing a law to ban birth control.
I think Santorum would win with this strategy because Americans like people who truly live according to personal conviction, but they don’t like to be told how they should live.
“He should have the sense to end this controversy by simply stating that he personally follows his church’s teaching on birth control, but he is not in the business of telling everyone else what they should do.”
I agree and actually saw a video clip of him saying just that a short while ago (naturally, I can’t find it now.)
{So what is there to fear about losing those other Constitutional rights such as the right to a trial by jury where you are confronted by the witnesses against you? }We already lost that one to George W Bush with his Tort Reform!If you get a chance watch the movie Hot Coffee!
Honestly, that’s a pretty ridiculous distinction. Calling someone a Nazi is wrong, but claiming their conduct is comparable to what the Nazis did is just fine and dandy? Come on.
Your characterization of Obama is completely off anyway. Analysts agree that the only Republican presidential nominee with proposals that would cut the deficit would be Paul — the rest cut spending, but they cut taxes (especially for the wealthy) at a drastically high rate and the deficit would rise multiple times faster than it would if we did nothing. Further, fefinancing loans, funding healthcare, investing in research, etc. is Nazi behavior?
Get real. Such a suggestion is so obviously ridiculous, but it is also offensive. I do find it ironic too that repealing Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell, the policy that searched for and sought out gay servicemembers to elminate from the armed forces somehow is a bad thing. Like, when has punishing people for a sole identifying characteristic ever been a good thing? Sounds familiar actually, was it a good thing when it happened to the gays during the holocaust as well? They were rounded up then too.
But yeah, whatever. Allowing gay people to serve and women easy access to contraceptives, that must be real hard on you. You’re a regular modern day Anne Frank alright.
You missed the point. Santorum is not saying Obama is acting like a Nazi. He is saying the people are making the same mistakes that the people in Nazi Germany did. The people were complacent. America was complacent. Nobody wanted to believe anything bad. Even with evidence that Hitler intended to wage war, and create an empire, people appeased him. Santorum does not say Obama is Hitler. He is using the lessons of history to show that it is dangerous for people to be complacent. Santorum thinks people ought to be outraged, not because Obama is acting like Hitler, but because Obama is acting like Obama.
I am not claiming that ending Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell is a bad thing. I am merely saying that while people are watching what Obama’s left hand is doing, they are missing what his right hand is doing, even though both hands are right there in front of them, in plain view.
I’m sorry, but I don’t for a second believe that that’s what Santorum means when he makes these Nazi references. When Obama is accused of “infanticide” and “waging war on Christians,” I somehow doubt that these claims and Nazi comparisons are merely an attempt to point out that people are being complacent. That suggestion is laughable to me.
You need to some twisted and convoluted logic to get to the point where the Nazi references turn into America being complacent. Why not just say that we’re being complacent? That is a much clearer and effective message than constantly making tired Nazi references.
I would say just about everyone on the left has mixed emotions in regards to Obama — happy how some things have turned out and disappointed about other things. What I think is really happening is Obama’s detractors are unconcerned with what Obama’s hands are actually doing and are instead intent on imaginary hands that are committing socialist, radical islamist, thuggish, whatever else nefarious deeds. Hence the stupid and offensive Nazi references. No basis in reality, just a desperate attempt to detract from the actual issues.
And yet much of the conservative right today would take us back to a time when Americans required to follow the religion based dictates of government and society. They claim America is loosing it’s way and yet if you look to the regions of America where religious conservatism is strongest and where they beat the drum loudest claiming the need for religious based family values you’ll find the highest rates of divorce. This is the society Santorum would have us move toward.
People, you are entitled, even encouraged to believe in whatever religion you want … just keep it out of my government and don’t try to twist the constitution to require me to live my life according to your beliefs. If you really want to go back to a better time then go back to the days of my youth (50 years ago) when religion was a private, personal thing and had no place in goverment.
How is Nobama taking my rights away any different than the religious right taking my rights away? Why did you change the topic to religion, no defense?
Liberals don’t always get it wrong. Conservatives don’t always get it right. And versay vicey. Nazi comparisons come from the stomach, not the brain. When you run out of intelligent things to say, sig heil comes in right handy — which is a helluva pun if you can think that low..
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Godwin's_law
” Beware the man who accuses everyone of being a thief …for he is a thief himself “……
And watch those who sit in the front row of church and sing the loudest. Just like Santorum.
In his 2008 “war with Satan” speech, Mr. Santorum dismissed “mainline Protestantism” out of hand. Apparently we are all to accept not only “Christian values” but specifically Catholic doctrine.
Mr. Santorum seems to have slept through the decades while his Church voluntarily abdicated all moral authority. And they can’t blame this one on the liberals. The priests who abused the children in their care were trained by the church, ordained by the church and protected by the church.
The idea that American women and their families should be dictated to, in their most private behavior, by a gang of child rapists and their enablers is beyond disgusting.
Now, call me a Nazi for saying so.
Having a sincere belief that your faith holds the full truth does not necessarily equate to wanting to force it upon everyone else. One of the basic tenets of the Catholic Faith is free will. A person must come to Christ willingly, and those who do not hold the Catholic faith are to be prayed for, not legislated against and coerced.
It doesn’t necessarily equate, but I do see Santorum and his supporters wanting exactly that — to put their beliefs and values (as well as the consequences they determine to be fit) into law for the rest of the country to adhere to.
I see them sincerely believing that society would be better if people did live as they believe. But every Catholic has had enough about sin, and the near occasion of sin, and the war waged by the devil for our immortal soul, and the need for confession drilled into them that they accept that this world is not perfect and will not be perfect.
Besides, it is just not possible to have Santorum’s beliefs put into law. Who in this country believes birth control should be illegal? Can you see any state legislature or the Congress passing such a law? Same with abortion. It is just not going to happen. That’s why Santorum is wasting any political capital he may have arguing about these issues. And that is also why the left keeps bringing it up. Santorum needs to take control of the debate here. If he can’t do that, he doesn’t get to be President.
So we’re going to pretend that all these “personhood” pieces of legislation across the country don’t exist? We’re also going to claim that it’s the left bringing these issues up?
Sorry oh great one, but the screwball Santorum will not get elected by the American people.
Free will ?
Like using Birth Control?
Anyone is free to use birth control. The church does not force anyone to accept and live according to their moral teaching.
Nazi’s vs Christians, The Holocaust vs The Dark Ages, 12 years of Nazi rule and killing of innocents vs A few hundred years of Christians killing innocents… this one is just too close to call. Oh wait, Obama does not have Nazi idealism, but Santorum has the Christian morality of those Christian leaders of the Dark Ages (while I don’t believe Santorum will kill anyone, his idealism is the same) so this is no contest, Obama wins hands down, so please Republicans send this guy up against Obama. The President can beat both Santorum and Romney, but it will be more fun to watch Santorum’s fall.
The current toxic spill from Santorum and Frank Graham is another stupefying round of GOP -Tea Party lunacy.
Santorum’s sneaky insults about this president resembling a Nazi, do more in radically defining this man and his flustered and irksome whining.
Frank Graham, Billie’s son, got on a tear and referred to President Obama as being a Muslim.
So, make your minds up fellas. One calls the prez a Nazi, and t’other says he’s a Muslim.
Both men are issuing corrections about being misquoted, or, “misspoke” and – “the press always gets it wrong.” Graham said he never implied that the president’s ideas were based on Muslim thinking. My TV does need a check, even after hearing it half a dozen times, “we got it wrong.”
Santorum is apologizing for voting “wrong” when “he thought” it was the proper thing to help “the leader.” Now he’s doing a re-creation of the 30s Nazi rise in Germany. It must be easy, for as his opponent stated – “he is one notch below being a Nazi.”
Three years of name calling. The GOP and Tea Party are fielding a man who drives cross country with the family pet tied to the top of his wagon – Pink Slip Romney.
Gingrich’s swatting and blaming everyone for things “wrong,” is juvenile. Paul’s re-introduction of the color bar defies reason. But then, none of them have it.
Santorum might wanta look in the mirror when ID-ing who the Nazi’s are
Santorum continues his descent into the bowels of infamy. By likening Obama to Hitler he also likens him to George W. Bush (AKA “Bushitler”). It’s shockin’, but these Republican johnnies have no shame.