While waiting with a friend on the southbound platform at the crowded junction of Medellin, Colombia’s two Metro elevated train lines in February 2017, a short, bespectacled, wavy-black-haired, thirtyish man approached me and asked, in Spanish, where I was from.
I answered, “Los Estados Unidos.”
He replied, “Gracias para derrotar Alemania en la segunda guerra mundial” and walked away, smirking.
I can say most of what I want to say in Spanish and understand most of what natives say to me. But after Japanese, Spanish is the world’s second fastest spoken language. Sometimes, as on that occasion, I don’t immediately comprehend what Spanish speakers say.
Thus, it took me about five seconds to figure out that the Colombian had said, completely out of context, “Thanks for defeating the Germans in World War II.”
I chuckled. Incongruity amuses me. I told my non-Spanish-speaking-friend what the man had said. My friend also thought it was funny.
Many a truth is said in jest. But some people who aren’t joking still love America for something it did eighty years ago. No thanks to me.
And of course, even given the passage of time, the death of young soldiers is the opposite of funny.
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I haven’t been to Europe in 38 years. For reasons I mentioned a few weeks ago, I prefer to travel in the US and Latin America. I appreciate that Europe has countless elegant, old buildings. Some book I read, perhaps William Manchester’s A World Lit Only by Fire, accurately described Europe as a 500-year art, architecture and historic preservation project. Needs more trees though.
Rick Steves is known for his European guidebooks and hundred-plus episode public TV series portraying Euro destinations. Steves is a cultural archetype: an affluent, androgynous Caucasian from Seattle who spouts progressive platitudes and complains about climate change as he jets around the world and encourages others to do the same.
Home alone tonight, I switched on the TV. PBS showed a new, uncharacteristically dark Rick Steves installment entitled “Fascism in Europe.”
During a pledge break, Steves explained that he produced this episode because, while his travelogues routinely portray Europe as a chill and “progressive” smorgasbord of wine, baguettes and cheese, convivial cafes, pubs and plazas, art museums, castles and cathedrals and punctual trains and oompah bands—my summary, not his—between 1930-45 fascism took hold in Italy and Germany and Spain. Steves said he wanted to acknowledge and preserve the memory of that grim period.
As he retraced those years, he solemnly enumerated the strategies and actions of these nations’ oppressive governments. As he did, I couldn’t help but notice that even though the 1930-45 regimes in those three nations killed more people—at least until the Covid lockdown and vaxx effects have fully manifested themselves—American, Australian, New Zealand, Canadian and European governments applied similar social control tactics during the Covid response.
Per Steves, in both periods, governments began by inciting fear to manipulate their citizens. Just as fascists fanned fears that Soviet Communism would spread to Germany, Italy and Spain, during Coronamania American, European and Oceanian officials incited terror about a virus that they said would ravage their nations. They convinced the populace that governors and the governed had to pull out all stops to crush a microbial invasion.
Both frenzied periods were driven by cults of personality. People believed that visionaries would rescue them. Europe had Franco, Mussolini and Hitler. Coronamania was driven by Fauci, Birx and Collins. The hype surrounding these evil individuals fueled fandom and fanaticism.
Officials from each era relied on a central lie. Italians, German and Spanish fascists convinced many citizens that they were part of a superior race and culture. Covid Era officials sold the lie that a respiratory virus threatened people of all ages but that enlightened people could defeat this scourge by “Following The Science.”
Relatedly, during both periods, officials scapegoated specific groups for ruining life for everyone else. During fascist years, Jews, Slavs, communists and others were blamed for the poverty and malaise that gripped Europe following World War I. During Coronamania, the division was based more on socioeconomic status, political affiliation and Covid-measure compliance than on ethnicity. Laptoppers and vacation homeowners skipped their commutes while vilifying MAGA “superspreaders” who refused to stay home, wear masks and inject mRNA.
European fascists curtailed individual identity and civil liberties. They urged national unity with discipline. Everything was purportedly done on behalf of the collective, embodied by The State. During Coronamania, Western governments promoted, and many people fervently internalized, the same collective, restrictive ethos. Since we were said to be “all in this together,” those who questioned any government-imposed restriction or demand for sacrifice were angrily labeled “reckless” and “selfish.” They were deemed Enemies of the State.
In both eras, officials defied constitutions and democratic principles and invoked Emergency Authority. They peremptorily, opportunistically and dishonestly asserted that they needed to suspend basic rights in order to protect peoples’ security. The masses bought in.
Steves notes that fascism was implemented incrementally. Similarly, the Covid response began with “two weeks to stop the spread.” Following the fascist playbook, when the shots were introduced, 2020-2021 American officials assured the public that these wouldn’t be mandated. These, and other, pledges were soon abandoned and more extreme measures were implemented.
During both the period spanning 1930-45 and 2020-2025, the State relied on media control, propaganda and suppression of dissent. Fascist rallies and radio broadcasts resembled Covid Era government briefings and TV ad blitzes. Fascist censorship, including book-burning, resembled Covid Era-captured news outlets and internet deplatforming and shadow-banning. Those who dared to question the human cost of the lockdowns, school closures, masks and tests were subjected to government-directed “devastating takedowns” in order to quash open discussion of the badly overblown Covid risk and the extreme and foolish government interventions.
Overt coercion occurred in both periods. The Europeans had secret police who raided and abducted civilians. Coronamanic police made examples of the non-compliant by chasing, tackling, handcuffing or fining those who didn’t stay home or mask. Covid shot decliners were fired on a mass scale. Concentration camps were big in fascist Europe. These were proposed in the US during Coronamania, but not built. Instead, viral house-arrest and hotel quarantines were common here and abroad.
Both fascism and the Covid response were economically disastrous. In 1930-45 Europe and during Coronamania, governments spent prodigious sums of borrowed or printed money to implement their strategies and subsidize cronies, saddling the general public with mountains of intergenerationally impoverishing debt. I suspect that, despite a net worth exceeding $20 million, Steves got PPP money when lockdowns disrupted travel and show filming.
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As is fashionable among liberals, Steves repeatedly expresses free-floating anxiety regarding the near-term future of Western nations, demagogically implying that contemporary Europe and the US are veering toward fascism. His Fascism episode seemed designed to stoke anxiety among his fans so they’d send more money to PBS.
In a pledge drive lecture excerpt, Steves mocks, to a studio audience, American safety-ism regarding vacation destinations. He specifically bemoans that Americans no longer bid travelers “Bon Voyage” but instead say “Have a safe trip” or “Are you sure going there will be OK?”
Lacking self-awareness, his audience laughs when Steves calls out others’ travel phobia. Steves’s derision seems odd because many of his fans prefer Europe precisely because it’s seen as safer than is the rest of the world. His projection regarding others’ destinational aversions is also odd because Americans who travel to Europe were a core Corona-fearing constituency who spent much of the past five years warning others to “stay safe.”
While he admonishes his fawning studio audience not to “confuse fear and risk” regarding travel destinations, Steves clearly oversold Covid fear in relation to actual risk. When tonight’s show ended, I clicked on his blog and found the following awful, May, 2021 pro-vaxx entry, which typifies liberal Covid fascism, an iron fist covered by a velvet glove, and profoundly misinformed:
And sooner than we might imagine, we’ll be free once more to “Keep on travelin’.” (He ends every show with that sappy slogan.)
Wearing my “Keep on Travelin’” t-shirt like a blankie and gripping my passport to manage the pain (just kidding), the nurse stuck me and pumped a dose of that magic juice that will, once enough of us have taken it, free us to once again embrace life physically — to travel, to hug, to sing and laugh without worrying about “social distance” and some evil virus.
As soon as I was eligible for a shot, I was on the list and booked. And in a couple of weeks, I’ll grab my passport again and get my second dose.
As I received my vaccination, I was filled with a special joy. I inhaled a thankfulness that we have modern medicine and science to beat this virus — and exhaled a prayer that people will recognize that herd immunity (our societal ticket to freedom) requires an all-for-one and one-for-all sensibility. Sure, we all have our quirky fears and hang-ups, but these vaccinations are serious: To beat COVID, we all need to be on board with this society-wide offensive. Please, get your shot and help your neighbors and loved ones to do the same. (For some reason, none of my neighbors “helped” me to get my shot).
And as a community of thoughtful travelers who care about equity and equal rights for all, let’s commit ourselves to the notion that people of all nations, rich and poor, are equally deserving of this vaccine. For one nation to be truly safe, all nations must be immune. Rich and mighty America will roll this vaccine out to all of us soon — and then we’ll help the rest of the world also climb out of the pandemic.
And sooner than we might imagine, we’ll be free once more to “keep on travelin’.”
Wow. This is someone Americans look to for guidance? This is someone who thinks he knows enough about biology and health to tell others what to do?
Since injecting the “magic juice,” Rick Steves has been diagnosed with prostate cancer.
Various readers’ forum comments to Steves’ other posts are equally, naively Covophobic and self-righteous. Steves fans congratulate themselves for “caring about others,” implying that they’re morally superior to those who never feared an overhyped virus and cared enough about kids that they wanted students in school, uninterrupted by a virus that didn’t threaten them or their teachers, nearly all of whom were under 60. Steves-ists aren’t more caring; they just have simpler minds than did those who didn’t succumb to Covophobia.
Multiple Steves’ blog commenters were mystified that they injected and still got sick. Nonetheless, they reflexively, defensively said, “No one ever said the shots would keep you from getting sick.”
This is plainly false. Tens of millions of Americans, including Fauci, Maddow, Biden and Walensky unequivocally said the shots would stop infection and spread. The jabbed Americans I know got sick multiple times.
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During one of the show’s pledge breaks, Steves self-righteously notes that, in the United States and Western Europe, “Anti-intellectualism is growing.”
But no one can seriously maintain that the Covid “expert-driven” response in these places and Oceania, or the multitudes who supported these measures, manifested strong intellect.
Steves repeatedly asserts that the elements needed for the re-emergence of fascism are simmering just below the surface of today’s Western world. He implies that America’s free press is a bulwark against contemporary fascism and says that if we don’t fund “independent media” like PBS, fascism will soon materialize stateside.
It’s ludicrous to suggest that American media and PBS are politically neutral. If PBS is independent, why is it protesting the potential loss of federal subsidies? And if PBS is enlightened, why did it steadfastly back the Covid lunacy? Given the Covid Era censorship and the media ownership oligopolies, no one can seriously contend that the America media, and especially PBS, are smart, honest brokers devoted to discourse and democracy.
Steves warns Western democracies against “marching in lockstep,” as ominous, old newsreels show jackbooted fascists doing. But Coronamanic governments relentlessly demanded that everyone metaphorically march in lockstep to the Covid edicts. “You do you” was not a thing.
In closing, Steves warns that PBS viewers shouldn’t take freedom for granted. But people don’t have to look back to 1930-40s newsreels to witness authoritarianism. During Coronamania, they lived through it. PBS viewers enthusiastically supported the Covid clampdown. During the past five years, politically correct Rick and his ilk were the ugly, fearful Americans that they disparage. Unlike subsequent generations who thank Americans for defeating the fascists during World War II, future generations won’t laud or joke about those who caused or supported the Scamdemic’s lasting damage.
But for now, let’s forget all that. If you donate to PBS tonight, you’ll get special thank you gifts: a DVD boxed set containing all of Rick’s episodes and, depending on your level of support, either a tote bag or a coffee cup.
Mark Oshinskie— thanks for this. You captured the covidian Zeitgeist perfectly in this one person's foolishness. I'd make about 11 lacerating comments about this celebrity who was so thoroughly duped, and all his duped followers, but he is right in line with the overwhelming majority of my own long-time friends and family, whom I love— and well, I'm just tired of their self-satisfied foolishness— I see it and I hear it every day. I do work on what I can to mitigate it, and protect myself, but dang. As a citizen, I have to say, if PBS lost every penny of its funding forevermore, I'd do the Rocky dance.
I used to like his shows years ago. His pompous attitude is obnoxious now that I’m older. I found it interesting when I read somewhere that it was the educated that joined the Nazi party in droves, and not surprising, doctors and nurses especially. Just like Covid.