As Dictator Don successfully forced the cancellation of The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, morons of America still fail to apprehend how he is a fascist. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve had to listen to f***tard MAGA morons call a talk radio show and demand an example of how The Don! is acting like a fascist. Well, here’s a good start.
In the early years of the Third Reich, comedians and cabaret performers were among the first cultural figures targeted because satire threatened the regime’s image of absolute authority. The Nazis understood that jokes could undermine fear, expose hypocrisy, and weaken propaganda.
- After Adolf Hitler became Chancellor of the Third Reich in 1933, the government rapidly censored cabarets, theaters, radio programs, and newspapers that contained political humor or criticism.
- Independent cabaret culture in cities like Berlin — famous during the Weimar Republic for sharp political satire — was dismantled. Venues were closed or forced into ideological conformity.
- Jewish comedians, writers, and performers were removed from public life under racial laws. Many lost jobs immediately; others fled into exile, were imprisoned, or later murdered in concentration camps.
- Satire directed at Nazi leaders became a criminal offense. Telling anti-Nazi jokes could lead to arrest by the Gestapo.
- The regime used broad laws against “malicious gossip,” “defeatism,” and “undermining the morale of the people” to prosecute humor critical of the state.
- Informants played a major role. Ordinary citizens sometimes reported neighbors, coworkers, or performers for repeating jokes about Hitler or the war effort.
- Some comedians were imprisoned in camps such as Dachau concentration camp for political dissent or “degenerate” art.
- The Nazis replaced independent comedy with approved entertainment that promoted nationalism, obedience, antisemitism, and militarism. Humor was allowed only if it reinforced state ideology.
- Performers who stayed in Germany often self-censored heavily to survive professionally and physically.
- Exiled German comedians and writers continued anti-Nazi satire abroad, especially in Britain and the United States, helping shape international criticism of Hitler’s regime.
One of the most famous examples outside Germany was Charlie Chaplin, whose film The Great Dictator mocked Hitler and fascism directly at a time when many were still reluctant to do so publicly. Look, America is just too f***ing G.D. stupid to learn from history, let alone muster the trenchant capacity to see what’s unfolding around them. America is blindly and willingly welcoming American-style fascism to its shores. And no one cares. Welcome to stupid America! First, they came for the comedians!