“You
are now witnessing the beginning of a great epoch in
history,” he proclaimed, standing in front of the
burned-out building, surrounded by national media. “This
fire,” he said, his voice trembling with emotion, “is
the beginning.” He used the occasion – “a sign from
God,” he called it – to declare an all-out war on
terrorism and its ideological sponsors, a people, he said,
who traced their origins to the Middle East and found
motivation for their “evil” deeds in their religion.
Two
weeks later, the first prison for terrorists was built in
Oranianberg, holding the first suspected allies of the
infamous terrorist. In a national outburst of patriotism,
the nation’s flag was everywhere, even printed in
newspapers suitable for display.
Within
four weeks of the terrorist attack, the nation’s
now-popular leader had pushed through legislation, in the
name of combating terrorism and fighting the philosophy he
said spawned it, that suspended constitutional guarantees
of free speech, privacy, and habeas corpus. Police could
now intercept mail and wiretap phones; suspected
terrorists could be imprisoned without specific charges
and without access to their lawyers; police could sneak
into people’s homes without warrants if the cases
involved terrorism.
To
get his patriotic “Decree on the Protection of People
and State” passed over the objections of concerned
legislators and civil libertarians, he agreed to put a
4-year sunset provision on it: if the national emergency
provoked by the terrorist attack on the Reichstag building
was over by then, the freedoms and rights would be
returned to the people, and the police agencies would be
re-restrained.
Within
the first months after that terrorist attack, at the
suggestion of a political advisor, he brought a formerly
obscure word into common usage. Instead of referring to
the nation by its name, he began to refer to it as The
Fatherland. As hoped, people’s hearts swelled with
pride, and the beginning of an us-versus-them mentality
was sewn. Our land was “the” homeland, citizens
thought: all others were simply foreign lands.
Within
a year of the terrorist attack, Hitler’s advisors
determined that the various local police and federal
agencies around the nation were lacking the clear
communication and overall coordinated administration
necessary to deal with the terrorist threat facing the
nation, including those citizens who were of Middle
Eastern ancestry and thus probably terrorist sympathizers.
He proposed a single new national agency to protect the
security of the Fatherland, consolidating the actions of
dozens of previously independent police, border, and
investigative agencies under a single powerful leader.
Most
Americans remember his Office of Fatherland Security,
known as the Reichssicherheitshauptamt and Schutzstaffel,
simply by its most famous agency’s initials: the SS.
And,
perhaps most important, he invited his supporters in
industry into the halls of government to help build his
new detention camps, his new military, and his new empire
which was to herald a thousand years of peace. Industry
and government worked hand-in-glove, in a new type of
pseudo-democracy first proposed by Mussolini and sustained
by war.
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