…Here’s your reminder that it’s not normal for an American
president to talk about taking over territory that belongs to our allies.
Greenland, the Panama Canal, and…Canada. This is, however it’s presented,
speculative war talk. It’s invasion talk—how else does one country take over
land held by another? We need look no further than Putin’s invasion of Ukraine
to answer that.
The countries Trump mentioned haven’t volunteered interest in
joining the United States. And it’s hardly realistic to think they would.
Perhaps Trump will drop it when he takes office. But it’s not funny, and it’s
not a joke. It’s destabilizing, and destabilization is dangerous, especially in
a fraught world… The idea that there are people sitting around and acting like
this is all normal is absolute madness.
This CNN headline is an example: Trump Is Teasing U.S.
Expansion Into Panama, Greenland and Canada
“Expansion?” A rival to the Louisiana Purchase? None of these
countries are interested in selling. The word they were looking for was
invasion. That’s how one country takes over territory from another. In Germany
in the 1900s, this need for “expansion” was called Lebensraum, literally, room
to live in or elbow room. We all know what happened next.
The German geographer Friedrich Ratzel came up with the term Lebensraum in the early 1900s.
Under Hitler and the Third Reich, Lebensraum was used to justify “expansion” to
the East. There was angry rhetoric about fulfilling destiny and the notion that
those countries were filled with inferior people who the Germans should be
permitted to elbow out—Jews and Slavs.
They compared it to the American expansion to the West. We
should not be surprised that the man who, according to his first wife Ivana, kept a copy of Hitler’s collected early
speeches, My New Order, by his bed would go there.
Trump, for the record, denied he’d ever read Hitler’s book Mein Kampf at
a 2023 rally. That book laid out Hitler’s justification for his vision and
provided the philosophical basis for the Nazi government and, ultimately, for
the murder of more than six million Jews during the Holocaust.
Trump issued the denial after calling political opponents “vermin” and saying
undocumented immigrants were “poisoning the blood of our country” while on the
campaign trail, language reminiscent of Nazi propaganda. Trump also claimed he didn’t know Hitler had said anything of
those things to conservative radio host Hugh Hewitt.
“I know nothing about Hitler,” he insisted. “I have no idea
what Hitler said other than (what) I’ve seen on the news. And that’s a very,
entirely different thing than what I’m saying.” Trump’s longest serving Chief
of Staff, retired Marine Corps General John Kelly, said that during his tenure, Trump suggested that
Hitler “did some good things.”
Some things are too important to ignore, even on Christmas
Eve. Trump is not making friendly jokes with our neighbor Canada about becoming
the 51st state. Greenland has its own indigenous people and a long-time
relationship with Denmark. Panama’s conservative President José Raúl Mulino released a video reminding
anyone who cared to tune in that “every square meter of the canal belongs to
Panama and will continue to belong” to Panama. What Trump is doing is
dangerous. On top of his lukewarm support for NATO, it could threaten
post-World War II stability.
Experience has shown that Trump will back down and abandon
plans in the face of persistent opposition. The bully does not have the courage
of conviction. We saw that when he distanced himself from Project 2025 after
its exposure and extensive discussion in the news during the campaign.
But he has realigned himself with its goals during the
transition period, now that public opposition has dissipated. We saw it happen
recently when Trump broke with Robert Kennedy Jr.’s views on polio vaccines
after crazy nonsense about a Kennedy ally opposing them surfaced.
Senator Mitch McConnell, a childhood polio survivor, made his
opposition to that view plain as public outrage swelled. “Efforts to undermine
public confidence in proven cures are not just uninformed—they’re dangerous,”
McConnell said, a view he has unfortunately not shared publicly about
a second Trump presidency. It was enough for Trump to back down.
There is a path to stop crazy, but it’s one that requires
focused and sustained public opposition. We know that in Trump 2.0, it will be
important to pick battles carefully. Threatening the sovereignty of friendly
nation-states, especially those we rely on for strategic support, in such a
cavalier fashion is one of those moments. And he’s not even president yet.
We’re in this together,
-Joyce Vance
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