The Fascist's Greatest Ally — The Liberal Lullaby
America isn’t being undone by fascists alone, but by liberals who mistake legality for democracy.
I watched a segment recently where pundits were calmly debating Trump’s takeover of the Smithsonian — ironically after a monologue perfectly explaining why there can be no legitimate reason behind it (you can watch it at the end of this article). They didn’t seem shocked or outraged — they were parsing it like a policy dispute, considering whether the White House review might have some “legitimate” basis. As if the forced rewriting of American history is just another issue for the Sunday shows.
That’s the poison. Not the fascist move itself, but the liberal instinct to rationalize it, to assume good faith, to pretend the problem is open for debate. That instinct doesn’t restrain authoritarianism — it enables it. It tells the public: stay calm, wait for the lawyers, wait for the courts, don’t worry, the system will sort it out.
But the system is already being bent to serve power. And every day we waste debating the “legitimacy” of fascist actions, those actions harden into the new normal. Fascism thrives on brutality, but it triumphs through passivity. And right now, it is the liberal lullaby — not the fascist ideology — that is putting America to sleep.
Control memory. Command force. Erase people.
Fascism doesn’t arrive all at once. It arrives in pieces that feel disconnected—until you step back and see the design.
First: control memory.
The Smithsonian has been forced into an “alignment review.”1 Trump mocks exhibits for showing “too much” about slavery.2 Impeachments are quietly erased from museum walls.3 This isn’t curating history — it’s strangling it. When you can dictate what a nation remembers, you decide what a nation believes. You erase the stains, you glorify the myths, and suddenly the truth itself becomes “unpatriotic.”
Second: command force.
In Los Angeles, Marines and National Guard units patrolled city streets — not during an invasion, but during protests against ICE. In Washington, D.C., local police were put under federal command as the Guard swelled into the thousands. These weren’t isolated incidents; they were tests. Tests of how far the president could bend the law to his will. Tests of how easily Americans would accept soldiers in their neighborhoods. Force is the spine of fascistic rule. Once the streets answer to Washington, your vote matters less than the man who controls the guns.
Third: erase people.
In the Everglades, “Alligator Alcatraz” cages thousands in conditions so dire that lawyers call it disappearance by bureaucracy. Counsel is blocked, hearings are delayed, families are left in the dark. A prison without justice is not a prison — it is a black hole. And black holes are where regimes put the inconvenient, the disposable, the ones they want the public to forget ever existed.
Put these pieces together and you see the method. Rewrite the past. Militarize the present. Disappear the opposition. This is not chaos, incompetence or mere cruelty. It is by design. Fascism always starts lawfully, then proceeds by seizing control of memory institutions, pairing them with force and erasure until truth itself becomes treason. What we are witnessing in America now fits that pattern in real time, while too many still tell themselves it’s politics as usual.
When courts serve ideology, law becomes camouflage.
Fascists rarely announce they are breaking the law. They don’t need to. They bend it, twist it, and capture the institutions that interpret it. The result isn’t the destruction of legality, but its mutation into camouflage.
First: they rewrite the rules.
Germany in the 1930s never looked lawless. It looked regulated. Every act of cruelty — book burnings, racial laws, confiscations, concentration camps — came with a statute, a decree, a rubber stamp from the judiciary. “Legal” became the shield behind which atrocity advanced. What mattered was not whether something violated a statute, but who wrote the statute and who controlled the judges.
Second: they capture the referees.
In America today, a Supreme Court stacked with ideological loyalists stands ready to bless almost any executive overreach as legitimate. Lower courts split along partisan lines. Constitutional “tests” become malleable enough to excuse federalized Guard deployments, emergency declarations in D.C., and mass detention schemes dressed up as immigration enforcement. If legality depends on a bench that already serves power, then legality means nothing.
Third: they weaponize delay.
At “Alligator Alcatraz,” detainees are technically granted hearings — just not now. Lawyers are technically permitted — just not there. Families are technically informed — just not clearly. Every abuse is hedged in paperwork, deadlines, and appeals. The cruelty is not outside the law but inside it, weaponized through procedure.
Put this together and you see the pattern: legality is not the barrier. It is the mask. Fascism doesn’t sweep away courts and codes; it burrows into them, hollows them out, and then points back at them to prove its own legitimacy. If your test for tyranny is “show me the illegal act,” you will never see it coming. Because by the time the regime is finished, nothing it does will ever be called illegal again.
Liberal Legalism is the lullaby of collapse.
In a healthy democracy, looking to the courts to decide right and wrong makes sense. Law is supposed to be the referee. But under authoritarian capture, that instinct becomes deadly. It lulls citizens into waiting, trusting, believing that justice will be handed down from a bench that no longer serves them.
First: legalism sedates.
Every time people say: “wait for the courts,” they buy the regime more time. More time to rewrite museum exhibits, more time to normalize troops on city streets, more time to expand black sites like Alligator Alcatraz. The law is treated as a metronome — tick, tock, tick, tock — keeping the public calm while the state retools itself around authoritarian priorities.
Second: legalism abdicates.
When we outsource our moral compass to judges, we stop using our own. We start to believe that nothing is truly wrong until a court declares it so. That’s how atrocities slip through the cracks: not because people don’t see them, but because people convince themselves it isn’t their place to act until the gavel falls.
Third: legalism collaborates.
By the time the courts are captured, reliance on their rulings doesn’t check power — it ratifies it. “Lawful” becomes the fig leaf over every abuse. And those who keep waiting for that magical day when a judge finally says “enough” discover too late that day will never come. The lullaby worked. They slept through the collapse.
That is the trap. Fascism doesn’t only conquer through brutality; it conquers through passivity. Through the liberal faith that someone else, somewhere else, in some courtroom, will stop it. But no one is coming. Courts do not save democracies already under capture. Only citizens, wide awake, can do that.
Wake Up Before It’s Too Late
This is the crossroads. A regime is rewriting history in our museums, putting troops on our streets, and vanishing people into black holes of detention. Courts are not a guardrail—they are being bent into camouflage. And liberals clinging to legalism as salvation are not saving democracy—they are lulling it into collapse.
Fascism doesn’t need to win a debate. It doesn’t need to “break the law.” It only needs us to keep mistaking legality for legitimacy, to keep waiting for a ruling that will never come. That is how democracies die: not with one sudden blow, but with citizens sedated into inaction, convinced that someone else will do the fighting for them.
So stop waiting. Stop soothing yourself with illusions of normalcy. Stop treating fascist design as political theater. The line has already been crossed, and it won’t be restored by a gavel. If America is to be saved, it won’t be lawyers or judges who do it. It will be citizens who refuse to sleep through the collapse. That’s the only way we win.
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As Promised, the segment I mentioned at the beginning of the article:
Chantelle Lee, White House Reviewing Smithsonian Exhibitions to 'Ensure Alignment' with Trump's Direction, TIME, (August 12, 2025)
The White House ordered an internal review of eight Smithsonian museums to “ensure alignment” with Trump’s direction. The mandate set 30-, 75-, and 120-day deadlines for “content corrections” and required reports on exhibits deemed “divisive.”
Kanishka Singh, Trump targets the Smithsonian again, says it focuses too much on how bad slavery was, Reuters, (August 20, 2025)
Trump posted that the Smithsonian was “OUT OF CONTROL,” claiming exhibits focused too much on “how bad Slavery was” and not enough on “Success” or “the Future.” He threatened to explore “all options” to purge what he called anti-American ideology.
Janay Kingsberry, Smithsonian removes Trump from impeachment exhibit in American History Museum, The Washington Post, (August 21, 2025)
In July, the National Museum of American History removed references to Trump’s two impeachments from an exhibit as part of a White House–pressured review. The Smithsonian later promised the content would return in an updated display.
I think we need a clear alternative vision for this country in order for people to turn away from fascism altogether because although many people know this is wrong no one has presented a clear and concise path forward. For all their loathsomeness the Republicans do have a clear vision of what they want and it is served with large sides of coercion, illegality and violence. Arguing the merits of what fascists say will only skew the narrative further to the right because they do not compromise on anything. And arguing with insane people will only drive us insane!
This kind of thing is like putting 4 deadlocks on your door & then undoing them because the Land Shark outside said, "Candygram."