Bret Stephens is a columnist for The New York Times. He is a conservative but he is no fan of Donald Trump. Stephens recognizes that Trump is a not-too-bright narcissist who puts himself above country and party. In this column, he describes how JD Vance made a fool of himself at the recent Munich Security Conference, where he lectured European leaders about their failure to honor the free speech of extremist rightwing parties. Vance spoke with total ignorance of the 1930s and World War II.
Stephens wrote:
In April 1928, Joseph Goebbels, later the Third Reich’s chief propagandist, wrote a newspaper essay addressing the question of why the National Socialists, despite being an “anti-parliamentarian party,” would nonetheless compete in that May’s parliamentary elections.
“We enter the Reichstag to arm ourselves with democracy’s weapons,” Goebbels explained. “If democracy is foolish enough to give us free railway passes and salaries, that is its problem. It does not concern us. Any way of bringing about the revolution is fine by us.”
Germany’s postwar federal republic, established over the ruins the Nazis made, has been haunted by Goebbels’s taunt ever since. How does a free society guard against being used, and possibly destroyed, by the rights and privileges it grants the enemies of freedom? How does it avoid the postwar fate of states like Czechoslovakia, which allowed Communist parties to gain a fatal foothold in their fledgling democracies? What about Palestinians, who voted for Mahmoud Abbas for president in 2005 and Hamas for Parliament in 2006 — and haven’t had an election since?
For countries with a totalitarian past, finding the right answers to these questions is hard. Few have done it better than Germany, which remains unmistakably democratic not because it unthinkingly honors a principle of unfettered liberty (no democracy does) but because it vigilantly monitors the enemies of democracy while maintaining a memory of what the nation once was. It’s something for which all Americans should feel especially grateful, given the price we paid in lives to defeat Germany’s previous political incarnations.
But not, apparently, JD Vance. The vice president’s speech last week at the Munich Security Conference — in which the man who refuses to say that Donald Trump lost the 2020 presidential election lectured his audience about Europe’s retreat from democratic values — combined with his meeting with the leader of the far-right Alternative for Germany, or AfD, party, has caused a scandal because it is a scandal, a monument of arrogance based on a foundation of hypocrisy.
Why does the AfD dismay so many Germans, including traditional conservative voters? The party began in 2013 in protest of Germany’s fiscal policies in Europe. It gained a further boost through its opposition to Chancellor Angela Merkel’s open-arms policy toward the uncontrolled immigration of more than a million Middle Eastern refugees.
But the party soon took a much darker turn. In 2017, Björn Höcke, a party leader in the eastern state of Thuringia, complained that Germans were “the only people in the world who’ve planted a monument of shame at the heart of their capital” — a reference to the memorial to the victims of the Holocaust — and that the country needed “nothing less than a 180-degree turnaround in the politics of remembrance.” In 2018, the party leader at the time, Alexander Gauland, dismissed “Hitler and the Nazis” as “just a speck of bird shit in over 1,000 years of successful German history.”
Last year, the German investigative news site Correctiv reported that in 2023 AfD politicians had met with other far-right extremists in a hotel in Potsdam, near Berlin, to discuss an “overall concept, in the sense of a master plan” for the “remigration” of “migrants” to their countries of ethnic origin — no matter whether those migrants were asylum seekers, permanent residents or German citizens. The star of the show was a 34-year-old Austrian named Martin Sellner, who as a teenager confessed to putting swastika stickers on a synagogue before going on to lead Austria’s so-called identitarian movement.
This record explains, in part, why all of Germany’s mainstream parties refuse to go into any sort of coalition government with the AfD, even as it is polling in second place in this month’s federal elections. Vance may seem to think it’s the responsibility of democracy to embrace any party or point of view; it’s worth wondering what he might have said if, instead of the AfD polling at around 20 percent, an antisemitic and anti-democratic Muslim Brotherhood-style party was drawing a similar percentage of voters.
There’s another reason to fear the AfD. Last year, The Times’s Erika Solomon reported on a secret session in the German Parliament in which lawmakers heard evidence of ties between AfD politicians and Kremlin-connected operatives. The AfD denies the allegations, but it’s no surprise that the AfD wants to end German military aid for Ukraine and restart the Nord Stream pipelines through which Russia used to supply Germany with natural gas.
In its first term, the Trump administration fought tooth-and-nail against Nord Stream, on the justified grounds that it made Germany dependent on an enemy of the West. Someone might ask Ric Grenell, Trump’s former ambassador to Berlin and now his special envoy, why the administration is now so fond of a party that effectively sides with that enemy?
There’s an argument to be made in a future column that some European governments go too far to curtail legitimate free speech. There’s another one to be written about the many ways that Europe’s supposedly mainstream right-of-center parties, particularly Germany’s Christian Democrats under Merkel, adopted left-leaning positions on migration, domestic security, fiscal policy, energy policy and other issues that drove conservative voters into the arms of the far right.
For now, the important point is this: Much like a certain British prime minister long ago, an American vice president went to Munich to carry on about his idealism while breaking bread with those who would obliterate democratic ideals. A disgrace.

I got five paragraphs in, and had to scroll back up– Bret Stephens wrote this? Wow.
I eagerly read newsletters entitled “Reasons for Optimism” but they’re usually about basically good people finally speaking up. This is an example of an entitled conservative actually telling the truth about JD Vance– that he’s an ass.
Bravo.
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Nancy,
I’m always on the lookout for people who see the light.
That’s why I enjoy “The Bulwark.” The Republican Never Trumpers who understand what Trump is.
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Uh, disgrace is putting it lightly. From my vantage point (and as teachers are taught) — pay attention to physical and verbal cues. In this case, when it sounded like three people clapped (I think it was from his own entourage) — dude, “Catch a clue.” No one in the audience looked impressed with what he espoused, but highly irritated. A slap in the face to all of those who “freed Europe” from Hitler and kept Russia at bay. I can’t keep up with why this moron sold his soul “Faustian style.” He looked like one of my sixth grade students faking their way through an oral presentation. I wonder if he “gets it” when Felon47 always has the “muskrat” by his side rather than the elected VP. And like the Germans, no one was impressed. Disgusting.
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Here’s the main issue, lost as usual in the extreme partisanship that is a staple of this blog. The most expansive protections in the world for free speech are enjoyed in the United States because of the First Amendment. To prohibit speech here, the general guideline is there must be a clear and present danger of harm being committed.
Europe has never had this same level of freedom. For example, people there have been arrested for posting comments online that oppose massive immigration from countries that oppose western values like the free exercise of religion. After World War II, democratic Germany has not allowed public expression of support for Nazi ideas, e.g. denial that the Holocaust occurred. That’s what Vance was referring to. His point has been made many times before by other people; he is just the most prominent person to say so publicly.
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JD Vance had never spoken to European leaders. It would have been appropriate to speak about the strong ties of history that bind us together.
Instead, he took the opportunity as an inexperienced newly elected official of the U.S. to hector senior European leaders. They know the horrors of war and fascism. They don’t need to be lectured to by a budding young fascist.
Vance drove home his point by snubbing the elected leader of Germany and meeting with the leader of the neo-Nazi party.
Am I “blindly partisan”? If blindly partisan means I despise the stupid, ignorant, pro-Putin in the White House, I proudly accept your title. I am blindly partisan against a fool who appointed Tulsi Gabbard, an apologist for Puti, as director of national intelligence. I am blindly partisan against the idiot who appointed a crackpot to lead the HHS. I am blindly partisan against the vain fool who appoint Kash Patel to the FBI. I am blindly partisan against the lowlife who appointed a womanizing drunk with no managerial experience to run the Defense Department. I am also blindly partisan against the traitor who genuflects to Putin.
And proudly so.
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As I see you, a clear-sighted partisan, if any.
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“For example, people there have been arrested for posting comments online that oppose massive immigration from countries that oppose western values like the free exercise of religion.”
Oh? Can you supply some evidence to support this claim?
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No, here is the main issue lost as usual in the extreme partisanship that is a staple of Russia Republicanism:
“lawmakers heard evidence of ties between AfD politicians and Kremlin-connected operatives.”
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Chamberlain did not have the view of Hitler that we have. This makes Vance all the more culpable. Either he is illiterate or he is deliberately kissing the ring of Putin (or kissing whatever else your mind allows). To call this despicable would be too kind.
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Vance chided German leaders for limiting free speech making it appear that he was on the side of democracy. German leaders, knowing the history of The Third Reich, have enacted laws to curb hate speech which inspires neo-Nazi groups. “60 Minutes” just had a story on the German policy on last week’s broadcast. One of the first proclamations Trump made was to assert support for unregulated free speech under the First Amendment. Trump also quickly had Zuckerberg eliminate any censorship on Meta. Our right wing extremists hide behind The First Amendment so they can spew lies and disinformation with abandon. It certainly worked well for them in the last election. Extremists are the champions of free misleading speech, free hate speech, lies and disinformation that so many on the right continue to feed on. https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/01/restoring-freedom-of-speech-and-ending-federal-censorship/
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Free speech?? That’s a joke.
Remember the long list of words that are now banned by Trump’s orders. Remember the ban on anything connected to diversity, equity, and inclusion. The bans on teaching the history of racism and sexism? The effort to define what can’t be taught?
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Neville Chamberlain was a Profile in Courage compared to Kraven Kremlin Kollaborator Felon47
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SPITTING ON AMERICAN BLOOD
The soil of Europe is soaked with the blood of American soldiers who died in World War II to stamp out nazism, and Vance spat on that blood-soaked soil by urging that European leaders allow nazism to rise again.
And how bitterly sad all those countless American heroes who spilled their blood to end nazism must feel when they look down on our nation today and see nazi flags flying and people wearing nazi tattoos.
My father came back from fighting World War II a broken man from the horrors of war against the nazis…but at least he came back. He would feel that he and all those who died to end nazism have been betrayed to see nazi flags and symbols in America which Vance dresses up by calling it “populism”.
AND THEN Trump says that Ukraine should not have gone to war with Russia just because Russia invaded Ukraine — that’s like saying that the United States should not have gone to war with Japan just because Japan bombed Pearl Harbor.
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This is a bit off topic but one that is important, at least in my mind. Senator Todd Young [R-IN] is an idiot who supports Trump, Vance and voted to nominate Robert Kennedy, jr. to be Secretary of Health and Human Services. Strong pro-life policies will continue under his leadership. I’m “sure” our health costs will go down.
Todd Young: I voted in favor of Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s nomination to be Secretary of Health and Human Services. I believe Mr. Kennedy will lead the Department in restoring trust to public health institutions, encourage innovation to lower health care costs, and improve research on Long COVID.
Mr. Kennedy’s unique leadership on healthy lifestyle choices will benefit countless Americans, and he understands the critical importance of rebuilding trust in our public health institutions. I’ve also received assurances from him that strong pro-life policies will continue to be reinstituted at HHS under his leadership. We spoke extensively about the importance of supporting innovation in health care to both bring down costs and improve treatment. I look forward to working with him to make positive changes for the American people.
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