Democracy destroyed itself in 1930s Germany, and it happened through an election. The Nazi Party never won more than 44% of the vote, yet Hitler became chancellor and dismantled German democracy within months. The culprit? A multi-party system so fragmented that 37 different political parties competed for power. With votes scattered across dozens of options, a fringe party with just over a third of support could seize control—then eliminate every other party overnight.
Shane sits down with Dr. Mark Smith, a history professor from Indiana Wesleyan University, to explore one of history's darkest ironies: sometimes the most democratic systems create the perfect conditions for tyranny. From Mussolini's fascists winning just 0.4% of the vote in 1921 Italy to the Bolsheviks exploiting Russia's fractured politics, these conversations reveal why America's frustrating two-party system might be the safeguard we never appreciated.
This isn't just about the past. As political extremism finds new platforms and fringe voices grow louder, understanding how democracies collapse from within has never been more urgent. Turns out, being stuck with two mediocre choices every four years isn't the worst thing that could happen to us.
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