Schwarzenegger likens U.S. Capitol siege to Nazi violence
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[January 11, 2021]
(Reuters) - Hollywood actor and
former California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger has compared the
storming of the U.S. Capitol by supporters of President Donald Trump to
Nazi violence against Jews in a deeply personal video posted on Twitter.
Schwarzenegger, a Republican Party member and long-time critic of Trump,
likened the siege at the Capitol Building last week to "Kristallnacht",
or the Night of Broken Glass, when Jewish-owned businesses and
institutions were destroyed by the Nazis in 1938 and dozens were killed.
"They did not just break down the doors of the building that housed
American democracy. They trampled the very principles on which our
country was founded," he said in the video published on his official
Twitter account on Sunday.
Drawing on his childhood experiences in post-war Austria, Schwarzenegger
warned against the threats to democracy from lies and intolerance, and
cautioned against mainstream complicity.
"Now I grew up in the ruins of a country that suffered the loss of its
democracy...Growing up, I was surrounded by broken men drinking away the
guilt over their participation in the most evil regime in history," he
said.
"Not all of them were rabid anti-Semites or Nazis. Many just went along,
step by step, down the road. They were the people next door."
Schwarzenegger, 73, who started out as a bodybuilder before reaching
worldwide fame through his roles in films such as The Running Man and
Predator, revealed he had domestic violence at the hands of his father.
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Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz receives actor Arnold
Schwarzenegger at the Chancellery in Vienna, Austria, January 28,
2020. REUTERS/Leonhard Foeger
"Now, I've never shared this so publicly because it is a painful
memory. But my father would come home drunk, once or twice a week,
and he would scream and hit us, and scare my mother," he said.
"I did not hold him totally responsible because out neighbour was
doing the same thing to his family, and so was the next neighbour
over. I heard it with my own ears and saw it with my own eyes."
Schwarzenegger said Trump, who would be remembered as the worst
president in U.S. history, had "sought a coup by misleading people
with lies".
The actor urged Americans to put aside their political beliefs and
heal together.
(Reporting by Yishu Ng in Singapore, Writing by Jacqueline Wong;
Editing by Raissa Kasolowsky)
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