Animals Anti-smoking Public health measures adopted since World War II in order to reduce smoking have been compared with
anti-tobacco movement in Nazi Germany, which is considered by proponents of anti-smoking measures to be a fallacious
reductio ad Hitlerum which often exaggerates how much the Nazis actually opposed smoking. Historian of science
Robert N. Proctor speculates that Nazi associations "forestall[ed] the development of effective anti-tobacco measures by several decades".
Bioethics According to an editorial by
Arthur Caplan in
Science,
bioethics questions including "stem cell research, end-of-life care, the conduct of clinical trials in poor nations, abortion, embryo research, animal experimentation, genetic testing, or human experimentation involving vulnerable populations" are often compared to
Nazi eugenics and
Nazi human experimentation. According to Caplan, the Nazi analogy has the potential to shut down debate and its capricious use is unethical. Similar arguments were made by
Nat Hentoff in 1988, writing for
The Hastings Center Report.
Chinese Communist Party Analogies between China and Nazi Germany have also been drawn by Australian politician
Andrew Hastie. However,
Edward Luce considers China–Nazi comparisons a form of
anti-Chinese sentiment and he also considers them a potentially
self-fulfilling prophecy. In July 2020, British Jewish leader
Marie van der Zyl said that there were "similarities" between the
treatment of the Uyghurs in China and the crimes which were committed by Nazi Germany. In 2020, Axel Dessein wrote that the Chinese Communist Party was better described as lowercase "national socialist"—in the vein of the Nazi Party and the
Czech National Social Party—than
communist, due to "its marriage between socialist means and national ends".
Chinazi flag Donald Trump of Donald Trump to the United Kingdom While qualified comparisons between
Hitler's rise to power and the victory of
Donald Trump in the
2016 United States presidential election have been made by some historians,
NeverTrump Republicans, and Democrats, the comparison is opposed by other scholars and commentators who cite reasons such as Trump lacking a coherent ideology, not supporting a dictatorship or political violence, and his rejection of interventionist foreign policy. According to Rosenfeld's research, the frequency of comparisons between Trump and Hitler in the media peaked in 2017 and the number of internet searches for "Trump and Hitler" has also decreased from a high point between mid-2015 and mid-2017.
European Union Some
Eurosceptic politicians, including
UKIP's
Gerard Batten and
Finns Party MP
Ville Tavio, have compared the
European Union to Nazi Germany. Then Ukrainian politician
Viktor Medvedchuk of the pro-Russia party
Ukrainian Choice argues that "objectively" the European Union is the heir of Nazi Germany. In many Greek newspapers during the
Greek government-debt crisis, caricatures appeared depicting the
European troika and
Angela Merkel as Nazis preparing to reenact the
Axis occupation of Greece. Merkel was also depicted as Hitler during demonstrations against her 2016 visit to the Czech Republic; the demonstrators objected to her approach to the
European migrant crisis. Opponents argue that the Nazi empire was formed by conquest and that joining the EU is voluntary, among other differences.
Indian Wars The Nazi
war of annihilation on the
Eastern Front has been compared to the
United States Army's conduct in the
Indian Wars. However,
Native American demographic collapse was mostly caused by
introduced disease, rather than warfare, and historians disagree as to whether the Indian Wars, or parts thereof, can be considered a form of
genocide.
Islamism and Islamic fundamentalism Some historians, including
Matthias Küntzel,
Wolfgang G. Schwanitz and
Barry Rubin, argue that there is a high degree of similarity between the ideologies of Nazism and
Islamism, especially in their radical antisemitism and xenophobia.
Israel , Colombia
LGBTQ issues in Boston in 2007 makes a comparison between the contemporary United States ("Today") and Nazi Germany. The
AIDS–Holocaust metaphor can be controversial. While
Susan Sontag said that "It's wrong to compare a situation in which there was real culpability to one in which there is none", it is also the case that homophobic views resulted in dismissal of the suggestion of research and treatment being supported, severely exacerbating the epidemic. In 2019,
Pope Francis criticized politicians who lash out at homosexuals,
Romani people, and Jews, saying that it reminded him of Adolf Hitler's speeches in the 1930s. Some advocates of
trans-exclusionary radical feminism have compared transgender medical care to
Nazi human experimentation or transsexuality to Nazism.
Paul Kagame In a speech made on 9 December 2023,
Félix Tshisekedi, the
president of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, compared
Rwandan President
Paul Kagame to Hitler, saying that if he "[wants] to behave like Adolf Hitler by having
expansionist aims, I promise he will
end up like Adolf Hitler". A Rwandan government spokesperson condemned this statement, accusing Tshisekedi of making "a loud and clear threat". This remark was made in the context of an
offensive in the DRC launched by the
March 23 Movement, a rebel group widely considered to be directly supported by Rwanda, despite official Rwandan denials.
"Second Holocaust" The term "
second Holocaust" is used in reference to perceived threats to the State of Israel, Jews, and Jewish life. In 2018, Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu said "Iran wants a second Holocaust" and to "destroy another six million plus Jews", after his Iranian counterpart described Israel as a "malignant cancerous tumor". In 2019, Israeli education minister
Rafi Peretz compared
Jewish intermarriage to a "second Holocaust".
Stalinism ) election banner.
Vladimir Putin Wealth In 2014, venture capitalist and billionaire
Thomas Perkins wrote to
The Wall Street Journal to compare what he called "the progressive war on the American
one percent" to what Jews faced during
Kristallnacht. According to Jordan Weissmann, writing in
The Atlantic, this is "the worst historical analogy you will read for a long, long time". Perkins was also criticized on Twitter, with
The New York Times journalist
Steven Greenhouse writing, "As someone who lost numerous relatives to the Nazi gas chambers, I find statements like this revolting & inexplicable". ==Criticism==