A. Eugenics emerged first in The UK, before spreading to The US, Canada, and many others.
B, Andrew Jackson was not a Founding Father. He was 7 when the Declaration was signed, and only became well-known after the War of 1812. Sorry, personal pet peeve.
C. I understand your point, but I think when people say Nazism is un-american, they’re not saying that America the nation is inherently anti Nazi:
1. They’re saying that the ideals America professes to have, namely, liberty, equality, ETC are antithetical to those of Nazism. Whether or not we’ve lived tot those ideals, they’re worth having.
2. ...Nazis are slowly taking over The Republican Party. I’m not gonna say all Republicans are Nazis: That would be a gross oversimplification, and, furthermore, if a solid 20% of the countries’ population were Nazis, I would’t still be here. Still, as always, Conservatism and Fascism do have ideological overlap to some extent, and, as the GOP have internetized the idea of “better an extremist on my side then a moderate on the fence”, they’ve found ground there, as they did in France, Brazil, ETC. So, tailor the argument: Conservatives ted to be VERY American, they love America, which is a major reason they’re so susceptible to Nationalism, it’s very easy to twist a love of your country in spite of its flaws into a love of your country that justifies its flaws/More then that, WWII is VERY popular among conservatives. It’s one of the onyl wars in recent memory where we can say in retrospect that we were on the right side, and pretty much no wa since has competed in terms of public approval-in-memory,except MAYBE The Gulf War,depending on who you ask. Thus, the hope is that, by appealing to moderate conservative voters’ patriotic streak, we can convince them they SHOULDN’T be voting for the party who ae slwoly becoming synonymous with “unconfertable HItler parraels”.