Obviously this is the kind of analogy that is made quite often nowadays. I would be cautious. I would not use it too easily. We are not witnessing the 1930s. On the other hand it is impossible not to notice that there are elements of our social and political reality that can be compared to the 1930s. There are movements that can be compared if we accept that fascism is the politics of total cultural homogeneity. There are movements out there, such as those marching in Warsaw on the 11th of November—or, in fact, yesterday—that have a very similar ideology. Even if they don't wear the swastika on their forehead, the ideology of total cultural homogeneity of hostility against all minorities is very present. In the Polish case, it is summed up by the slogan “Poland for the Polish”, which is also a slogan from the 1930s that symbolizes a hostility against all types of minority communities.
Some of those groups actually take their names from the groups that existed in Poland in the 1930s, such as the All-Polish Youth or the National-Radical Camp. That was actually banned in Poland in 1934 for inciting hatred. Today a group with the same name, the same symbolism and the same ideology is allowed to march in the streets of Warsaw, after the Holocaust, in the 21st century. In my view, that is truly alarming.