Typical. You wait ages for a reference to Godwin’s law to turn up, and then two come along at once (and now its three).
At risk of sounding horribly literal-minded, though, the law is vacuous and trivial. It says that:
As an online discussion grows longer, the probability of a comparison involving Nazis or Hitler approaches one.
But, of course, as anything grows longer, the probability of anything happening approaches one. Take crap-shooting. The probability of rolling a double six once with two dice is one-in-36 on one roll. But its two in 36 in two rolls. And it’s a 3-in-4 chance in 50 rolls.
The question isn’t: does the probability approach one? It always does, as this story shows. It’s: how fast does it approach one? In some cases – such as the probability of George Moonbat saying something intelligent – the answer is: not very fast at all.