What is fascism? A lot is said about it. How much do you actually know?

in informationwar •  6 years ago  (edited)

The term fascism is a hot button word these days. It should be. Fascism traditionally has been a very dangerous and bad thing. We also have organizations such as Antifa around the world which is short for Anti-Fascists. They claim to be fighting against fascism. I don't think they are. Their actions combined with what fascism actually is show them to be like a mentally controlled mercenary army FOR fascism. Yet that is my current opinion based upon my observations and knowledge of fascism. You don't have to agree with me, or anyone else.

What is fascism?

As with anything you can find many definitions because let's face it a dictionary is composed by a human or group of humans. They get to foist their opinion of what something means. It should be no surprise that definitions while usually being somewhat close tend to differ from dictionary to dictionary. They are assembled by other groups of humans. Yet there is a logical fallacy embedded in someone who thumps people with dictionary definitions as their proof they won an argument. It is called an argument from authority fallacy. It assumes that the humans (you're a human too right?) that assembled that dictionary has some authority that you don't to dictate what words mean.

Truth. They don't. Unless you blindly give it to them.

Now this could lead you down the path that then no words mean anything and they can all shift subjectively. Technically this could be true, yet it would cause the break down of communication. In reality we should have a probability of understanding the intended meaning of a word. We should not lock it into stone as we are not mind readers and we cannot know from one person to the next what their meaning of that word is. Thus, with most things we can only work with probabilities. So why am I saying this? Simple. The people who make dictionaries are not Gods. Don't forget that. They are human like you. Writing it into a book does not mean they were correct.

Okay then why use dictionaries? Dictionaries are useful for learning what a word is you heard and have no clue what the meaning is. They have no authority on the other hand to force you to agree with their meaning if you are already familiar with the word.

With that said. What is fascism? I'll give you some definitions from a few dictionaries just to get it out of the way. This is also why I gave you my opinion/understanding about dictionaries before thumping you with dictionaries like that is proof of anything.


Dictionary.com

  1. ( sometimes initial capital letter ) a governmental system led by a dictator having complete power, forcibly suppressing opposition and criticism, regimenting all industry, commerce, etc., and emphasizing an aggressive nationalism and often racism.
  2. ( sometimes initial capital letter ) the philosophy, principles, or methods of fascism.
  3. ( initial capital letter ) a political movement that employs the principles and methods of fascism, especially the one established by Mussolini in Italy 1922–43.

That is a good example of why not to trust dictionaries. That definition is weak and doesn't really define fascism. It is more a tweak to try to make it fit how a lot of people seem to be treating it these days. Yet it doesn't really define what fascism really is. No surprise. Let's see what else I can find.


www.merriam-webster.com

  1. often capitalized : a political philosophy, movement, or regime (such as that of the Fascisti) that exalts nation and often race above the individual and that stands for a centralized autocratic government headed by a dictatorial leader, severe economic and social regimentation, and forcible suppression of opposition
  2. a tendency toward or actual exercise of strong autocratic or dictatorial control early instances of army fascism and brutality

Again. They didn't actually define it. They focus on dictatorship, yet there is a reason the word dictatorship exists. Fascism and Dictatorship are not synonyms though these modern dictionaries are treating them like they are. No surprise as what they are doing fits the narrative and the propaganda that is being used with the label these days. If people were to only use such sources it is also no surprise they would end up being the actual fascists without realizing it. The definition is incomplete and misleading. Can I go further? Sure. Let's try one more online before I start looking for older physical dictionaries.


dictionary.cambridge.org

  1. a political system based on a very powerful leader, state control, and being extremely proud of country and race, and in which political opposition is not allowed

This year's history syllabus covers the rise of Fascism in Europe.
Fascism develops from right-wing extremism, supported traditionally by the middle classes, in contrast to Communism.

In lock step with the others. Notice the "right-wing extremism" comment in the example? Clue. Right-wing extremism wasn't a thing when fascism was invented as a term... These dictionaries also did not use to define it this way.

Why change it? Note the last four words of that example "in contrast to Communism". One of the things popular in something known as cultural Marxism is to redefine words to their advantage to paint the narrative desired. I usually call this word hijacking. Why would you want to do this? Most of us think in words. Change the meaning of words, change our minds. It is about control.

Now I want to go wander around the house and see if I can find a physical dictionary. I own several, though I haven't had to crack one of them open for quite some time.

Webster's New World Dictionary


1973

  1. rods bound about an axe, ancient. Roman symbol of authority.
  2. a system of government characterized by dictatorship, belligerent nationalism and racism, militarism, etc.: first instituted in Italy (1922-1943)

Now I have to do something that I am willing to do. I must acknowledge that if that is from 1973 then this definition predates the typical cultural Marxism by some degree. Thus, I must acknowledge some of the foundation upon which I argue is shaky. Yet not all is lost. I note that it doesn't really tell you what fascism is either. You see dictatorships and all of those things existed before fascism. Fascism has some traits that make it more than a dictatorship. In fact the Socialist Nazi party and Hitler practiced Fascism. It was this Fascism and a few tweaks that made them differ from Stalin and the Communist Soviet Union. In many respects they were similar other than these differences.

I will go into what I had been taught over decades that Fascism meant, but first I want to see if I can find any place that provides this detail without showing my hand.

Britannica.com - Some decent information and history.

Wikipedia - Corporatism - Specifically the section labeled Fascist corporatism begins to touch on a trait that I always saw as common in fascism.

Wikipedia - Economics of Fascism

Fascists opposed both international socialism and free market capitalism, arguing that their views represented a third position. They claimed to provide a realistic economic alternative that was neither laissez-faire capitalism nor communism.[12] They favored corporatism and class collaboration, believing that the existence of inequality and social hierarchy was beneficial (contrary to the views of socialists),[13][14] while also arguing that the state had a role in mediating relations between classes (contrary to the views of liberal capitalists).[15]

That is closer to what history seemed to show. In all cases I could find there was a great deal of what we call crony capitalism these days. Favored corporations and the government would work hand in hand to mutual benefit. Ultimately the corporations answered to the government, but they worked so closely with the government that in many respects they became arms of the government. This is sometimes called corporatism. Many so-called socialist movements have ultimately gone this route. People would argue they are not socialist, yet that is what they often called themselves at a time such concepts were new. Does that mean they were? It is easy to hide behind a label, especially one that is hijacked to support a narrative. Yet since socialism was new perhaps they were...

Afterall what are the avowed socialists typically pushing for in our world today.

More and more government control over everything. Offer you free education yet at the same time narrowing your choices of the education you can pursue to favored entities (corporations). Offer you free healthcare at the same time empowering select health insurance middlemen (corporations) your business and removing your choice. No surprise when prices skyrocket as any natural market competition is removed in the collusion between corporation and government. Speak about how tolerant, wonderful, and advanced they are and how they have the solutions to the worlds ill while simultaneously relegating segments they find undesireable to obscurity, censorship, poverty, and in some cases death camps. Speaking of tolerance while being intolerant.

If we take a look at historical examples of fascism you'll find corporations bending over backwards to work with them to benefit from it. A well placed corporation within a socialist (and yes even communist) nation can become the ultimate form of monopoly. A government sanctioned monopoly.

One thing that makes me think of this a lot is with Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and her "Green New Deal" and speaking of Public Private Partnerships.

That simple phrase Public Private Partnership should scream "fascism" to anyone that has studied it. The melding of government with private corporations is that phrase in action.

Now here is an idea...

Which is fascism?

  1. A corporation is deemed too big to fail and is propped up by government.
  2. A businessman cannot pay his bills, must declare bankruptcy, and/or sell assets. Likely will close down.

In my mind. The answer is 1.

Which is fascism?

  1. Corporations suddenly have the right to censor the speech of people, and are allowed to only allow ideas and concepts they agree with to exist, even though they have often referred to themselves as a public square.
  2. A person asks someone to leave their house who is saying things they don't want to hear.

In my mind. The answer is again 1.

Which is fascism?

  1. Receiving pay through the corporations owned by a person actively attempting to overthrow and influence not one, but multiple governments, while silencing and attacking those who try to speak against it. Acting as an intimidation force and agency to apply force against the opponents of the corporate interests paying them. Receiving material free of charge from these agencies to use as propaganda. Using violence if necessary. Largely being ignored for such actions by government and corporate (again fascism) controlled media, who instead focuses on the same targets being attacked.
  2. A group of people challenging corporate, government, or corporate media narrative.

This to me is easy. I'd say 1 again, and I personally believe that describes the modern day Antifa. The movement may have been legit when it started. Much like the tea party was hijacked is is highly likely that Antifa was also long ago hijacked.

Another historical thing of past Fascists like Hitler and Mussolini. They were charismatic and their word was taken as gospel by many of those that followed them. They were trained to treat anyone that challenged these ideas as heretics. In fact, there was quite a lot of propaganda at play specifically designed to ridicule and destroy challengers.

That propaganda was but an infant compared to what we have today.

I didn't vote for Trump. I probably would now, but lately he has been giving in when he should have kept fighting. I do not consider him controlled opposition. I did not vote for him simply because I had no idea how he would do. If I had been forced to vote between him and Hillary I would have voted for him.

I've been impressed with what he has accomplished considering the unprecedented onslaught he has been under. That onslaught which largely is lies and propaganda has turned me from someone who was not a Trump supporter, into someone that at the moment is such. Again, I didn't vote for him.

I've never been a fan of peer pressure. I am likewise no fan of propaganda and the news, media, and celebrities telling me what I must do or I am a bad person. I tend to push back against both peer pressure and propaganda.

I will admit I never thought the peer pressure would ever get this bad, or the propaganda. There is a large air of injustice and no accountability for some very bad actors and it is and has been spreading globally. It is like a huge fire. Some are trying to fight the fire. Others are simply piling on the gas, or sitting at their table drinking a beer as they stare into the light of the screen.

What is there to do?

One thing we can do is fight back against the hijacking of the words, the censoring of history, and shout loudly that we will not give up free speech. We'll fight for your right to speak, even if we despise what you say.

You see. I am not calling for the silencing of ANYONE, or ANY SUBJECT.

I'll meet them with my own words and thoughts, but I'll never say they shouldn't be allowed to speak no matter how much I dislike what they may say.

That is the difference.

Who on the so-called right is calling for the censorship of people on the left?

I haven't been seeing it.

Yet look at the left (the so-called tolerant liberal left) and you'll not only find swathes of demands for it, you'll find them actually taking action and doing it.

Deplatforming, pressuring banks not to allow people they disagree with to even have a bank account. I doubt many people think how that can literally lead to starvation, health, and other problems if they cannot have money to pay for things. Or perhaps they do, and like the fascist Nazis (National Socialist German Worker's Party) they have dehumanized certain groups of people so much that in their mind it is okay if they die. As with eugenics movements this is the same. No need to use concentration camps. Simply remove their ability to speak, to be heard, or to receive payment or make payment for food, shelter, etc. No need for gas chambers. Let them rot on the streets. No need for more public utilities and shelters. Simply pass laws to say it is okay for them to defecate and urinate on the streets and sidewalks. No need to bring back wagons to clean the defecation from the streets from the old days, simply leave it be and allow the spreading of diseases to kill them off quickly. All the while virtue signalling about tolerance, saving the world, and being pro-choice. When in reality the only thing they are pro-choice about is the right for someone to kill their child. I can say this now as much of this has now moved to post birth. I am a Deist. I have no religious reasons for being pro-life. In fact I've mostly considered myself pro-choice. Though this has gone long beyond simply a clump of cells argument. It now is legalized murder. I am not pro-choice on that.

I do like maximizing CHOICE. I believe in voluntarism. In reality I am more pro-choice than the virtue signalling left, pseudo-liberal, etc. For I believe you should have the right to choose on anything as long as you are not harming someone else or infringing upon their rights/property. For them Pro-Choice is only about one choice. Whether they can kill a baby or not. That is limited. I am pro-choice on everything. Yet aborting a child. I haven't ever been a "life begins as conception" person. For me it is about awareness. When is the child aware of itself? When can it feel and react to pain? Unless there is a life threatening reason (not including mental state) I do not support abortion. I do not support endorsing irresponsible action. "Birth control, being careful, who needs it? I have planned parenthood to cover my abortion. Trust me I've had several." Irresponsible. Vile. Immature. Lazy. For me I have been pro-choice with that concept but I always viewed it as something within the first trimester. I've never been pro-murder which I think is the case after that time. I'd like a study on awareness (there have been some with varied outcomes) and for me the results of a scientific study of that type should dictate when pro-choice is no longer viable as it is terminating someone elses life. Sure it may be carried in your body, yet you could have acted sooner to end it, and you could have been more responsible and less casual. If you can't accept the responsibility for your own actions then you shouldn't be having sex. If you were raped, or something of that nature. You can still do something in that first trimester. Just don't make me pay for it. If your health is truly in danger (not mental) then an exception may need to be made. It is called an exception for a reason. When it becomes the norm, then it is no longer an exception.

Wow... that post took a direction I didn't expect. Yet I see these things as the actions of those that are most acting like the minions of past Fascists acted. Accept the dehumanization of others and then you can justify attacking and killing them, be they people that disagree with you, or unwanted children.

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Fascism has just turned up their heat up to a new notch.

I used to agree to abortion just like you mentioned : medical reasons.

To either save the mother or the child, one has to choose.

I know because it happened to my mom. She was too weak to carry through. I lost a sibling at the time but I understood the reason.

But bottom line, even if it was medical reasons, abortion effects not only physically but mentally scared. I see it in my own eyes the years that effected the women close to me, including family members.

And to have enforcenents on abortion up till before the baby is born just because of pro choice that is just immoral and out right evil. Anyone that supports and even celebrates it... Is totally a notch up of craziness.

Posted using Partiko Android

As Doug Casey wrote in The International Man, 2nd ed. © 1979, p. 77,

Fascism
This term immediately brings to mind images of jack-booted storm troopers, Chicago's late Mayor Daley and militarism. These things are only accidental (albeit usual) political ramifications of the system - which is purely economic in itself. Fascism may be defined as an economic system where although the "means of production" and "consumer goods" are owned by individuals, they are essentially controlled by the state. Hitler's Germany is, of course, the classic example. Krupp, I.G. Farben, Messerschmidt - all were privately owned, but the government told them what to produce, how much to charge, what to pay their laborers, how much profit they might make, and regulated every other aspect of their existence. Just so, are General Motors, Lockheed, Westinghouse and most other U.S. corporations privately owned; but the government dictates maximum prices, quality ("safety") standards, minimum wages and every other detail directly through the various regulatory agencies (CAB, FTC, ICC, OSHA, etc) in addition to profit margins through its monetary, taxing and, increasingly direct "bailout" policies.

There is no difference whatsoever in kind between Nazi Germany's and America's systems; the differences are only in degree and in detail. Scandinavia is another superb example; don't be confused by all the welfare benefits; Hitler's Germany also had a full complement of them.

This makes the most sense to me, and it helps clarify where fascism and socialism overlap and where they differ. Casey's book is great, if you can find it. I have a physical copy. I have no idea whether it's online anywhere.

I'll have to check it out. My personal definition of fascism is more a cognitive collection of studying the history of WW2 and people like Hitler, Franco, Mussolini, etc. I looked at their actions and those actions kind of have given me an internal concept of what fascism is simply based around their actions.

One thing I find sad is how many people call Trump a Nazi, Hitler, Fascist, etc. He might be a fascist as I think most of the people in our government kind of lean that way, but then he does stuff that doesn't fit the mold. Plus he isn't calling to censor anyone, block web pages (book burning), confiscate guns, and imprisoning and killing his opponents. Yet these things are all things that those attacking him with such labels are doing, and if they are not doing the last few I listed it is certainly isn't for lack of trying.

Trump has actually freed a bunch of people from prison. The key is he isn't under their thumb. That is the real reason to attack.

Yet what bothers me is how many people throw those labels or claim to be anti-fascists and if you follow their actions they are the closest thing to fascists we currently have.

Technically I am anti-fascist. Yet I know what it means. I am not someone who throws labels around like they are grenades to try to shut down opposition without actually knowing something about the label. Though I try not to throw verbal grenades anyway. I don't think that leads to anywhere positive, and shuts down the doors of learning.

Trump is a fascist. He is a nationalist. He is more Mussolini than Hitler, though. Il Douche, one might say.

His administration arbitrarily redefined an accessory as a "machine gun" without the slightest nod to property rights, much less due process or the Constitution. He declared a national emergency to build a wall. He is now trying to actively intervene in Venezuela. His corporate cronyism is obvious, and his tariff plan is classic protectionism with no regard for economic reality.

His opponents differ little in principle though. They all want power, and just disagree in some of the details of how exercising the usurped authority should proceed.

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  1. Who cares about "Bump Stocks"?
  2. They found enough fentanyl to kill 54 million people in one drug bust at the US/Mexico border and the opposition party who is supposed to be protecting US citizens refuses to do anything to stop it. The drugs in addition to the trafficking of nameless, faceless women and children and the thousands of deaths in the desert of people attracted to the US by failed immigration policies are a humanitarian crisis and a disaster. Every single President of the last 20 years have agreed that we have a crisis at the US/Mexico border.
  3. People are eating out of garbage cans in Venezuela and the dictator is killing them by the thousands. He is rich but he doesn't care about the people. He is taking instructions from Cuba about how to oppress people. Socialism is rising in the Americas and is a national threat to the USA. YOU wouldn't want to live that way, believe me.
  4. What are your examples of corporate cronyism?
  5. Past Presidents set up the USA to be the slaves of the world. US citizens have a right to the wealth that their work produces and the government needs to make it possible for US citizens to care for themselves by protecting the diversity of our workforce. In addition, farming out industry to the aggressive Chinese and EU is a serious national security problem.
  1. They don't do much. People who care about the slippery slope that it's precedence might set are the ones who care. Incrementalism is how the world has gotten to the state it is in. Come for something seemingly inconsequential, then come for something else. Also if you are and advocate for the Constitution the 2nd amendment clearly states "shall not be infringed".
  2. Not much to say here. I agree.
  3. Again. Not much to say. I agree.
  4. Those that are supposed to keep big pharmaceutical companies in line tend to let things through, leave the FDA, then get high paying jobs with the places they were supposed to protect from. Sometimes called the revolving door. Other examples would be Obamacare. Letting insurance companies write that law, then using it to force citizens to use the services of the same companies that wrote the law rather than giving the citizens choice. These days it is hard to find bills in Congress that do not involve corporate cronyism. Granting favors to certain corporations and possibly blocking their competitors. Another is the fact that the big pharma groups producing the vaccines that are being mandatory and forced in an increasing number of places have had all legal liability removed from them with their products. Thus, they have no incentive to improve them and reduce negative side effects. In fact, they can just keep pushing the same products over and over, and even better the people have no choice now but to take them. They then can give nice donations to political campaigns and coffers of the Politicians that help them make such things happen. Those same politicians create a Vaccine Damages Fund that is paid for by tax payer dollars and the billions in damages that are reported (about 1-2% of the actual amount) are paid for out of that fund with zero consequence to the manufacturer. Zero incentive to reduce the chance of negative side effects.
  5. If we can take care of ourselves, then we will be in a much better position to help people that ASK for our help. We shouldn't be able to FORCE our help upon people. If we cannot take care of ourselves then how can we be expected to help others?
  1. Anyone who understands liberty needs to care about the bump stock ban because it's another arbitrary dictate that turns innocent people into "criminals" by fiat. Sich "laws" prove the illegitimacy of government by laying bare the authoritarianism behind their pretensions.

  2. The drug epidemic is bad, but the black market in drugs is 100% a consequence of drug prohibition. See point 1. We need to end arbitrary prohibitions to seriously address these problems, not impose new restrictions on travel and trade.

  3. Venezuela is a mess. Socialism is destructive. But it does not dollow that "we" (the US government) need to militarily intervene. Can you not see the absurdity in arguing that government monopolization and centralization of power is both destructive there, and beneficial here?

  4. Tariffs. Lobbyists. Banking as an industry. Regulatory capture. Subsidies. Bailouts. Sweetheart contracts. The military-industrial complex. The prison-industrial complex. The medical industry. There's a start.

  5. What are you even trying to say here? Politics is about power and wealth for the political class here first and foremost, and the US government doesn't represent or protect you or me. See point 4 above. It isn't foreign governments taxing and regulating us to death. Foreign trade isn't a threat to security. May I suggest Economics in One Lesson by Henry Hazlitt?

If you support criminalization of innocent people, prohibitions, restrictions on travel, restrictions on trade, military adventurism, economic central planning based on nationalism, and a strong central government in general, you might be inclined toward fascism yourself.

....here's my definition of fascism

Crony capitalism leading to communism.

Now this could lead you down the path that then no words mean anything and they can all shift subjectively.

this post modernist supposition can easily be discounted by

'....if all words can mean anything, and are entirely subjective - and then you rely on words to convey a message to me, you are saying that your own words have no meaning.
You are either being intellectually dishonest at best - or attempting to manipulate my perceptions of my reality, at worst.'

(you then drop the mic at this point and tell them 'fuck right off, loser.'..)

Can you tell that I've spent four days disconnected and totally offline? - Reading and listening to philosophy non stop... it's highly recommended, matey!

I can't spend time disconnected. I am a network engineer who works from home. Yet I do disconnect from Social Media and Steemit more than I once did.

Isn't the whole premise of the legal profession that it can nail down the meaning of words so that contracts can be freely entered into by willing participants? Yes, the legal profession does, like all things, succumb to corruption over time. But isn't it better for a society to aspire to living under the rule of contracts freely entered into? That requires that the meaning of words be precise and stable.

Yep. Communication, and sharing of concepts work better with stable words. However, if your goal is to manipulate minds, then manipulating words is a good path to that.

Isn't it interesting how many people directing such movements actually have backgrounds as attorneys?

The legal profession is eminently susceptible to corruption. So are many other professions that we have been naively tending to trust.

Yep. The fact they barely teach critical thinking in education (even higher) these days only makes us more susceptible. It also makes propaganda much more effective.

Most people have no clue about some of the following which are in rampant use around us:

Argument from authority fallacy (aka Appeal to Authority)
Argument from popularity fallacy (aka Bandwagon)
Argument from emotion fallacy
Red Herrings (shifting the target to avoid an answer - usually then new target is something attention grabbing)
False Dichotomy / False Dilema (You are either this, or you must be that... when usually there are actually more than two choices)

Just learning those few things as a stepping stone is like getting a new prescription of eyeglasses. You suddenly see red flags in conversations all around you. You begin to see through a lot of bullshit and manipulation.

I am of the position that Critical Thinking should be taught right along with reading, writing, math, history, science, arts, etc from a very early age and it shouldn't stop being taught as you cannot master it, you can only get better at it.

If most of the population had such an education I think collectively we could solve most problems we encounter.

Critical thinking was a required course in my first year of university. I aced the course because it was already somewhat familiar to me from my last year of high school math classes.

Sadly. It is required in universities. Yet unless you get a good teacher it usually doesn't really teach it.

We have a guy here on steemit who has taught the course in college several times yet if you watch his material (generally videos) it is clear he either doesn't know it, or he is intentionally exploiting it.

The required course I had of it in college was "Public Speaking and Critical Thinking". It was a 1st year course that I didn't take until my 3rd or 4th year.

There was this professor (old guy) named T.C. Johnson and people said "Don't take the class if he teaches it, it is a nightmare class, take it from some other professor"

I took it from him. It is likely the single most important class I took in all of my college. That was largely due to him. Yes, it was brutal. Yet it opened doors in my mind that I didn't even know existed. Some of them it took me years to see.

We would give speeches. He would be actively outlining the speech as you gave it on a chalk board somewhere else in the room. When you were done he would eviscerate it using critical thinking.

He would point out the Glittering Generalities, and many more things.

I don't recall learning the appeal to authority, appeal to popularity, etc in his class or in my Arguments and Conflict Resolution class. I encountered those within the last decade or more on my own. I do remember the glittering generality though as it was something I used in my speech and was eviscerated for.

I got an A in the class. Prior to that class I was terrified of public speaking so much so that I would generally shake quite a bit. After it, it was easy. :)

EDIT: Time frame. I took that class likely in 1992 or 1993.
EDIT 2: It is also a very huge subject that takes time and practice to learn. So a single class if done correctly is just nudging the door open as far as I am concerned. We still need to step through the door and keep practicing it and getting better at it. That is not something universities really do for us. We have to choose to do so on our own.

Good reading, with an interesting twist, I completely agree.

However, I must point out that the definition of facism, like any other word, must have a kind of relative meaning, for the fascists it meant one thing, and for those of us who are not fascists it means a different one, a capitalist and a socialist will describe the Fascism in a different way.

I would have to take the trouble to read Mussolini's book to find out what he considered to be what he was doing, but I really do not feel like doing it.

http://faculty.smu.edu/bkcarter/the%20doctrine%20of%20fascism.doc

I do not think they defined it as we do, even so its meaning for all of us, who are not fascists, it is only one, and it is as you say, a game to control the language.

Cheers!

Words mean things....or they don't.
Hijack the word to mean what you want it to mean.
Everything is GIRL SCOUTS (or someother random word)

That said...Fascism is an economic term. It means that private enterprise OWNS the means of production..but government tells them what to do.

Sound familiar?

One more thang....it's really not important what you call it.

It doesn't matter if it's a left boot or a right boot if it's on your neck.

what MATTERS is that it's ON your neck.

Well said.

You might like to read Liberal Fascism. If I recall correctly, according to that book Mussolini called it(what he was doing) socialism!

So did Hitler. He rose through the ranks of the National Socialist German Workers' Party. Germans like to shorten things into new words. That party name was shortened to Nazi.

as an understanding born of the desire to make a totalitarianism, fascists become a powerful weapon for the authorities. Even though it finally collapsed because there was nothing that could run long if the engine was broken. We see in pursuit of German with Nazi and dreamed by Hitler. Italy with Mussolini Fascists or even Japan during the second world war, all of which was intended to destroy the enemy. then who is meant by that enemy? Not only physical enemies but also ideological enemies. Anyone who is not approved will be considered an enemy. Liberalism, communism including the hostility of fascists. And this fascism is not only a military and political issue but also touches the joints of the economy as well.
In my opinion, things that have become commonplace in the history of power will have a tendency to maintain power. either politically, military or economic power will try to dominate. And in many cases, it seems that all will use the methods of fascism.
Thank you @dwinblood for sharing this post

  ·  6 years ago Reveal Comment