In defense of somebody’s perception that ‘fascism doesn’t have a definition’:

You’ll find that for many casual observers, looking for a consensus on fascism is about as easy as handling a wet bar of soap. Even George Orwell said that “the word ‘Fascism’ is almost entirely meaningless.” This slipperiness was very much by design:

In 1922 [Benito Mussolini] declared ‘Fascism is not a of dogmas and principles.’ Indeed, this was probably a real advantage, for it permitted an easy shifting with the political winds and finally enabled the Fascists to recruit followers all social classes.

None of this is to say that we shouldn’t even bother trying to define fascism, just that it is nowhere nearly as straightforward as the average liberal believes. The tactic of forcibly suppressing opposition, for example, is a phenomenon that predates Fascism by centuries (Marx hisself was a victim of it), and it was not necessarily as common during the Fascist era as you may think. Should we call ‘oppressing opposition’ a ‘fascist tactic’ or not? So while I agree that saying that ‘fascism doesn’t have a definition’ is an overreaction, I am not entirely unsympathetic to it either. Likewise, while Umberto Eco did correctly identify some themes associated with Fascism, I cannot in good faith treat his criteria as gospel.

I know what fascism truly is (it’s when I FEEL it’s fascism)

Way to miss the point. Read it again: ‘I will easily use actual history to tear them into pieces’. Funnily enough, few of Eco’s criteria cite examples from history. On the other hand, I did when answering questions on capitalism.

Tankies are just fascists who employ the visual aesthetics of the left.

I can’t really say that I’ve met many petty bourgeois communists, or even communists interested in collaborating with the petty bourgeoisie (with the possible exception of business owners who purely work alone). Likewise, the bourgeois state treated communists (including those who liked Stalin) much more harshly than fascists, and this trend persists today.

Now, I could end this commentary here, but just to prove that the liberal has an inadequate comprehension of fascism I would like to comment on this reply from another topic:

Voting is an IMPORTANT part of this picture, and the key to stop fascism from taking over in the next six months.

Sigh… no, PugJesus, it isn’t. Voting did not stop the Fascists in 1924, it did not stop them in 1932, it did not stop them in ’33, and it did not stop them in ’35. You know why? Because the upper classes designed all of these so‐called ‘democracies’, not us. They rigged the game in their favour. Hence why they entered into a backroom deal with the Fascists back in ’33.

I could go into a lengthy rant about liberals shaming adults for refusing to participate in what is effectively an overglorified public opinion poll, but I’d be veering off‐topic. Suffice to say that the perception that neofascism can be defeated at polling booths fundamentally misunderstands its nature and ignores the class society in which it exists. The tide of history is nowhere nearly this easy to bend.

  • Barx [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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    7 months ago

    Fascism was invented in Italy by Mussolini and his compatriots as a “third way” that was anticommunist/antianarchist while also claiming to oppose the conditions created by liberalism. It was still, of course, fundamentally capitalist, an intercapitalist fight that targeted the left for destruction before they properly turned on one another.

    But these things are also true:

    • There were many precedents for the elements of fascism that were adopted. They borrowed from settler-colonialism, Western chauvinism, nationalism, racism, and The United States more generally, particularly its anti-left backlashes and use of groups like The Pinkertons.

    • Germany was also obviously its own flavor of fascist and Imperial Japan a substantially different flavor. They were “friends” because of their expansionist colonial projects to cut a piece of the imperialist pie out for themselves that was not offered by the liberal order.

    • Fascism was never fully defeated. Its elements were absorbed into the liberal order as new means of control and anti-left oppression. The accumulated set of policies introduced by the dominant imperialist countries since the fall of fascism would appear as a sudden reappearance of fascism had they not been put into place over such a long period - without creating the need for brown shirts, without a left to oppose.

    Anyways that liberal has no idea what they’re talking about.

  • ghost_of_faso2@lemmygrad.ml
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    7 months ago

    If we’re fascists why did the USSR invade and defeat nazi germany lmao

    Key thing to keep in mind, the USSR when germany defeated just left

    Germany wanted to keep going when they invaded, they wanted to kill everyone.

    Thats the key difference.

  • ForgetPrimacy@lemmygrad.ml
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    7 months ago

    Agreeing here with your second-to-last paragraph: It wasn’t voting that delayed the US fall to fascism during the Business Plot of 1933 either