Fascism now there is a word that is getting a workout these days….almost as popular as ‘socialist’ was in the not so distant past.
But how many that use the term actually know anything about it?
Here’s a hint: Very Few!
Then here is a very simple definition to get us started….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.
But if that is too simplistic for you then maybe this will make more sense to you…..
When far-right personalities and movements started popping up during the last two decades, there was, in some quarters, strong hesitation to use the “f” word to describe them. Indeed, as late as less than three years ago, I had to defend the use of the word fascist in the Cambridge Union debate against academics who were squeamish about employing it to describe far-right movements in Europe, the United States, and other parts of the world. What Donald Trump and the Jan 6, 2021, insurrection have shown, however, is that the distinction between “far right” and “fascist” is academic. Or one can say that a “far-rightist” is a fascist who has not yet seized power, for it is only once they are in power that fascists fully reveal their political propensities.
Fascism 101 for Today’s Geopolitics
But like so many other political philosophies there are many aspects within the ‘movement’….
Primo Levi used to say that every era has its own fascism. What is the fascism of our time? I define fascism as the socio-political condition of capital concentration which, without democratic control, legitimizes total indifference to the humanity of others. Therefore, fascism is a phenomenon specific to capitalist societies. I’ve been making a distinction between societal fascism (when one social group holds the right of veto over the life of another group) and political fascism (a type of authoritarian regime). Today, I think we are moving towards fascist assemblages in which previously distinct components (cultural, economic, social and political) are combined. The fascism of our time has the following faces: social neo-Darwinism, political religion, the traditional far right, lawfare, acedia individualism. Any of them is compatible with democracy, as long as democracy is not much more than a game of appearances.
Social neo-Darwinism. Neoliberalism, as an economic policy, is a device for concentrating wealth through transfers from the poor and middle classes to the upper classes by reducing the freedoms proposed by liberalism to economic freedom. As a social policy, neoliberalism translates into neo-social Darwinism: sacralization of individual autonomy in parallel with the denial of the conditions for being effectively autonomous, which leads to defending the incapacity of the state to alleviate inequalities of opportunity; glorification of order, security and tranquillity guaranteed by police repression and the mass incarceration of discontents or nonconformists; conversion of wealth and economic power into privileged criteria of human dignity; cooperation and altruism are unnatural; the means are always more contingent and disposable than the ends; the production of death is collateral damage in the struggle for success or power.
The Different Faces of Fascism
There are many faces to fascism and I feel we have not seen the end of any of them.
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Howdy Chuq!
Fascism is actually quite difficult to define as a political movement or a governing philosophy. It seems to combine absolute state power over all aspects of life, some kind of promotion of private business as long as it serves the state’s interest, over the top nationalism, and scapegoating. In short, it is government by narcissism, which is what the Republican Party has become. All of the bad actors in the Republican Party are very narcissistic.
Huzzah!
Jack
The GOP whines about the ‘nqnny state’ and they are worse of the lot.
Thanx for the visit and have a great holiday season. chuq
Howdy Chuq!
I was answering a comment on my blog and a similar issue came up, so the link I’m about to give you is top of mind.
The GOP whines about the nanny state while take advantage of all of its benefits. The misconceptions that the average rural conservative white voter has about our government and society is staggering. It is quite well documented in Arlie Hochschild’s book “Strangers in Their Own Land: Anger and Mourning on the American Right.” I reviewed it here and summarized most of what they get wrong: https://wp.me/p7vabV-22M
Huzzah!
Jack
Thanx for the link I have bookmarked it and will read it as soon as things slow down a bit….chuq
The Politics of Blame give birth to Far Right ideology. Blame people of different religion, or different colour. It’s all their fault, and if you persecute them or get rid of them, life will return to the ‘American Dream’ of the 1950s. All bullshit of course, but many people are so easily led down that path.
Best ishes, Pete.
Americans are easily lead for sure…..how sad is that when we use to be proud of the defeat of fascism and now some embrace it….how pathetic. chuq
I never forget the ‘other side’ of history, how many Americans supported the Nazis during WW2 and spied for them too. (Same thing in the UK, with the BUF in the 1930s)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_American_Bund