EAllusion wrote:Fascism is traditionally considered a type of right-wing authoritarian political structure with an emphasis on extreme nationalism (often called "patriotism" in America), militarism, corporatism, support of a strong police state, and veneration of state leaders when they are part of the fascist party. Categorizing it far right when, say, an antithesis of it in anarcho-capitalism is also far right has to do with the limitations of the dipole political spectrum. The extreme leftwing movement of anarcho-syndicalism has more in common with hardcore libertarians than it does Stalinism. Likewise, Stalinism has more in common with fascism than leftist communitarians. Multidimensional political spectrums do a better job capturing family resemblances of political ideologies, but that doesn't change how and why things are categorized as left or right.
1. Fascism only began to be categorized as "far right" or "right wing" after Hitler invaded the Soviet Union and the entire political dynamic changed from the point of view of the Comintern and the Western communist parties it controlled. Generations of Western and American intellectuals swallowed this Popular Front propaganda whole because it served their own ideological interests and because it was what they wanted to hear, but this idea cannot survive any actual serious study of the ideologies involved and their intellectual patrimony.
extreme nationalism (often called "patriotism" in America),
Uh...no. Again you paint yourself as a Chomskyite anti-American leftist radical with a chip on his oh so enlightened and morally superior shoulder against the United States and its historic role in the world. "Patriotism," of course, is not "nationalism" at all, in the American or generalized sense of the term, or is it (gulp!) "extreme" nationalism (which, by the way, has also imbued a number of 20th century communist revolutionary movements and characters).
There's a movement in the more authoritarian religious right sector in the United States that Droopy is a part of
CFR. Consider this a MADboard CFR, Def (even though that rule doesn't apply here). Put up or shut up.
to recast fascism as leftism given that all things "left" are bad and all things "right" are good. The irony is those are some of the most fascist members of our own society.
It was never "recast" as anything because no one on the Left in the 1930s believed that either Italian fascism or German National Socialism were anything other than forms or versions of progressive ideology and thinking. It was those authoritarian religious right wing nuts, Von Mises and Von Hayek, who, from the 30s onward, began pointing out the family resemblance between socialism, National Socialism, and fascism.
Other fundamentalist snake-handlers who have pointed this out over the last half-century or more have been Richard Pipes, Robert Conquest, William F. Buckley, Eric Voeglin, George Reisman, Balint Vazsonyi, Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn, and many other distinguished modern conservative and libertarian thinkers.
Def has just bottomed out once again and recused himself from consideration as a serious thinker on these issues.