10 Steps To Fascism

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Have been reading some stuf on nationalism and this caught my eye:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/usa/story/0,,2064157,00.html/

What do the people of ILX think? Is this way over the top...a little bit over the top...OTM?

optimus, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 05:39 (seventeen years ago) link

linkee no workee

bobby bedelia, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 05:40 (seventeen years ago) link

Ok...

http://www.guardian.co.uk/usa/story/0,,2064157,00.html

is that better?

optimus, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 05:41 (seventeen years ago) link

Yes, it's OTM, but she made up that list while contemplating the current situation. It's not THE ultimate objective "these ten steps, and only these ten steps, in this order define fascism" list. So it won't change anything, chilling though it all is.

StanM, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 06:15 (seventeen years ago) link

lol, "argues naomi wolf"

bobby bedelia, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 06:20 (seventeen years ago) link

According to a 2006 interview with Torcuil Crichton in the Sunday Herald, Wolf claimed to have channelled an adolescent male and had a vision of Jesus Christ in an experience which prompted her to re-explore her own spirituality and her views on what is "sacred" in femininity.

bobby bedelia, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 06:22 (seventeen years ago) link

Why it's so easy to label everyone you don't like a fascist: nobody agrees on what it actually is. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Definitions_of_fascism

StanM, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 06:26 (seventeen years ago) link

OK. Lets say authoritarian populist. Is that better? Ten steps to America becoming an authoritarian populist state. Discuss.

The Boyler, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 09:44 (seventeen years ago) link

11. Win the support of the middle classes

Tom D., Tuesday, 24 April 2007 09:49 (seventeen years ago) link

i thought it was a bit hypersensitive, although usa has been an elected dictatorship pretty much from day one hasn't it?

also, can't wait for them to wake up and see this. 700 posts by 2pm GMT?

CarsmileSteve, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 09:50 (seventeen years ago) link

"usa has been an elected dictatorship pretty much from day one hasn't it? "
erm, no.

That one guy that quit, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 09:53 (seventeen years ago) link

far less so than the british system

That one guy that quit, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 09:54 (seventeen years ago) link

when we will submit to a tolitarianism of ice cream and xbox the only artistic statment that captures our final capitualtion to dull tyranny will be razorlight's lone number one single

acrobat, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 10:29 (seventeen years ago) link

Quite, Though it's interesting how many of Wolf's points equally could be applied in the UK too. We're a long way off the USA, but there's some reasonably large steps taken down the path in the last few years.

The Boyler, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 10:29 (seventeen years ago) link

I was just reading this. I would add: 11) Use popular real-life documentary "24" to prove to the unbelievers how increasingly necessary torture etc is.

Not the real Village People, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 10:32 (seventeen years ago) link

We're a lot closer than the US on the surveillance criterion.

Alba, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 10:34 (seventeen years ago) link

one thing i wonder about the uk is how close we are to having mainstream ultra-right pundits. we haven't got the limbaugh's and coulter's yet but watching j clarkson on have i got news for you a couple of weeks back with his unique brand of reactionary "comedy" the threat felt suddenly much closer. cf the adoration of boris johnson. i guess thou "right-wing" means different things over here...

acrobat, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 10:35 (seventeen years ago) link

Actually, I don't see how we differ from the US on most of them.

Alba, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 10:35 (seventeen years ago) link

Most network US television IS torture, btw.

SeekAltRoute, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 10:38 (seventeen years ago) link

So is most UK television

Tom D., Tuesday, 24 April 2007 10:38 (seventeen years ago) link

... tho UK television companies go in more for extortion than torture these days

Tom D., Tuesday, 24 April 2007 10:43 (seventeen years ago) link

I think if you watch any late night "quiz" show you'll find they do both in equal measures.

onimo, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 10:45 (seventeen years ago) link

As ever, if it really was a fascist state they'd know all about it, what a load of self important shit.

Also why is this in a British paper? Why are British people presumably keen to read about America descending into fascism, and more pertinently, shouldn't they be more worried about Britain, since they live there?

People love this sort of stuff when written about America cos it's such a romantic narrative, but personally this is about as bad a form of Americanisation as you can have, the Americanisation of politics and political beliefs. Articles like this are why students here can tell you more about America's great decline than who is running for election in their own constituency.

Ronan, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 10:59 (seventeen years ago) link

"Threaten civil servants, artists and academics with job loss if they don't toe the line."

erm...isn't this pretty much what happens in every institution on earth?

Ronan, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 11:02 (seventeen years ago) link

"As Americans turn away quite leisurely, keeping tuned to internet shopping and American Idol, the foundations of democracy are being fatally corroded"

Or listening to the Arcade Fire with a Dr Dre t-shirt on, while looking at child porn.

Ronan, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 11:04 (seventeen years ago) link

Threaten civil servants, artists and academics with job loss if they don't toe the line."

Artists losing their jobs, yes, who among us doesn't lie awake at night, terror-stricken and in a cold sweat, worrying about that

Tom D., Tuesday, 24 April 2007 11:06 (seventeen years ago) link

Sorry Tom, I'm tuned in to some internet shopping right now.

Ronan, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 11:07 (seventeen years ago) link

fascist isn't a useful word because it gets on people's nerves and they can be like 'oh you're sensationalizing it', where 'it' = 'suspension of habeas corpus' or 'atrophy of cabinet government' or whatever.

That one guy that quit, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 11:15 (seventeen years ago) link

Is there a newspaper version of Godwin's law?

StanM, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 11:19 (seventeen years ago) link

'suspension of habeas corpus' = "er? you what?"
"FACISM!" = ""shit!"

and hey here's an article on how we (as in UK folks) are losing our liberty too! woo hoo!

http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/this_britain/article2474442.ece

acrobat, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 11:40 (seventeen years ago) link

"Threaten civil servants, artists and academics with job loss if they don't toe the line."

erm...isn't this pretty much what happens in every institution on earth?


no one threatens the civil servants in this land of the free!

I think tenured academics in America are completely unfireable. Untenured - now that is different.

The Real Dirty Vicar, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 11:48 (seventeen years ago) link

Also why is this in a British paper?

You think British papers should only have articles about Britain? This isn't America you know!

onimo, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 11:50 (seventeen years ago) link

wolf is a bit misguided in her faith in the efficacy of the US academy as a hotbed of activism, but she's not all wrong.

That one guy that quit, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 11:56 (seventeen years ago) link

No, I don't, I just think they should have less articles about America.

Ronan, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 12:15 (seventeen years ago) link

wow terrible writing and worse thinking

gff, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 13:25 (seventeen years ago) link

creeping authoritiarianism and curtailment of real liberty are the centra, but jesus this managed to say really nothing about our moment or um europe 70 years ago. they're not really the same, sorry! way to change america, gaurdian.

gff, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 13:30 (seventeen years ago) link

the centra??

-l problems of our time blah de blah de blah

gff, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 13:31 (seventeen years ago) link

Eh, she's got some points but there are all kind of stretches and false parallels made in her arguments. Guantanamo and the secret prisons are really bad but they're not exactly on the scale of gulags in terms of numbers of prisons. Private security contractors are really scary in their own way but I don't see the analogy to brownshirts one bit.

Hurting 2, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 13:47 (seventeen years ago) link

Sorry, in terms of numbers of PRISONERS

Hurting 2, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 13:47 (seventeen years ago) link

actually to backtrack a little i think there are common ways in which authoritarianism works wherever it happens, fine. but after reading so much stuff about how this happens, in specific, from all kinds of people (josh marshall, anne applebaum who i'm totally in love with right now), this just seems really, i dunno, undergraduate.

at this very late date let's at least not give the cats in the echo chamber another OMG DEY SED BUSHITLER AGIN!@#!@# yarnball to play with

gff, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 14:00 (seventeen years ago) link

ffs, how does naomi wolf have any credibility, it's 2007. at least get the other naomi (klein) for this sort of boilerplate shit.

gershy, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 14:15 (seventeen years ago) link

ANOTHER NAOMI IS POSSIBLE

gff, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 14:16 (seventeen years ago) link

It's G2, what do you expect???????

Tracer Hand, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 14:18 (seventeen years ago) link

Marian Wright Edelman, the person who coined the phrase "no child left behind" - subsequently hijacked by Bush - says that the US is in danger of becoming an essentially fascist society. I don't know specifically why she says that, though. It would have made a good article.

Tracer Hand, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 14:22 (seventeen years ago) link

Hurting OTM, but this phrase,

"...each of us might have a different moment when we feel forced to look back and think: that is how it was before - and this is the way it is now..."

I feel has been applicable for several years. The US is not the same place it was in the 90s as this article demosntrates by being a stretch but difficult to dismiss offhand.

riche, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 14:43 (seventeen years ago) link

The US used to be a "can-do" nation. Ingenuity and stick-to-it-iveness. Now people can barely tie their own shoes without instructions.

Tracer Hand, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 14:52 (seventeen years ago) link

Well OK, maybe they can tie their shoes. I am being too hard.

Tracer Hand, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 14:57 (seventeen years ago) link

More OTM than the Guardian piece are Umberto Eco's 10 "general properties of facist ideology" from "Eternal Facism," quoted in the Wiki article that StanD referenced upstream. I especially like: "Pacifism is Trafficking With the Enemy" because "Life is Permanent Warfare" - there must always be an enemy to fight"; "Appeal to a frustrated middle class" (that one's for you, TomD); and the bit about facism "employing and promoting an impovershed vocabulary." I wonder if any other American presidential administration can approach Bush's for pure volume of catch-phrases absorbed into and perpetuated by the news media? (Viral marketing genius, in its way.)

crazymonkeyfromjapan, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 14:59 (seventeen years ago) link

http://farm1.static.flickr.com/147/433020755_cd79c68446.jpg
GM - Tits Ooi

Dr Pow, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 14:59 (seventeen years ago) link

"Appeal to a frustrated middle class"

Cultivate a resentful majority

Tom D., Tuesday, 24 April 2007 15:03 (seventeen years ago) link

*TREASON THREAD ALERT*

M.V., Wednesday, 25 April 2007 18:37 (seventeen years ago) link

12) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4v4y3tzQty8

M.V., Thursday, 26 April 2007 02:16 (seventeen years ago) link

so that Scahill book on Blackwater seems interesting

http://www.google.com/search?client=safari&rls=en-us&q=domestic+operations+blackwater&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8

http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=07/03/21/1340210

JEREMY SCAHILL: Blackwater has an aviation division, and they have at least twenty aircraft. And one of the things that I did in the book was to look at the commonalities between the extraordinary rendition flights, the patterns of the aircraft that are engaged in extraordinary renditions, and Blackwater’s aircraft. And several of Blackwater’s aircraft, as I document in the book, fit the pattern, the flight patterns, of these flights that were engaged in extraordinary rendition.

Now, I have to say, I’ve tried to get all of Blackwater’s contracts. Some of them are classified. In fact, Blackwater’s president, Gary Jackson, has said that some of their contracts are so secret that Blackwater can’t tell one federal government entity what it’s doing for the other.

Milton Parker, Friday, 27 April 2007 20:10 (seventeen years ago) link

bush's shadow army

In just a decade Prince has expanded the Moyock headquarters to 7,000 acres, making it the world's largest private military base. Blackwater currently has 2,300 personnel deployed in nine countries, with 20,000 other contractors at the ready. It has a fleet of more than twenty aircraft, including helicopter gunships and a private intelligence division, and it is manufacturing surveillance blimps and target systems.

In 2005 after Hurricane Katrina its forces deployed in New Orleans, where it billed the federal government $950 per man, per day--at one point raking in more than $240,000 a day. At its peak the company had about 600 contractors deployed from Texas to Mississippi. Since Katrina, it has aggressively pursued domestic contracting, opening a new domestic operations division.

Milton Parker, Friday, 27 April 2007 20:11 (seventeen years ago) link

I wondering, what is the measure of when things get a bit too fascist for comfort: when radical powers are granted to the authorities, or when the authorities decide to use them?

If an internment camp is built next door, but they call it something else, like a happy camp or emergency center, is there no problem until one actually finds oneself being bussed thru the gate?

And do things have to get as bad as the worst case in recorded history in order to categorized similarly?

kingfish, Friday, 27 April 2007 20:38 (seventeen years ago) link

we already had internment camps once, remember?

Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 27 April 2007 22:02 (seventeen years ago) link

And we got them again, but before, we didn't have them at the same time as all the other shit that's going on. There wasn't a move to destroy an independent judiciary or the concept of judicial review, for example.

kingfish, Friday, 27 April 2007 22:05 (seventeen years ago) link

And more to the point, such camps are pointedly unAmerican and undemocratic things.

kingfish, Friday, 27 April 2007 22:06 (seventeen years ago) link

well circumventing judicial review isn't necessary when the Supreme Court is authorizing the detentions like they did in '44. kinda like they are now with Guantanamo.

UnAmerican shit is totally American, sorry to say.

Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 27 April 2007 22:08 (seventeen years ago) link

(I mean why would FDR need to "destroy an independent judiciary" when he'd already packed the courts with sycophants eager to follow his lead? Just like Dubya...)

Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 27 April 2007 22:09 (seventeen years ago) link

His attempt at packing the courts was partially blocked, wasn't it?

kingfish, Friday, 27 April 2007 22:12 (seventeen years ago) link

this country vacillates between its best and worst tendencies - it always has and it always will. Right from the beginning we were for great things like freedom and equality and oh yeah slavery.

I am loathe to subscribe to any notion that the country is moving irreversibly towards some end-goal - whether its fascism or a utopian democracy. It just is what it is (i.e., a mess of contradictions)

x-post

partially blocked in the sense that he was not allowed to expand the number of judges on the court. but he still "packed" it with politically motivated appointees.

Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 27 April 2007 22:14 (seventeen years ago) link

I think I'm just irritated by attempts to separate the term "fascism" from its historical context. No one goes around calling anyone a "whig" or an "anarchosyndicalist" anymore, because those terms belong to specific historical and political situations that are no longer extant. But the term "fascist" has maintained some kind of currency because its a term that still resonates as both an insult to paint your opponents with, and a bogeyman to scare people into agreeing with you. But its usually used in a manner that is totally devoid of any actual understanding of fascism as a political movement, and a distinctly European one at that, which was rarely exported to other countries (Peron and a handful of other "populist strongman"-type examples).

Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 27 April 2007 22:21 (seventeen years ago) link

I mean there's nothing inherently fascistic about rounding up and expelling/imprisoning/executing a minority group. Every political system in the history of mankind has done that at one point or another.

Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 27 April 2007 22:23 (seventeen years ago) link

I'm an engineer by training, so I think in terms of systems. The thing about our history of oscillating between a high point and a nadir is that there's is a point in any system here you can drive it past a certain threshold and the system breaks down; there's no vascillating back because the feedback control mechanism has been broken.

The feedback control mechanisms that have corrected previous authoritarian grabs for power have been deliberately and systematically disabled: a broken media, fucked voting, a justice system filled with cultist apparatchiks at all levels, an education system designed to kill off any school not run by a church or a company.

Not all of them have gone, of course, but plenty of quite powerful, quite determined, and quite well funded people are continuing to work away at it.

It is only these feedback control mechanisms that return the system/nation to a state of stability, but it's entirely possible to break these mechanisms down.

kingfish, Friday, 27 April 2007 22:32 (seventeen years ago) link

*toke toke*

JW, Friday, 27 April 2007 22:47 (seventeen years ago) link

that's very true, and the system analogy is a good one - historians are fond of trying to pinpoint when the Roman Republic reached the point of no return as well. But determining where that point is with any accuracy is nigh impossible - particularly when you have no perspective and are in the middle of it (as we are now). Take the examples you list:

- "a broken media". When was the media NOT broken in US history? The media isn't under any serious government censorship at the moment, certainly not any worse than it's ever been under (its arguably FREER than ever thanks to the relatively unregulated internet). You can complain about Fox, but how is their particular brand of "yellow journalism" worse or more detrimental to the country than, say, William Hearst's?
- "fucked voting". Women couldn't vote AT ALL until the beginning of the previous century. Black people were basically entirely disenfranchised in large swathes of the country up until the 60s. Presidents have "bought" the office before (JFK springs to mind), and we've had political dynasties before (the Adams'). There is a long, long LONG history of voter manipulation, fraud, dead people voting, "ward heels", ad infinitum.
- "a justice system filled with cultist apparatchiks at all levels." This is kinda too complex to get into but the struggle for civil rights is illuminating in this regard and basically involved the removal of an entire generation of the judiciary.
- "an education system designed to kill off any school not run by a church or a company." The public school system is a relatively recent phenomenon. I applaud it and believe its the best way to run it, but we shouldn't pretend like it was ever the norm in this country. It had a hot run in the middle of the 20th century, but it began to break down on a lot of levels (primarily because most people in this country don't agree on the GOAL of education - is it to churn out automatons that can parrot answers to specific test questions? or is it to "enlighten the mind" in a more general sense? or is it to train people to be diligent workers?). Even so, I'm not sure how the privatization of education = fascism. The fascists didn't care who did the educating as long as everyone swore fealty to the state.

Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 27 April 2007 22:48 (seventeen years ago) link

*toke toke*

my rants are fueled by caffiene, and little else

(okay, boredom, too)

kingfish, Friday, 27 April 2007 22:49 (seventeen years ago) link

yeah dude I am disappointingly sober

Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 27 April 2007 22:52 (seventeen years ago) link

[url=[Removed Illegal Link], boiling water, slow steady heat etc[/url

The Boyler, Wednesday, 2 May 2007 17:24 (seventeen years ago) link

bah

frogs, boiling water, slow steady heat etc

The Boyler, Wednesday, 2 May 2007 17:24 (seventeen years ago) link

given that its the LAPD its more surprising that they didn't just shoot a bunch of people (another time-honored American tradition that is not specifically fascist in any way)

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 2 May 2007 17:31 (seventeen years ago) link

capn save-a-blackshirt

and what, Wednesday, 2 May 2007 17:50 (seventeen years ago) link

I prefer cap'n-read-a-history-book

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 2 May 2007 17:52 (seventeen years ago) link

WHAT

jesus

Tracer Hand, Wednesday, 2 May 2007 17:52 (seventeen years ago) link

i prefer cap'n crunch. sweeter, less conflict.

latebloomer, Wednesday, 2 May 2007 18:02 (seventeen years ago) link

http://ec1.images-amazon.com/images/I/31M3X3T5EBL._SS500_.jpg

and what, Wednesday, 2 May 2007 18:03 (seventeen years ago) link

haha, that's the one that's yet to be published, right? the one he's been putting off for 3 years?

kingfish, Wednesday, 2 May 2007 18:05 (seventeen years ago) link

he's waiting to see if he has to change it from Hillary to Obama

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 2 May 2007 18:13 (seventeen years ago) link

http://i20.ebayimg.com/01/i/000/8f/92/9645_2.JPG

and what, Wednesday, 2 May 2007 18:14 (seventeen years ago) link

At what point does:

- Excessive militarisation of civilian life
- Extremely large military
- Incredible traction of flag-waving patriotism as argument winner
- Extremely closed political class, in terms of recruitment and access
- Media in hands of small coterie of corporate interests
- Media very antipathetic to anything looking left of centre
- Very handy pariahs within state and without with added value of actually having had pariahs having done something with USA (as opposed to being people who might do something)
- general decline of political language and general acceptability of some awful things
- general decline of ability to stop gross violations of human rights by the state

stop being things you can identify as common strands of US political life and start to be worrying?

It seems to me like saying something isn't a bolognese, because although it contains meat, tomatoes, wine, basil, garlic, onion etc, all those things have been seen before in meatloaf, wine bottles, chilli etc, which whilst true, doesn't get around the fact that right now, they've all come together and made, er, bolognese.

PS - this is not a thread for discussing bolognese recipes. There's another thread for that.

The Boyler, Wednesday, 2 May 2007 18:38 (seventeen years ago) link

since almost all of your qualifiers for fascism are dependent on modifiers ("extreme", "very", "excessive", "incredible", etc.) seems to me some definite goalposts need to be set by which those measurements can be made. American history provides those goalposts. Compare the past to today.

Its just tiresome to see "fascism" flung around carelessly because people are distressed about the current political situation, without any in-depth understanding of what constituted the political movements that delineated and defined fascism.

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 2 May 2007 18:44 (seventeen years ago) link

Don't forget a burgeoning "cult of masculinity", where all those uptight white guys going on about how "Jesus wasn't a pussy"

kingfish, Wednesday, 2 May 2007 18:50 (seventeen years ago) link

most of your qualifiers are so vague I don't even know what they mean. and you leave out several of the key aspects of fascism - its basic ethnic/racial/nationalist character, its populism and appeal to the "lower classes", etc.

and btw fascism was definitely not constituted by a "closed political class, in terms of recruitment and access" - Hitler was a failed painter, Mussolini an journalist, etc.) Nor does the size of the military have anything to do with fascism (America has long had the biggest military in the world - are you implying its been fascist since, oh, WWII?)

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 2 May 2007 18:52 (seventeen years ago) link

Shakey I kind of agree with you insofar as the second the word comes up, the conversation becomes way too heated and it becomes impossible to focus. Let's just agree that whatever America ends up doing is going to require a whole new word and stay alert to the developments.

And I actually think that Wolf article wasn't that bad at tracking those developments -- its concluding point wasn't that we are now actively fascist, but simply that laws and workflows have been implemented and and actively put into practice, and that given a precipitating event (like another moderately successful attack), whatever the government decides to move forward with will _already_ be perfectly legal and it'll be too late to dismantle the machine. Steps need to be taken now.

Milton Parker, Wednesday, 2 May 2007 18:56 (seventeen years ago) link

- Very handy pariahs within state and without with added value of actually having had pariahs having done something with USA (as opposed to being people who might do something)

I don't know what you're saying here.

- general decline of political language and general acceptability of some awful things

A decline from what? The lofty political language of the "Know Nothing" party at the turn of the century? This is so vague, and predicated on their being some mythic point in the past when our political language was more high-minded and eloquent. This past does not exist.

general decline of ability to stop gross violations of human rights by the state

This is also super-vague. Decline of whose ability? The "people's"? Reigning in human rights abuses by the state requires the participation of people WITHIN the framework of the state, to reshape it so those things don't happen. Problem is, in the current political climate of the US, the majority of the people are actually A-okay with Abu Ghraib, Guantanamo, and torturing people in the name of stopping terrorism. No excessive legal obstacles have been placed in their way - these laws are open to being challenged by the courts (and they ARE being challenged in the courts), the problem is that the majority of the country DOES NOT CARE.

x-post

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 2 May 2007 18:58 (seventeen years ago) link

laws and workflows have been implemented and and actively put into practice, and that given a precipitating event (like another moderately successful attack), whatever the government decides to move forward with will _already_ be perfectly legal and it'll be too late to dismantle the machine. Steps need to be taken now.

I totally agree with this assessment. I just don't find the deliberate misuse of terminology helpful. Its actually detrimental - cuz it makes the speaker sound like a shrill alarmist (and thus more easily dismissable).

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 2 May 2007 19:00 (seventeen years ago) link

another key thing about fascism is its inherent reliance on the cult of personality - the veneration of the leader as the embodiment of the country's ideals. Unless presidential term limits are repealed, its kind of impossible for this to happen in America. Our love affair with Dubya barely lasted 6 years (obviously 6 years WAY TOO LONG but still - its not comparable to the idolization of Hitler, Peron, Mussolini etc.)

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 2 May 2007 19:03 (seventeen years ago) link

well that's always been Wolf's problem before, but goin' all LOL at her article seems an overreaction as well. I see your point though, discussing these things in a thread with _that word_ in the title helps things gets lost, I should probably move that domestic-operations-of-military-contractors stuff to a Blackwater thread

x-post

Milton Parker, Wednesday, 2 May 2007 19:04 (seventeen years ago) link

Blackwater is just the best name ever for that kind of company - so evocative (the River Styx ie the passageway to hell, oil, etc.)

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 2 May 2007 19:06 (seventeen years ago) link

Also, it can be true that the current bunch of chuckleheads have been busily putting things into to place that perhaps things aren't a fascist state now, but are certainly setting things up for the next time round. As guys like Chris Hedges write, religious totalitarian types need a moment of crisis to come to power. These guy have just been stacking the deck: attacking the notion of an independent judiciary, discrediting science, journalism, and narrowing everything down to an authoritarian set-up. They've been remarkably competent at this; actual governing, no, but setting up this shit, which was their actual goal since they don't believe in public services or representative government, hell yeah.

kingfish, Wednesday, 2 May 2007 19:09 (seventeen years ago) link

well they're obviously obsessed with consolidating power in the hands of the executive, which is certainly a move towards fascism. combine that with the handy repeal of a couple of amendments and voila Uberfuhrer Schwarzenegger. You know we're in agreement on the current admin's penchant for totalitarian fantasies.

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 2 May 2007 19:13 (seventeen years ago) link

By pariahs, I'm referring to the Islamic other; US politics, like most countries, have a long history of using some vague ill-defined and overblown threat to justify a more repressive set of policies. Unlike previously, these people have more traction with US voters because they've done something in the US. Instead of being a phantom, they're more 'real' and so more durable and more amenable to being a justification for some bad shit.

By failure to stop human rights abuses, I'm saying that regardless of who has failed - the media/supreme court/congress/people, it doesn't really matter. They've happened and continue to happen, indicating a failure of really quite important counterbalances to actually do anything at all about a quite dreadful state of affairs.

As for language, I wasn't positing a golden age back in the day, merely saying that from where we are know, you notice an astonishing vacuity and vapidity of US political discourse. Fights seem to take place over the most inconsequential points of linguistic definition whilst the bigger picture never gets a look in. The normalisation of this weird hybrid of martial language and management textbook shite looks pretty entrenched with no-one seemingly able to challenge this and find a new way of talking about things.

The Boyler, Wednesday, 2 May 2007 20:33 (seventeen years ago) link

http://www.mises.org/TRTS/18.jpg

braveclub, Thursday, 3 May 2007 15:40 (seventeen years ago) link

http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2007/5/3/102322/7962

M.V., Thursday, 3 May 2007 17:28 (seventeen years ago) link

eight years pass...

Has anti-fascism lost its urgency in the eight years since this was published? I grew up with World War II veterans for relatives. My own father was a WWII buff. "Don't be a fascist" was a big thing in my family. Might seem quaint to a younger generation? My own mother was a big proponent of "never forget". Yet on the Internet, I encounter many people -especially younger people - for whom it is more like "never even considered it". Even with a black man in the White House, I think it's important to "never forget".

Fake Sam's Club Membership (I M Losted), Tuesday, 7 July 2015 16:54 (eight years ago) link

thread title sounds like the evil self-help shadow of

http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/419KZWFeBcL._SY344_BO1,204,203,200_.jpg

difficult listening hour, Tuesday, 7 July 2015 18:02 (eight years ago) link

http://www.wikihow.com/Be-a-Fascist

jmm, Tuesday, 7 July 2015 18:03 (eight years ago) link

thread title sounds like the evil self-help shadow of

Seven Steps to Heaven

Οὖτις, Tuesday, 7 July 2015 18:05 (eight years ago) link

modern states' complete fealty to global capitalism makes fascism look p quaint and outdated

Οὖτις, Tuesday, 7 July 2015 18:06 (eight years ago) link


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