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Notes -
Yes, Its Fascism
I decided to come in with an open mind and read this, and i have to say, im only somewhat impressed.
There are 7 primary points that I have a big axe to grind with, lets jump into it.
Blood & Soil/White & Christian nationalism
Here is my push back for some of this: 1st, trump has passed laws that are in the interests of minority communities here & here There are some others as well. And has gone out of his way to condemn racists on multiple occassions 2
From the whitehouse website, the immigration that is largely approved is mostly from europe, asia, latin america, and oceania. A good chunk of people from these regions are not white, are free to come in the country. This is a heavily skewed exaggeration. White Christians are not being favored in the way the author wants us to believe.
I will concede here that attempts to white wash history (and the confederates) are bad, im not convinced that by itself is white nationalism. Even if it was, the fact that trump has been willing to go out of his way to help non-white groups proves that he probably isnt explicitly hateful in any real sense. To be honest, i dont think he cares for race that much.
As for europe. They have had enormous trouble with immigration, that warrants the type of nationalist response. The continent has been dealing with repeat violence and mass rape. This behavior is simply unacceptable. Your not a nazi for not wanting Islamist buffoons in your society, or for not wanting your societies demographics to shift towards those kinds of populations.
What’s private is public.
So only one of the links given here is barely comparable to Mussilini.
Lets have a quick rundown of what Mussilini did to really get accross what is meant here: Mussolini sought to ensure that no independent centers of power could exist:
Targeting law firms, while certainly poor, cant really be equivalent too this.
The other link is him appointing someone to look over steel companies. This isnt him making the steel company a corporation of the feds. Whats likely happening here is that he is trying to appease the blue collar part of his base, and keeping steel jobs within the country. The intention here is seems different, at least to my eyes.
Then there is the part about the education cuts. Yeah, again, i agree its bad, but not fascism. The point of those policies is to reduce the federal governments influence and hand power to indvidual states and parents. This is the opposite of consolidation
Might is right
While I agree trump acted poorly in response to Zelensky here, the quote "We live in a world, in the real world, that is governed by strength, that is governed by force, that is governed by power. These are the iron laws of the world that have existed since the beginning of time." Clearly strikes me as descriptive, rather than normative. It would of course be ideal if being strong wasnt the relevant factor, but thats not the reality of the situation. Those who have power makes the rules, doesnt make it ok, but it is what it is.
Territorial and military aggression
Ok, so greenland comments here, fair enough. Bad. But on the bright side, he rolled it back. His foreign policy isnt the same as desiring to invade and conquer every country a la Mussolini. CFR notes that “many of [trumps] actions mirror those of previous administrations,” even as the strategic framing differs.
This is the last one im gonna touch on, because i find it so fucking gross.
Politics as war
Dude, for fucks sakes, the dude went and fucking murdered a man!. He almost certainly is not coming in good faith or wanting to be buddy buddy with conservatives or the people he perceive as fascists. Leftist extremist who are referring to others as fascists and desiring to bash the fash, and actually carrying out the violence are clearly asking for a fight. People have the right to denounce those kinds of people as the assholes they are. Last i checked, if you fired the first shot, you are the one starting the war.
This post is getting long, but i just wanted to rant about the parts that really bothered me
It seems to me that a piece like this hinges on the assumptions that the concept of "fascism" exists in a way that rationality can show and then instances of it can be identified through the application of shared, dispassionate scientific evidence and logical argument, and further, that "fascism" is universally and obviously "evil" in some incontestable normative sense (also proven through the application of rationality, I guess?). You'd have to go along with these assumptions for this style of argument to even make any sense. And so, in this theory, if sufficient members of the Elect (to borrow the term from Joseph Bottum's "An Anxious Age: The Post-Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of America") can thus show that something is "fascist", then the broad masses will have to accept, by those preceding assumptions, that it has to be rejected, fought, exiled, etc.
I've seen Freddie de Boer, long ago, inveigh against this habit from young Progressive activists as something like the "Magic Word" theory of politics; if you can just get the dreaded magic word to be applied consistently to the thing you abhor, then broader society will have to accept that you won the argument, and then Progressive social change will surely follow. He probably had some Marxist materialist complaints to go with it, but I think the observation and critique itself is really useful as a phenomenon I see constantly.
I'm actually open to all sorts of fact based critiques of various aspects of the Trump administration. But the moment the "Magic Word" stance is trotted out, I recognize myself on the receiving end of a rhetorical bludgeon that I can either choose to participate in or resist. This has already happened with a bunch of other "Magic Words", and it seems like we're reaching the point of running on fumes here for having any kind of theoretically shared moral vocabulary at all. I imagine I'm just not in practice the audience for this line of argument, but at a certain point I'm not sure what happens when the theoretically shared moral vocabulary is entirely exhausted for broader society.
And for what it's worth, I really appreciated Paul Gottfried's "Fascism: The Career of a Concept", for actually trying to wrestle with the history of the idea and its context in broader historical contexts more generally.
Yeah, it's interesting to think about the mentality that produced this piece. I mean, if the MAGA movement is harmful, why not just argue that it's harmful? Why is it so important to label Trump/MAGA as "fascist"?
Perhaps I am speculating a bit, but I strongly suspect the reason is that in the Progressive mindset, once a person (or entity) has been labeled a "fascist," it becomes morally permissible to use just about any means to oppose that person; to deny that person his rights; to use political violence against that person, to be gleeful at anything that harms that person, no matter how unfair or unjustified, etc.
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