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The Fascist Epithet
The Freeman ^ | June 1994 | Mack Tanner

Posted on 07/05/2003 9:50:28 AM PDT by optimistically_conservative

The Fascist Epithet

Mack Tanner

Epithets are always good political weap- ons. If they are well chosen, they paint the opponent's reputation so black that further discussion is no longer required. If an opponent is inherently evil, then one has no reason to expect that rational discussion and debate would produce any useful result. Therefore, once a political opponent has been appropriately labeled, that person can be shouted down and driven from the po-dium without the need of further discussion.

Using epithets is obviously not engaging in logical political discourse, but politics isn't about logic, it's about winning and who gets to use legal force for their own advantage. Anyone who looks seriously at the American political system can only conclude that elections are won on an emotional level, not through rational debate. Usually, the politician who scares the voter the most is the one who wins.

Lovers of individual freedom generally agree that politicians, news commentators, and government bureaucrats who want to increase the size and power of government, raise taxes, further limit personal freedom, and give us socialized medicine are misguided at best, or crooked, power-hungry thieves at worst. If we believe that they support evil ideas, shouldn't we use an epithet that makes it clear what we think about them? Ultimately, freedom can only be won by those willing to fight for it, and the first weapon in any fight are fighting words. We need a single word epithet that paints the enemy as black as we believe the enemy to be.

Words like statist, liberal, or conservative simply don't get the blood boiling. Use them, and the listener yawns and continues to ignore well-reasoned arguments. More important perhaps, the targets of such sweet-sounding epithets usually accept the words as compliments that explain what they consider themselves to be.

The Best Epithet

To be effective, an epithet must make the target angry. An effective epithet must also have a basis in truth. The best epithet is one that describes a truth that the targets refuse to recognize about themselves and their political positions. By making an angry target deny the truth of the epithet or to try to explain it away, we might finally get a rational, logical discussion going as we explain why the epithet does honestly apply.

There is a very appropriate epithet that fits perfectly everyone who favors more government control of business, the economy, society, and health care. But first some political and philosophical background.

With the collapse of Communism as a threat to our modern society, it's not surprising that the two most damning political epithets that can be hurdled these days are Fascist and Nazi, the second epithet being an even more dangerous mutation of the first evil. Those who usually throw those hated epithets think they know what they accuse an opponent of being. In the popular mind, the two words are assumed to mean anyone who is a bigot, a racist, an extreme nationalist, or a political ultra-conservative.

Understanding Fascism

If we examine the political evolution that produced fascism, we find that fascism has an entirely different meaning. Once we understand what that meaning is, it's easy to understand why it is that while the epithet fascist is so popular with liberal politicians and commentators, hence little is ever written about fascism as a political philosophy. Liberal statists don't want the public to know that when they point the finger of fascism at someone else, they are pointing four fingers at themselves.

From a logical perspective, a fascist may be a racist, a bigot, an ultra-nationalist, a violent sociopath, or a blond Swede, but all racists, bigots, ultra-nationalists, sociopaths, and blond Swedes are not fascists. Fascism is a specific form of government, just as feudalism, monarchy, socialism, communism, and constitutional democracy are specific forms of government.

The roots of fascism are found in the French Revolution. While the American Revolution was founded on the philosophical idea that all men should be free, and that the primary role of government should be to guarantee that freedom, the intellectuals and politicians of the French Revolution argued that government should guarantee not only freedom, but economic equality as well.

While this is an appealing idea, the reality is that as government goals, freedom and economic equality are mutually exclusive. When people are free, those with greater intellectual capacities, creative abilities, physical prowess, initiative, or good luck will probably end up with the most economic wealth. The only way a government can create economic equality is to take wealth forcibly from the most productive members of society and redistribute it to less productive citizens. The economically successful lose their freedom so that the unsuccessful can share the wealth. The more economic equality the government guarantees, the more it must restrict the freedoms of its most productive people.

Socialism

The original political philosophy that promised both freedom and equality was socialism. Socialism proved to be a powerful rallying cry for revolution in economically backward countries where tyrants ruled, especially in countries where foreign tyrants ruled. However, intellectual supporters of the socialist dream soon discovered that it was hard to sell socialism in democracies or even in those non-democratic countries where rulers had allowed the population a degree of economic freedom.

The voters in the Western democracies not only didn't want socialism, they were terrified of the prospects of a violent socialist revolution. In the United States, most citizens quickly decided that socialism was un-American.

Not willing to give up the impossible dream that a government could guarantee both freedom and equality, the utopians proposed an alternative to socialism: the idea of a strong, nationalistic government which would allow private enterprise and privately owned property, but would control and regulate it to insure that the property owners and entrepreneurs served the public good instead of their own selfish greed. Under this scheme, politicians promised that they could achieve the goals of socialism without the otherwise inevitable pain of revolution and confiscation.

It is not surprising that these utopian intellectuals began calling themselves Progressives. What they were proposing was progressive socialism rather than revolutionary socialism. They also pre-empted the word liberal, redefining the liberalism of the American founders which held individual freedom as the ideal of a limited government into modern American liberalism in which the government limits individual freedom in order to insure economic equality.

The Promises of Progressivism

Academic economists like John Maynard Keynes threw in the promise that a strong central government could also smooth out economic cycles of boom prosperity followed by bust depression. Progressive democratic government thus not only promised freedom and equality, but also the good life of economic prosperity and perpetual growth.

The liberal democracies proved to be especially vulnerable to this philosophy which promised the voters significant improvements in their economic station without the need for great sacrifice on their part. While the successful and wealthy did have to pay the bill, initially, the bill presented extracted only a minor portion of their personal wealth and they accepted the argument that it was a cheap price if they were to avoid a socialist revolution.

In America, this system of progressive, socially engineered economic democracy was adopted so slowly that only a few thinkers recognized that it represented a total and complete break from the philosophy of government as espoused by those who wrote the American constitution. By the mid-1930s, this progressive idea that a strong government could resolve all problems of human society had thoroughly permeated the popular political thought of Western democratic governments.

Fascism

This philosophical counterpoint to socialism in which people were permitted to retain property and personal wealth while the state regulated how private property and wealth would be used to achieve the common good was given a name by Benito Mussolini when he founded the Fascist Party in Italy. He promised to give the Italians the same things that Roosevelt promised to give Americans. Mussolini called the political process for doing that Fascism.

In like manner, Adolf Hitler promised the Germans equality and prosperity through regulation and control of private wealth and industry. Hitler called his movement National Socialism (which was shortened to the acronym Nazi) because he was promising the same utopian benefits as the socialists promised, but without the pain of the immediate confiscation of all property and wealth. Like the democratic progessives, the fascist tyrants argued that the fascist way to prosperity and equality was the only hope for defeating the Communists.

Fascism was and is a political philosophy in which a strong central government permits, but regulates and taxes, private wealth and property in order to achieve the utopian socialist ideal.

Hitler played on frustrated national pride and used hate and envy of the German Jewish population in selling his fascist dream. To be a fascist one must not necessarily hate the same things the Germans hated at the time Hitler rose to power. But hatred is an inevitable by-product of fascism.

A primary fallacy of fascism and socialism is the belief that intelligent, selfless people can be found within any society - people who are so wise and knowledgeable that they can determine what constitutes the common good and what individual sacrifices are necessary to achieve that good. The fallacy dictates that such wise citizens are morally entitled to do whatever is necessary to ensure that all other members of the society make the necessary sacrifices. Other members of the society have a moral obligation to make the personal sacrifices, even if in making them, they suffer a significant decrease in the level of their own comfort and personal happiness. By definition, anyone who resists making such a personal sacrifice is deemed an immoral, evil, selfish beast who deserves whatever punishment the state decides to inflict.

Because fascist controls of business and private property can never produce the promised result of equality, freedom, and economic prosperity any more than socialist promises can, fascist politicians must always be looking for someone to blame for their failures while continuing to promise even greater future economic and social miracles. Both socialists and fascists must demonize those who object to the state taking over control of their property, businesses, and lives in order to justify the violence that the political leaders will inflict on them. Fascism and socialism grow only in the soil of envy and hate.

Like socialism, fascism has fatal flaws that can lead to excesses like those of Nazi Germany just as socialism led to the gross excesses of violence in the Soviet Union, China, Cuba, and on down to the killing fields of Cambodia. But the excesses of racism, the violent suppression of minority views, ruling class elitism, and aggression against other states are symptoms of fasc1sm, not descriptions of the political-economic system.

Hitler picked the German Jews as hate targets. Modern fascist politicians demonize Wall Street bankers, entrepreneurs, well-paid CEOs, pharmaceutical and insurance companies, illegal immigrants, creative financial managers, gun owners, fundamentalist religious leaders, and dead white guys who wrote criticism pointing out the fallacies of fascism and socialism.

World War II started out as a confrontation between the two competing utopian systems for building a brave new world. Hitler expected that the democratic fascist countries of England and the United States would either support his efforts, or remain neutral. How we ended up on the side of the most extreme socialist country in the world rather than the most extreme fascist country requires a complicated historical examination beyond the scope of this essay.

Nevertheless, once Germany was defeated, the ongoing world-wide struggle immediately reverted back to a conflict between fascism and socialism and continued on for another 45 years. The primary issue of the Cold War was never freedom or slavery; it was whether total state control would be achieved through Communist revolution or through progressive subversion of the democratic process.

Now that socialism has collapsed under its own weight, we will next learn how long it will take democratic fascism to collapse because of the same fatal flaws in economic and political theory that are common to all socialist systems.

Much of modern American liberalism is fascism and always has been. We ought to start calling it that. By calling it what it really is, we can draw attention to what is happening in our country and explain why we keep losing freedom while violence and hate grow and spread through our society.


At the time of the original publication, Mr. Tanner, who lived in Moscow, Idaho, was a retired American diplomat and free-lance writer.



TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Editorial; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: communism; communist; coreprinciples; culturewar; excellent; fascism; fascist; historylist; liberal; liberalism; philosophytime; pufflist; socialism; socialist
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To: thoughtomator
Republic as in the opposite of federalism? These describe how a nation organizes itself, not the philosophy by which it is governed.
21 posted on 07/05/2003 11:49:30 AM PDT by ffusco (Maecilius Fuscus,Governor of Longovicium , Manchester, England. 238-244 AD)
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To: optimistically_conservative; Budge
"Liberal statists don't want the public to know that when they point the finger of fascism at someone else, they are pointing four fingers at themselves."

That says it all right there.

"Much of modern American liberalism is fascism and always has been.:

Which brings us back to the first point. They are experts at projection. Calling us fascists is one of their favorite things, but their feigned outrage always did ring hollow. Wonder if even they realize how much more it is THEY who fit the description and not us at all. The fact that the word is used as an attack reveals that even they know that it is a bad thing.

Ping!

22 posted on 07/05/2003 1:00:23 PM PDT by sweetliberty ("Having the right to do a thing is not at all the same thing as being right in doing it.")
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To: Eva
"This is what the left fear most of all because you cannot subjugate a people who answer to a higher power than the state."

Which is, of course, the reason for all the recent attacks on our predominantly Christian beliefs.

23 posted on 07/05/2003 1:02:21 PM PDT by sweetliberty ("Having the right to do a thing is not at all the same thing as being right in doing it.")
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To: optimistically_conservative
Excellent article...similar to what we're seeing today.
How two popular movmeents equate the same group.
Hitlers National Socialists: Jews = capitalists.
Progressive left in America: Neo-cons = Jews
24 posted on 07/05/2003 1:26:27 PM PDT by Katya
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To: optimistically_conservative
I read this with as close attention as I could, and I still don't understand exactly what the difference is between Progressive Socialism and Fascism. Both allow private property and both allow businesses to be owned privately, but both tax heavily to support social programs (from what I can understand) and both regulate business very closely. So what is the difference?
25 posted on 07/05/2003 1:37:07 PM PDT by A_perfect_lady (Let them, like, eat cake, or whatever.)
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To: sweetliberty
"Liberal statists don't want the public to know that when they point the finger of fascism at someone else, they are pointing four fingers at themselves."

They must have double-jointed thumbs...

26 posted on 07/05/2003 1:39:24 PM PDT by A_perfect_lady (Let them eat cake.)
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To: A_perfect_lady
I would offer that part of the difference is how they come about.

Fascism is the government redistributing wealth through the imposition of taxes, regulation, etc. - happens quickly with a single change in leadership.

Progressive socialism assumes the slow movement towards equality without revolution or the imposition from a single leader.

27 posted on 07/05/2003 1:43:25 PM PDT by optimistically_conservative (Why isn't Cathryn Crawford pictured at http://www.jerseygop.com/R_babes/)
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To: ffusco
A republic is not the opposite of federalism - the two are very similar. Federation and confederation are two forms of government that are not referenced here, and a republic is a third (although the similarities between the three are broad, they are not all the same thing). Constitutional democracy is not a republic, and not a federation.
28 posted on 07/05/2003 2:23:32 PM PDT by thoughtomator (Abort, Retry, Ignore, Fail?)
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To: Gabz
Bump to read later.
29 posted on 07/05/2003 2:23:58 PM PDT by Just another Joe (FReeping can be addictive and helpful to your mental health)
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To: ffusco
Some definitions from Miriam Webster:

REPUBLIC
a government in which supreme power resides in a body of citizens entitled to vote and is exercised by elected officers and representatives responsible to them and governing according to law

FEDERATION
formed by a compact between political units that surrender their individual sovereignty to a central authority but retain limited residuary powers of government : of or constituting a form of government in which power is distributed between a central authority and a number of constituent territorial units

CONFEDERATION
a league or compact for mutual support or common action

30 posted on 07/05/2003 2:29:27 PM PDT by thoughtomator (Abort, Retry, Ignore, Fail?)
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To: seamole; gcruse; thoughtomator; rdb3; ffusco; jimkress; Gabz; RichardMoore; The Electrician; ...
I have not seen this posted on FR previously, and did not feel right starting a new thread for it. I should warn everyone that ires may be raised in viewing the material linked.

I think this shows an example of the left's use of epithets, specifically the rampant comparisons of Bush to Hitler.

TakeBackTheMedia presents Bush is no Nazi.

31 posted on 07/05/2003 6:43:08 PM PDT by optimistically_conservative (Why isn't Cathryn Crawford pictured at http://www.jerseygop.com/R_babes/)
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To: optimistically_conservative
I wish I could say that I'm surprised. I'm not.
32 posted on 07/05/2003 8:20:18 PM PDT by rdb3 (Nerve-racking since 0413hrs on XII-XXII-MCMLXXI)
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To: optimistically_conservative
I agree with Tanner's observations regarding the power of the word fascist. Living in Italy in the 70's and experiencing the bantering about of the word by political party supporters (i.e. the PCI) during campaigns and students (again, mostly PCI ideologues) in philosophy classes at the university of Genoa, I observed first hand how its use could get things hopping; I use it myself on occasion to get peoples attention.

Nevertheless, I get the sense from Tanner’s discourse on what he described the “political evolution that produced fascism” that he hasn’t followed research, study, and commentary on this subject that have taken place during the decades since the end of World War II. Some books worth reading on the political ideology are "The Faces of Janus" by A. James Gregor, "The Birth of Fascist Ideology" by Zeev Sternhell, and "Fascism" by Mark Neocleous. Rather than try to reproduce my own interpretation of these three works, I will cite two points from Neocleous’ book which I believe are in fairly close agreement to the other historians and which are an accurate distillation of the current state of fascism. The New Right that Neocleous refers to regards a contemporary political movement in Europe, and even more specifically in Great Brittan.

First, on the kind of ideology fascism presents, extracted from the Preface, page xi of “Fascism”:

“[Fascism] is a form of reactionary modernism: responding to the alienation and exploitation of modern society but unwilling to lay down any serious challenge to the structure of private property central to modern capitalism, fascism can only set its compass by the light of reaction, a mystic past to be recaptured within the radically altered conditions of modernity. This politics of reaction constitutes the ideological basis of a revolution from the right in which war, nature and the nation become the central terms.”

And in the final chapter, on page 91 Neocleous writes:

“Many have noted the radicalism of the New Right, and have assumed that this radicalism stems from the attempt at modernizing Western liberal democracies. But in fact the New Right has been radical not because it sought the ‘modernization’ of liberal democratic states and societies, but because its project has been essentially reactionary: it pitted itself against the existing social order – the post-war ‘consensus’ regarding welfarism and the quasi-corporate management of capitalism – in the light of an image of past national glory (a mythical and contradictory image, but no less powerful for that). The central element of the New Right politics – an aggressive leadership, uncompromising stance on law and order, illiberal attitude on moral questions generally and certain political questions such as race and immigration, an attack on the labor movement and a defense of private property, and a forthright nationalism all contribute in a politics of reaction: a reassertion of the principal of private prosperity and capital accumulation as the raison d’etre of modern society, alongside an authoritarian moralism requiring excessive state power as a means of policing civil society. If there is such a thing as New Right distinct from ‘traditional’ conservatism, then it lies in being a reactionary modernism of our times.”

All three writers mentioned above, and many more historians and political scientists that have written on the subject, have characterized fascism as anti-materialist, anti-liberal, and anti-communist. This was certainly true of Hitler’s, Mussolini’s, and Franco’s fascist agendas. These are the principal points that Tanner misses. Gregor also stresses the additional irony that there is a convergence of Marxism and fascism. I would assert that I have long found the convergence even more pronounced in those variants Bolshevism and Nazism, even though Stalin purported that his Bolshevism was materialist, and he certainly assumed it to be communist.

33 posted on 07/05/2003 11:45:56 PM PDT by thucydidesofsummit
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To: thucydidesofsummit
Great post. I think Fascism was not ant-materialist but thought that the trappings of wealth were un-manly. Fascism idealized thrift, hardwork, self-sufficiency and the industrial arts.

34 posted on 07/06/2003 12:45:37 AM PDT by ffusco (Maecilius Fuscus,Governor of Longovicium , Manchester, England. 238-244 AD)
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To: ffusco; thucydidesofsummit
I have to agree. I don't remember facism being anti-materialist or based on a communal equity, but that all wealth and efforts should be for the national greater good.

The trappings of wealth were un-seemly, in an immoral and impolite way.
35 posted on 07/06/2003 6:44:17 AM PDT by optimistically_conservative (Why isn't Cathryn Crawford pictured at http://www.jerseygop.com/R_babes/)
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To: RichardMoore
What do you call a conspiracy that advovcates the elimination of economic freedom to preserve a past that no longer exists?
36 posted on 07/06/2003 7:00:21 AM PDT by bert (Don't Panic!)
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To: bert
Academic...The past , real or imagined doesn't exist exept in the minds man.
37 posted on 07/06/2003 12:06:48 PM PDT by ffusco (Maecilius Fuscus,Governor of Longovicium , Manchester, England. 238-244 AD)
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To: DPB101
Yes the Unions are part of the problem mainly because human nature is flawed. But the larger problem is one of design and intent. We can take turns pointing fingers at various groups and individuals but the truth is much more subtle than any of that sort of rhetoric.

What we need to do is recognise that freedom starts in the home and only truly lives there. Am I free to pursue my dream? Yes I am freer here in the USA than anywhere else. Are we guaranteed that America will always be what we think it is? No, the land of the free has been sold out to various economic interests. The problem is much greater than any one nation, a concept that the Globalists would be glad to abolish. "The modern world is insane, not so much because it admits the abnormal as because it cannot recover the normal."(Chesterton)

What is wrong with the nation today is our loss of definition or borders. It is reflected in our everyday life. Try to have a disscussion with someone who says they disagree with you and you will be met with anger or indifference. There is no room for compromise where there are no fixed ideals. So the questions is, what are we aiming for? The greatest common good? But no one can agree on what that is. So all pursue their own interests in the name of individual freedom. When what is really going on is consolidation of wealth by the few against the many. The common man is told that he is receiving a fair wage and he is offered cheap goods from China, a land where no one is free. What is the ideal that is being held up here? Our future as a nation is being squandered to benefit the few today.

38 posted on 07/07/2003 4:21:27 AM PDT by RichardMoore
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To: optimistically_conservative
"I have often been called a Nazi, and, although it is unfair, I don't let it bother me. I don't let it bother me for one simple reason. No one has ever had a fantasy about being tied to a bed and sexually ravished by someone dressed as a liberal."

- P.J. O'Rourke

39 posted on 07/07/2003 4:25:46 AM PDT by E Rocc
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To: bert
I give, what do you call it?

Fear of the past is a topic very close to my heart. Chesterton wrote about it in 1910. Dylan mentions it in his latest album. "She said, 'ya can't repeat the past.' "Ya can't repeat the past? Whatdaya mean, of course you can!"

"If I am to discuss what is wrong, one of the first things that are wrong is this: the deep and silent modern assumuption that past things have become impossible."(GK Chesterton WHAT IS WRONG WITH THE WORLD, 1910) chesterton.org

40 posted on 07/07/2003 4:28:53 AM PDT by RichardMoore
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