Jonathan101 wrote: ↑Wed Dec 23, 2020 11:32 pm
My point was to criticise Eco and point out that his definition is flawed, and express my annoyance with everyone using it, especially since it is mostly because he is famous rather than truly versed in the subject.
The problem with labelling every right-wing strongman as a "fascist" is that they probably don't see themselves like that and neither do their supporters, and in the vast majority of cases they aren't plotting another Holocaust, trying to start a new world war or trying to establish an absolute dictatorship. In the long run it just looks and sounds like hyperbole and can make them MORE popular rather than less just because their critics sound dishonest, and it legitimises the right labelling every Liberal or Leftist a Marxist or a Fascist themselves.
Okay, as a social assertion in the form of public protest or partisan bickering, for instance for instance, yes definitely. Also on levels of decency if you please, just for the specific reason you gave of anybody on any type of constituency basis.
On top of that, there are a number of people who really and truly believed that global war and genocide were set to happen under Trump and were actually going into therapy over it (sometimes with therapists who agreed with them).
And just on this, the reflexive of that is not necessary true for Fascism. The only point there being that that's not really my hypothesis per se about what would happen, and also foremost I don't think it'd be a necessary facet for consideration.
Sooner or later, a full-blown Fascist or some other sort of extremist might actually show up and take over, and the US won't be equipped to deal with them. Not because they haven't been vigilant enough, but because they have been hypervigilant to the point of exhausting and fooling themselves. In the meantime Americans keep fighting each other over real and imagined threats because of some "blood of patriots" crap.
Perhaps, if I may be so blunt. As I agree with the first condition I don't see too much to argue there I guess. People will remember the left calling Trump a fascist, but I don't think that the DNC was so far as drinking necessarily all that much kool aid on the matter. They were vocal for sure, but to varying degrees of sensationalism for the most part, I'd say leaning on the lighter side compared to the social media left.
I personally feel information is so perverted on social media that I wish people would take it a little more superficially or at least patiently, but I'm probably blowing into the wind there.
As a digest on the left, the people typically more concerned with social theory respectively instead of baser survivalist rhetoric, lobbing around fascism for consideration is not all that snobbish or eclectic. By terms of radicalizing the left and right, I'd say Trump is somewhat unprecedented for modern US times. Speculating about him being a fascist seems incredibly more pertinent now than what I know about historical presidents. But really what do I know? I'm really not that confident lol, but if you want to throw an example down then I'd appreciate it.
As to the Tea Party, my point was that they too honestly believed that Obama was a Fascist (or a number of them did at any rate) and this partially accounts for the revival of the far-right, just as the fear of Trump partially accounted for the rise of a far-left. Cumulative extremism is a documented thing and when actual extremists take power it is usually in cases where both sides are in the ascendant and people think they have to choose between one lot of lunatics or another (which is why extremists on either side of the fence both hate moderates and centrists).
I'm inclined to agree, but I've always appealed more strongly to conventionally established progressivism, particularly on this forum for instance. Which basically just means you tend to take the boring route on more decisive issues.
I personally feel that I let the right to its own devices plenty enough. I know that socially it's a more mirrored perspective rather than hierarchical in terms of social knowledge, and I say that in full despite not being very familiar with any conservatives that are much fluent at all in progressive understanding. But I don't think it's lofty as a philosophical consideration. Again I'm not much of an activist.
Politics in America today seems to be about making things sound as terrible as possible in order to force people to vote X or support Y in order to avoid Z.
I took several philosophies in college, even a fun one based on argumentation logic. So I follow so to speak.
And a "spectrum of fascism" is fine as long as it isn't actually a "spectrum of Nationalism" or "Spectrum of Concervatism" under a "Fascist" name. Otherwise it has the same problems as making a "spectrum of Marxism" (or a right-wing version of a "spectrum of fascism") and trying to cram Anarchists, Socialists, Syndicalists and Liberals onto it as if they all believe in much the same thing.
...but, mostly, I came here just to bash Eco.
Sounds very interesting, but I'm just not specifically sure what a spectrum of nationalism or conservatism under the fascist brand would look like for instance.
I guess yeah I agree that you don't want to 3-dimensionalize stuff the way Marxism was. Really I love looking into the phenomena of that though.