Who’s Really The Fascist?
Illargi
Meijer Meijer
John Vachon Paramount Theater and dairy truck, 44th Street, NYC 1943
13
June, 2016
Like
most of you, I too see an increase in the use of the term ‘fascism’
in the media, and it is -almost- always linked to the rise of Donald
Trump in the US and various politicians and parties in Europe, Le Pen
in France, Wilders in Holland, Erdogan in Turkey, plus a pretty
bewildering and motley crew of ‘groups’ in Eastern Europe
(Hungary’s Orban) and Scandinavia. I guess you could throw in Nigel
Farage and UKIP in Britain as well.
And
while I -sort of- understand why the term is used the way it is, and
it’s not possible to say it’s used wrong simply because ‘fascism’
knows so many different interpretations and definitions, very few of
which can be classified as definitely wrong, that doesn’t mean that
just because you’re not definitely wrong, you’re therefore right,
and certainly not comprehensive or complete. And there’s a story in
there that deserves to be told. Who is really the fascist? From
Wikipedia:
George Orwell wrote in 1944 that “the word ‘Fascism’ is almost entirely meaningless … almost any English person would accept ‘bully’ as a synonym for ‘Fascist'”. Richard Griffiths said in 2005 that “fascism” is the “most misused, and over-used word, of our times”. “Fascist” is sometimes applied to post-war organizations and ways of thinking that academics more commonly term “neo-fascist”.
I’m
inclined to venture that ‘terrorism’ is a good second for most
misused word, but something tells me that once you get into economics
and the way terms like ‘stimulus’, ‘unemployment’ and
‘inflation’ are used, this is an argument that would never end.
Let’s stick with ‘fascism’ for now.
The
prevalent definition -and public notion- of fascism today is
connected first and foremost to Adolf Hitler, to the Holocaust, the
SS and other German WWII ‘phenomena’. And it’s quite something
to link Trump or Le Pen to that, even if they say things at times
that may make you shudder. It seems at least a tad hyperbolic, no
matter how much you may not like these people. Neither is responsible
for the deaths of millions of people.
What’s
more interesting, because it can provide perspective, is to look at
what fascism is (or was) prior to, and beyond, Hitler and Germany.
One man stands out in this: Benito Mussolini, Italian prime minister
slash wannabe dictator from 1922 till 1943, who’s even often
labeled the founder of fascism (though its roots go back much
further). But for Mussolini, fascism was not what Hitler has made us
define it as.
For
Mussolini, fascism was much more about corporatism (or corporativism,
or fascist corporatism), of letting corporations write, define and
perhaps even execute a country’s economic policies. And have a
strong man -he meant himself- coordinate these policies in
government. Where civil servants would inflict them on the people.
Mussolini’s idea(l) of fascism was very nationalistic, but also
-surprisingly?- anti-conservative. It was “against the
backwardness of the right and the destructiveness of the left”.
“Fascism, sitting on the right, could also have sat on the mountain of the center … These words in any case do not have a fixed and unchanged meaning: they do have a variable subject to location, time and spirit. We don’t give a damn about these empty terminologies and we despise those who are terrorized by these words.”
Hitler,
in his early days, remained very close to Mussolini’s (and other
people’s) definitions. Nazism stands for national socialism.
But
what I’m really trying to get at is that if you look closer at
these definitions and interpretations, you can made a solid case that
it’s not Trump and Le Pen who are the fascists, but instead the
present incumbents in our governments, as well as those belonging to
the same political class and parties as them, and who aspire to one
day fill their seats and shoes.
That
the fact that politics and economics (‘politico-economics’) can
no longer be seen as separate entities, as I argued recently in “The
Only Thing That Grows Is Debt”,
conforms pretty much one-on-one to Mussolini’s definition of
fascism.
‘Politico-economics’
(a.k.a corporatism) is our present form of government, even of
organizing our entire societies, and it’s the very thing people
protest against when they vote for Trump and Le Pen (and against
Cameron when they vote for Brexit). This would seem to put the claim
that Trump is a fascist on its head.
Trump is the reaction to fascism
as defined by Mussolini, as are le Pen and Orban and Wilders and the
others, even as they are accused of being fascists themselves.
Corporations,
the elite, govern our societies, no matter that there is still a thin
veneer of democratic rights -barely- visible. It makes no difference
in the States whether you vote Democratic or Republican, they are the
same thing – except for a few intentionally well-conserved minor
details.
The
same is true all across Europe. In Greece, left-wing Syriza governs
in a coalition with very-right-wing Independent Greeks. In Holland,
former adversaries from the left and right sit happily in a cabinet
and nobody thinks that’s strange. That why people like Le Pen and
Wilders and Trump can become what they are today. There is a
politico-economic vacuum.
The
former differences between parties don’t matter anymore because on
major issues politicians have no decision-making voice, they simply
do what they are told. And if they do that well, they get handsomely
compensated for it. The ultimate paragons of this development are not
Trump and le Pen, but Obama, Cameron, both Clintons, Hollande,
Merkel, the list is endless because the corporatist takeover is
well-nigh complete across the board.
These
‘leaders’ represent a society in which there is no dividing line
between politics and economics. They, and their paymasters, have
achieved Mussolini’s ideal, something he himself -ironically- never
accomplished.
And
we could take this argument a step further: even if you would want to
talk about the ‘Hitler brand of fascism’, the violence, the
large-scale murder, you still have Trump and Le Pen with zero kills
to their name, while Obama, Cameron, both Clintons, Hollande, Merkel
et al are responsible for hundreds of thousands of lives lost. Just
watch what’s coming in the next batch of Clinton emails Wikileaks
is set to publish.
In
a next step, while we’re at it, we could hold up Mussolini’s
fascism ideals and look at what they have in common with trade deals
such as TPP and TTiP. Plenty, obviously. Though they are not in sync
with the nationalist component of his definition, they do represent a
much larger drive than anything that has preceded them in human
history, to hand over -the last vestiges of- political power to the
corporate sector.
And
who’s in favor of these deals? The incumbent politico-economic
classes that have taken over our governments. Even as resistance to
the deals is surging, they are undoubtedly as we speak scrambling to
find ways, legal or not, democratic or not, to push them through.
Trump, Le Pen, Wilders want nothing to do with them.
So
when I read things like a recent Salon headline:“Fascism
is rising in the US and Europe – and Donald Trump is the face of
this disturbing new reality”,
it makes me think that this is at the very least a little one-sided,
if not blind-sided, and for more reasons than one.
Obviously,
the sitting parties in Congress want nothing more than for Trump to
be branded a fascist. Which is why Hillary Clinton not long ago
compared him to Adolf Hitler. Through a wider philosophical and
historical lens, there are two issues with that claim. First, Trump
hasn’t killed anyone. Second, the person making the claim has.
The
problem for Hillary is that a lot of Americans understand this. And
that because of this such claims have started to backfire in a 180ยบ
turnaround. You can witness the same process in Britain’s Brexit
debate, and in many other countries.
I’m
not writing this to support Trump or Le Pen, they’re not my kind of
people at all. But neither is Hillary. I write it to warn people away
from vacuous claims and statements. Which are not only dishonest,
they have started to support the very people they’re made against.
The political climate is changing, because the economy is tanking.
And
I write this to indicate that fascism may well already be amongst us,
and it would be a good idea if we learned to recognize it. To suggest
that perhaps, if we’re honest, Hillary is closer to Mussolini than
Trump is to Hitler.
Look,
we could talk our faces blue about the differences and analogies
between fascism and racism, something the ‘new right wing’ seems
to have plenty of, and something Muhammad Ali’s death and
yesterday’s Orlando massacre should teach us yet another lesson
about. And we could talk about what they might potentially do if/when
they acquire political power. But none of that makes these people
fascists. Whereas the other side of the equation, the incumbents…
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