Fascism
is Real, But the “Resistance” is Mostly Fake
Glen
Ford, BAR executive editor
Fascism
is Real, But the “Resistance” is Mostly Fake
31
October, 2018
Fascism
is
always a danger under capitalism, with its frequent crises and
endemic white supremacy, but the phony “resistance” is only
concerned about electing Democrats.
“The
history of capitalism begins in the holds of slave ships.”
With
last weekend’s election of Jair Bolsonaro in Brazil, white
men’s parties now lead governments that preside over the two
largest concentrations of Black people outside Africa. Both Bolsonaro
and Donald Trump are widely described as fascists -- which is
correct. But it does not follow that everyone who calls such men
“fascists” is a friend of Black and other oppressed people and,
therefore, worthy allies in a “united front” of “resistance.”
Who
are the fascists, and where do they come from? More precisely, what
are they defending?
It
is generally understood among the Left that fascists are the
political products of capitalism in crisis, reactionaries that
promise to restore order by purging the society of unwanted peoples
and ideologies. Their targets depend on the particularities of the
society in crisis: in Germany, it was the Jews and the Bolsheviks,
enemies that Hitler conflated as one and the same. In the
post-Reconstruction southern region of the United States, whites
imposed the world’s first
totally racially regimented society,
one that would serve as a model and inspiration for emerging fascists
for generations to come. The Jim Crow order was heralded as a new day
for the white working man, who would no longer have to compete with
Black labor -- enslaved or free -- but instead join in the profits
(and priceless white social and political privilege) from Black
people’s super-exploitation.
“U.S.
Jim Crow would serve as a model and inspiration for emerging fascists
for generations to come.”
In
Latin America, a native-born white elite lorded it over the surviving
descendants of the original inhabitants and the millions of slaves
imported to the “New World” by European colonialists --
especially to the colossus, Brazil. Although the post-slavery racial
order was never as regimented as in the U.S. -- indeed, racial
ambiguity was encouraged among the dark lower classes, to keep them
divided -- the people at the top always knew they were “white”
(Portuguese), and defended the racial hierarchy with horrific force,
when necessary.
The
New World and the old were united by globalizing capital as most of
the planet was divided between the western European powers, with the
fiercely racist U.S. unilaterally declaring a kind of sovereignty
(Monroe Doctrine) over the south of the hemisphere, a region where
the racial pedigrees of even the elites were suspect to North
American eyes -- “mongrels,” the white southern politicians
called them.
At
the Berlin Conference of 1884-85 the industrial capitalist powers
divided the world among themselves, with their respective colonial
empires reserved for the “home” country’s super-exploitation --
globalization made formal. The newly unified German state stepped
forward to claim its rightful portion of the spoils -- its White
Right. In 1898, the United States, which had been represented in
Berlin, seized Cuba, Puerto Rico and the Philippines to become a
full-fledged imperial power. Not long afterward, President Teddy
Roosevelt sailed his “Great
White Fleet ”
around the world to show that the U.S. was not only a great power,
but a major defender of white “civilization.”
“The
United States seized Cuba, Puerto Rico and the Philippines to became
a full-fledged imperial power.”
The
U.S. claimed to be late to the colonial game, but had in fact been
catapulted to major economic power status on the backs of its
super-exploited internal colony of slaves, whose bodies were
mortgaged to securities traded throughout the developed capitalist
world, as were the deeds to the fields they toiled.
Brazil
was the last Latin American country to abolish slavery, in 1888. The
elite tried to overwhelm the freed men and women with white
immigrants, importing between 70,000 and 80,000 newcomers each year
from 1870 to 1930, mainly Portuguese and Italians. Much of the same
attempts at whitening the population occurred elsewhere in Latin
America, as elites tried frantically to certify their membership in
the global white club.
U.S.
President Woodrow Wilson, an arch racist who segregated the federal
civil service and praised the Klan-loving film “Birth of a Nation”
as “writing history with lightning,” sought to perfect the
post-World War One international order by backing formation of a
League of Nations. But Wilson’s rhetoric on people’s rights to
“self-determination” was meant for white people only. Wilson gave
no encouragement to the colonized people of Africa, Asia and the
Americas; instead, he invaded and occupied Haiti and the Dominican
Republic -- as was his right, as leader of a Great White Nation.
This
global white ruling structure was built on a doctrine of white
supremacy – or, as Marxists correctly maintain, the ideology of
white supremacy evolved to justify the crimes of the western European
colonizers and settlers against the rest of the world. Either way,
that ideology was supreme on the planet -- a mature world system --
when fascists started calling themselves by that name, most notably
in post-World War One Italy and Germany. Mussolini and Hitler wanted
nothing less for their nations than what Britain and France had long
enjoyed: a free hand in subjugating the “lesser races” of the
world -- a white privilege that the U.S. had arrogated to itself,
internally, and against its neighbors, at whim.
“The
United States was catapulted to major economic power status on the
backs of its super-exploited internal colony of slaves.”
In
a sense, the western Europeans and their settler states had forged an
ideology of white “exceptionalism” over the centuries since the
piratical European breakout of 1492. The Haitian Revolution of 1804
was a challenge to the white world order of a magnitude that would
not be exceeded until 1917, with the Russian revolutionary
declaration of the rights
of all peoples to
“free self-determination, including secession and formation of a
separate state.” The Soviet stance was seen as a declaration of
war, not just on capitalism, but on white people’s “exceptional”
right to supremacy over darker peoples -- a revolutionary idea whose
time would not come for most of the colonized peoples of Africa, Asia
and the Caribbean for two generations.
Fascism
would consume Europe, as Hitler pursued his super-white Aryan nation
dream, a genocidal ambition derived directly from the centuries-long
planetary colonization project of Britain, France, the Dutch, Spain,
Portugal and other globe-trotting thieves.
White
supremacy is deeply embedded in Euro-settler culture. It provides an
implicit, if not explicit, explanation for Euro-American dominance in
the world, and an excuse for the tens of millions slaughtered in
reaching that zenith. The histories of Euro-American world conquest
and capitalism are entwined -- that is, the history of capitalism
begins in the holds of slave ships. It is impossible to separate
these historical developments.
“Hitler
pursued his super-white Aryan nation dream, a genocidal ambition
derived directly from the centuries-long planetary colonization
project.”
It
is also near impossible to isolate “fascists” as if they are some
peculiar and discreet strain of “ism.” They are able to garner
mass followings when the prevailing order is threatened -- and in the
Euro-American world (including, of course, Latin America), that order
is inherently white supremacist and capitalist.
Fascists
always win power with the assent of strong sections of the ruling
class, since those are the social forces that have the biggest stake
in the old order. Such was the case with Hitler, Mussolini and, yes,
Trump and Bolsonaro. Therefore, the question is not, What do we do
about the miscreants Trump and Bolsonaro, but, How do we defeat this
system -- the rule of capital, buttressed and justified by white
supremacy -- and those elements of the ruling class and their minions
that have empowered these ugly fascists? That means Democrats and
Republicans in the U.S. and a host of political parties and business
enterprises in Brazil. It means indicting the oligarchs at the top of
late stage global capitalism and their protector, U.S. imperialism,
which confronts growing resistance, worldwide.
Washington
began intervening to get rid of the Workers Party government in
Brazil, years ago. In other words, the U.S. government was fomenting
fascism in Brazil (again) long before Trump got his hands on the
levers of power. Bolsonaro and Trump did not march into their capital
cities at the head of goose-stepping mobs, overrunning the old order.
They came to save the
old order -- or, at least, to salvage the white supremacist aspects
of it, which is what their grassroots followers care about. The
entire ruling class was rewarded with trillions in tax breaks and
deregulation, once Trump was in office. All of the capitalist
vultures in Brazil can expect the same -- while the nation’s Black
population braces for a reign of police and military terror, with
leftists pushed underground or disappeared.
I
have no problem labeling Trump a fascist, and Bolsonaro appears to
have no problem being called one. My problem is with a phony
“resistance” that defines fascism so narrowly that it applies,
domestically, only to Donald Trump and his most crazed followers. For
Democrats, the fascist label is mere political epithet, a demon-word
hurled for election purposes. Even self-styled “progressive”
Democrats will not break with a lawless U.S. “exceptionalism”
that has killed upwards of 15 million people around the globe since
World War Two -- six million in the Congo, alone, which makes Uncle
Sam (Clinton, Bush, Obama, and now Trump) a bipartisan mass genocidal
murderer on a par with Belgian King Leopold. Except that Leopold
confined his genocides mainly to the Congo, while the U.S. superpower
lays waste to non-white peoples worldwide.
“My
problem is with a phony ‘resistance’ that defines fascism so
narrowly that it applies, domestically, only to Donald Trump and his
most crazed followers.”
During
the whole colonial period, most of the Left in Europe treated Black,
brown and yellow lives as if they didn’t matter, all the while
claiming to be the vanguard of humanity’s struggle for dignity.
Then the mass murdering monster that had been marauding the darker
world for centuries, fattening Europe, turned inward to eat Europe
alive. Fascism was perceived as a new and singular evil, rather than
the logical outcome of capitalism+white supremacy.
In
the wake of World War Two, Aimé Césaire, the poet and politician
from Martinique, explained that Europe had incubated fascism in its
colonies, where millions perished and whole cultures vanished for the
sake of capital accumulation. He argued “that they
tolerated that Nazism before it was inflicted on them, that they
absolved it, shut their eyes to it, legitimized it, because, until
then, it had been applied only to non-European peoples; that they
have cultivated that Nazism, that they are responsible for it, and
that before engulfing the whole of Western, Christian civilization in
its reddened waters, it oozes, seeps, and trickles from every crack.”
In
the postwar U.S., white people couldn’t recognize a fascist without
his uniform – which is understandable, since much of the white
population were themselves fascist, in that they endorsed a police
state and enforced political and social subordination for Black
people at home, and supported wars to suppress non-whites' right
to self-determination, abroad. The Black liberation movement of the
Sixties provoked a fascist white general response: Black mass
incarceration, a system that “oozes, seeps, and trickles from every
crack,” enmeshing millions of whites in the carceral state as
collateral damage in the unceasing war on Blacks. The biggest
incarceration state in the world must be, by definition, the world’s
biggest police state. If there is a fascist regime on the planet,
this must be it -- otherwise, the only conclusion is that Black
Americans are congenitally criminal, and deserve to be the most
imprisoned people on earth.
“They
absolved it, shut their eyes to it, legitimized it, because, until
then, it had been applied only to non-European peoples.”
(In
fact, Native Americans, Maoris in New Zealand, and Roma in eastern
Europe are locked up in proportions that rival Black U.S.
incarceration -- as are Blacks in the UK, it has been argued. But
this only confirms that white supremacy is an incubator of fascism,
worldwide.)
So,
where have all the anti-fascists been hiding, the last 50 years, as
Black America was methodically tortured, destabilized and dismembered
by the State? Did they cry “fascist” when Barack Obama broke all
records in deporting undocumented people? Of course not -- no fascism
there. They denounce Trump’s anti-Muslim tirades, but did they
mobilize an anti-war movement to halt Obama’s proxy jihadist war
against Syria that has left half a million dead? No, instead they
applaud Trump when he bombs Syria and condemn Russia for defending a
sovereign state from unprovoked attack by the U.S. and its allies. Do
they care about international law? Never heard of it. They are not
upset that the U.S. spent $5 billion to overthrow an elected
government and install actual Nazis in power in Ukraine -- after
which Hillary Clinton had the nerve to call Putin “Hitler.” No,
the “resistance” is mad at the Russians for…everything.
Is
it disturbing to the “resistance” that Colombia, a CIA-nurtured
narco-regime that is the most dangerous place in the world to be a
union or peasant organizer, and where millions of Black and
indigenous people have been displaced to fatten the profits of U.S.
corporations, is about to join NATO? Truth be told, are they really
angry about Bolsonaro getting elected in Brazil, except as a talking
point to hammer Trump?
“Do
they care about international law? Never heard of it.”
Any
real resistance to fascism would defend freedom of speech and seek to
broaden, rather than further restrict, popular access to media of all
kinds. But much of the “resistance” cheers Facebook and Google
censorship of material that might “sow division” in U.S. society
-- including Black Agenda Report -- as if conformity with imperialism
and institutional white supremacy is a bulwark against fascism.
We
at BAR are always ready to join with genuine anti-fascists. But,
outside of Black America, which endured the world’s first fascist
regime in the Jim Crow South, and continues to suffer under fascism’s
second, mass Black carceral incarnation, real anti-fascists are hard
to find in the United States. The historical Black consensus on peace
and social justice is constantly undermined by the pervasive presence
in our communities of the Democratic Party, acting as an agent of its
corporate masters. Under the Party’s money-drenched influence, 80
percent of the Congressional Black Caucus voted in 2014 to continue
the infamous 1033
Pentagon program that
funnels military weaponry, gear and training to local police. And
earlier this year, three quarters of the Black lawmakers in the U.S.
House supported a bill that made police a
protected class.
Attacks on cops are to be treated as hate crimes.
Self-determination
and socialism are the antidotes to fascism, a social pathology born
in the bowels of white supremacist capitalism -- the only kind of
capitalism that exists in the “West.” (We’ll find out what
those Chinese capitalist-roaders are cooking up, in time, but U.S.
imperialism is the main danger to humanity in this epoch.) These two
topics are always on the agenda at the Black Is Back Coalition for
Social Justice, Peace and Reparations, which holds its annual march
on the White House and
national conference, this weekend.
BAR
executive editor Glen Ford can be contacted
at Glen.Ford@BlackAgendaReport.com.
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