Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 26 – A major
source of ideological confusion in Russia today is that fascism and especially
its most extreme variant Nazism is viewed as a response to Bolshevism rather that
both fascism and Bolshevism were in fact reactions to what their leaders viewed as “the
crisis of liberal capitalism in the first half of the 20th century,
Aleksandr Skobov says.
“Liberal capitalist civilization went
through a most serious crisis which many took to be not growing pains but its final
agony,” the Moscow commentator says. And many both began to talk about “the
decline of the West” and search for an alternative to the order they believed
was on the way out (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5DB435503D180).
Just like now, he
continues. Then, “two main projects”
were suggested, one on the left, “the Bolshevik project of ‘a communist
revolution,’” and one on the right, “the fascist project of ‘a conservative revolution.”
It was between these two competing projects, Skobov says, that “the main battle
of the 1920s and 1930s” occurred.
Because the two were engaged in a fight
with each other, “about liberalism, hared to which and the denial oof the basic
principles of which in fact united these mirror-like competitors, they forgot.”
They viewed it as “an insignificant phenomenon on its way out” that could be
ignored. That in fact saved liberalism,
Skobov says.
Again, perhaps, just like now.
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