Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 27 – Because most
people today view “fascist” as a term of abuse rather than an explanation, they
cannot see that ever more countries have been drawn to fascist approaches in
recent years and are now institutionalizing it without ever employing the word
itself, Maksim Aleksandrov says.
The Moscow commentator says that to
understand what is going on, one must begin by recognizing that “fascism is a
form of authoritarian state system at the foundation of which lies total
control of the population in the interests of the owners of major (very major)
businesses. In fascism, the state itself becomes a big business” (apn.ru/index.php?newsid=38295).
“The natural enemies of fascism are
any who have their own Faith or Freedom” regardless of what that idea is, because
“the essence of fascism is in the absence of ideals and in subordination to a
hierarchy.” Ordinary people may hate this or that group for various reasons.
But fascists “hate them simply because they are able to believe something.”
According to Aleksandrov, “the deal
of the fascist is a state mechanism in which each part is assigned a place.”
Anyone who refuses because of alternative beliefs of any kind must be driven
out or destroyed, and it makes no difference what these alternative beliefs are
– be they communism, Christianity, monarchism or even procrastination.
At the same time, fascism itself “is
not an ideology because it does not offer any faith in the Idea of Fascism. Fascism
does not believe in fascism, a fascist is not devoted to fascism, he acts instead
in order to rise as high as possible in the fascist corporate hierarchy … and this
is the limit of his ideological conviction.”
“The supremacy of the right of strength
is fascism’s chief principle,” the commentator continues. “If you can do
something and not be punished, it means you have the right to do it. Social
Darwinism in extreme cases becomes fascism. If you prevail, it means you are
right; if you die, it means you don’t.”
“All that you can take and keep is
yours by right. What you can’t keep isn’t.
Therefore, people in high posts in a fascist state are allowed to violate
any rules of the corporation.” Also, “a fascist state is not the automatic ally
of anther fascist state.” They may cooperate or they may not but it is not out
of any ideological conviction.
Moreover, “a fascist state is not
necessarily national.” It was in Germany, but it need not be. “There is almost
no place in fascism for romanticism and glamour.” And what is most important: the population does
not necessarily suffer “under a fascist regime.” It may be quite comfortable
with it as long as people fit in with everyone else.
And despite what people think,
Aleksandrov argues, “fascism didn’t lose in 1945.” The German version did, “but
during the Cold War, the US, an essentially fascist state won out. over the
last 20 years, almost all states in the world to one degree or anther have been
drawn to fascism and have taken advantage of circumstances too ‘legalize’ this.”
“That is what we are observing now,”
Aleksandrov says. He does not mention Russia in this regard, but his description
of fascism clearly fits Putin’s regime as well as many others.
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