A Liberal Dose, April 15, 2021 "Defining Terms: What Is Fascism?"
Troy D. Smith
I have been using the first several columns in this
series to define terms, and I am going to continue that today with a word that
is seriously misunderstood and frequently misused: fascist.
Fascist, like socialist, communist, and terrorist, has
devolved among the general public into an insult to use on whoever you don’t
like, without understanding the meaning of the word. It is usually linked to
brutality and suppression, which is accurate, but has basically become a
synonym for “meanie.” That simplistic understanding is dangerous on several
levels. For one thing, a government (or a person) can use brutality and
suppression without being fascist; the brutality and suppression are tools, it
is the ideology those tools enforce that makes someone fascist or not.
Merriam-Webster says that fascism “exalts nation and often race above the
individual,” and that’s a good place to start unpacking.
People sometimes call those they disagree with fascist
communists. That’s where the problem comes in. Fascists and Communists are
opposites, you can’t be both at once. Fascism is the extreme far right,
Communism is the extreme far left. Taken to their ultimate extremes, both can
be authoritarian and use similar tactics to control their citizens. I like to
say that if you go all the way to the left or all the way to the right, you
circle around and they start to look like the same thing. The majority of
citizens in fascist countries did not make a conscious decision to be fascist-
it sneaks up on them, usually because they don’t understand what it is or how
to identify it, and they fall for its propaganda (this is another way in which not
understanding the meaning of fascism is dangerous.)
I am now going to give you the detailed explanation of
fascism that I have been giving in class for 15 years. Starting in 2017, I
sometimes got angry looks from students as I gave this definition. I know it
was because they thought I was picking on Donald Trump, and twisting things to
make it seem like they applied to him. But again, in reality, it was the same
definition I had been giving for years.
We get the term fascist from the Fascist Party that
formed in Italy in the 1920s and was led by Mussolini, who eventually ruled the
whole country. This was closely followed by the rise of the Nazi Party in
Germany. Control of the Japanese government at that time was seized by the
military, and –while they may not have espoused the exact same views as Italy
and Germany –they qualified as fascistic.
Fascists are far-right. Fascism equals
hyper-nationalism –our country and our way is the best and all others are
inferior. Fascists will say that other countries have taken advantage of
theirs, because their leaders have been too weak to stand up for themselves. This
weakness, they say, is a form of betrayal. The country and its leaders must be
strong as steel. Fascists call for authoritarian leaders who will restore their
country to the glory it had in the past. Fascists strongly emphasize their
country’s mythology, especially the idealized, mythologized stories about how
and why it was founded (it was always founded in perfection). Perhaps most
importantly, in a fascist state everyone must conform to the norm. People whose
ideas differ, or whose ethnicity, race, religion, etc. differ from the
majority, are not to be tolerated. Their very existence threatens the unity and
strength of the whole. This is a perfect description of Hitler, Mussolini, and
the militarized rulers of Japan in WWII. And, I don’t know, maybe some other
people.
The Italian term “fascist” comes from the Latin word
fasces, which literally means “bundles.” You can google the word and see a
picture of fasces, but I will describe it for you here as well. It was made
from a dozen or more slender wooden rods tied up in a bundle, with one rod
longer than the others holding an axe head that protrudes out of the top. It
was a symbol of governmental authority in Republican Rome. The idea was that
each slender rod could easily be broken on its own –but when placed in a
bundle, they were invulnerable. Add an axe head to them, and they were
dangerous. On its own, this is not a bad image. It demonstrates strength in
unity. 150 years before Mussolini, fasces were used in the iconography of the
new U.S. government, appearing on various official seals. U Pluribus Unum,
after all –out of many, one. United we stand, divided we fall.
But it meant much more to the hyper-nationalist
government of Mussolini, who dreamed of creating a new Roman Empire. Think of
that image in terms of fascist Italy and Nazi Germany. The whole is more
important than the individual –except that one individual, the leader (or Duce,
or Fuhrer), the rod with the axe, around which everything is built. All the
other rods must be uniform, exactly the same. If you have some one length and
some another, or different widths or shapes, the bundle will be uneven and
weakened. Think of this in context of Nazis. Everyone in Nazi society had to be
“Aryans” of Germanic descent, conform to dominant social mores, be healthy and
productive, and submit to Nazi ideology. Anyone who did not “fit the bundle”
was pruned out of it. This included “inferior races,” foreigners, LGBT people,
members of certain religions, people with disabilities, and people who did not
conform to Nazism: socialists, communists, intellectuals, and political
protesters. This is the essence of fascism. There is one way, the national way,
and dissidents and outsiders must be purged in order to strengthen the nation.
Nowadays, I hear many people insisting that Nazis were
left-wing, and were in fact socialists. On one hand, it’s easy to understand
the confusion, due to the Nazi Party’s official name: the Nazionalsozialistische Deutsche
Arbeiterpartei. Or, in English, the National Socialist German Worker’s
Party. It sounds socialist, and even has the word right in there. On the other
hand, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (North Korea) is not democratic
nor is it really a people’s republic, so titles don’t always mean anything. The
fact is –and, let me stress, this is a historical fact –socialists and
communists were the arch-enemies of Nazis, and were among the first groups (along
with labor unions) that they went after. If you know your history, you know
that four weeks after Hitler took office a fire was set at the Parliament
building (Reichstag) in Berlin, which Hitler blamed on the communists and used
as an excuse to suspend their civil rights and give himself emergency powers.
The key word in the party’s name was Nationalist, not Socialist (Nazi is short for Nazional).
So if you hear someone blame the nation’s woes on
foreigners or lazy, shiftless racial minorities, or on academics and
intellectuals, or on the weakness of more liberal leaders, or on our own allies
who stabbed us in the back, or on socialism, and that only they are strong
enough to save us and make the nation great again… it’s been said before.
And again, more recently.
--Troy D.
Smith, an Upper Cumberland native, is a novelist and a history professor at
Tennessee Tech. His words do not necessarily represent TTU.
The Upper Cumberland is very entrenched in Fascism.
ReplyDeleteDriving down the middle of Cookeville yesterday I noticed Cookeville really has very little that makes its identity as Cookeville anymore - other than Tech and the Depot - there are NO Mom and Pop shops until you get to El Tapatio.
Then you get to Gainesboro where they'll pull you over if your car doesn't match the general populace of Jackson County... (I don't have to worry about that - I happen to drive the same make car as JacksonCo SO, now).
Then you get into Macon County - and even Red Boiling Springs is losing its unique identity, trying to be like everywhere generically else in this state.
When I was an undergrad 20 years ago, and buffing floors, I had a route that included the Food City stores in Crossville and Jamestown. I could tell when it switched over from Cumberland County (a growing community with a lot of people moving in from other regions) and Fentress County... as you got closer to Jamestown, people in approaching cars started waving to you when they passed. That has almost disappeared in White County, whereas when I was a kid it was almost universal. I do see a lot of regional identity fading away into a sort of expected national identity, from natives as well as newer arrivals.
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