02/21/2025 Nazism, Fascism, and Communism:
Warring Sons to a Common Father Amirhossein Ojaqfaqihi
What if two of history’s most infamous ideologiesNazism and
Fascismshared more in common fundamentally with Communism than we often
recognize? Recently, a chairwoman of a German political party
controversially claimed that
Hitler was a communist. While this assertion is incorrect, much of
the criticism it drew focused only on the visible differences between
Hitler and Communists, leaving their deeper ideological similarities
unexamined. By revisiting the words of Hitler and Mussolini, it becomes
clear that their rivalry with Communism was less about rejecting its
principles and more about promoting competing visions of
collectivism.
It is now the duty of
classical liberals, who fundamentally diverge from both communists
and fascists, to seize the opportunity and reveal the shared collectivist
roots of these ideologies. As a classical liberal, I have always been
skeptical of my ideology being grouped on the same “side” as the Nazis,
given the stark philosophical differences. The disproportionate attention
drawn to the rivalries between various forms of collectivism hinders
thorough political discourse and leaves the core question of
individualism versus collectivism inadequately explored.
Mussolini: From Marxist to Nationalist Collectivist “If the 19th century was the century of the individual, we are free
to believe that this is the ‘collective’ century,” wrote Benito
Mussolini. He began his career as an ardent Marxist, even editing a
socialist magazine. However, World War I and his perceived failure of
Communist internationalism to galvanize workers led him to reconsider.
Rather than abandoning collectivism, he sought a unifying force stronger
than class: nationalism. In The Doctrine of Fascism, he
argued that “the nation has not disappeared,” emphasizing that class
distinctions obstruct true unity: “Class cannot destroy the nation. Class
reveals itself as a collection of interests, but the nation is a history
of sentiments, traditions, language, culture, and a race; it is a
spiritual community.”
Mussolini criticized socialism, not for its collectivist nature, but for
its inability to unify all segments of society. He
described Fascism as an ideology that subsumed the individual into
the state:
Liberalism denied the State in the name of the individual; Fascism
reasserts
The rights of the State as expressing the real essence of the
individual…. The Fascist conception of the State is all-embracing;
outside of it no human or spiritual values can exist, much less have
value.
For
Mussolini, the individual had meaning only as part of the collective,
bound by traditions, culture, and duty:
Fascism sees in the world not only those superficial, material
aspects in which man appears as an individual, standing by himself…but
the nation and the country; individuals and generations bound together by
a moral law…founded on duty.
Hitler’s Vision: Sacrificing the Individual for the Race The Nazis developed a slogan that can be read in a May 1, 1934 New
York Times article title:
“
The Common Good Before the Good of the Individual.” This Nazi slogan
encapsulates Hitler’s collectivist ethos. While he diverged from
socialism in practice, he acknowledged the collectivist appeal of its
goals. In Mein Kampf, he
states: “I had no feelings of antipathy towards the actual policy of
the Social Democrats. That its avowed purpose was to raise the level of
the working classes…” However, Hitler’s break with socialism stemmed from
its perceived failure to preserve national unity and identity. He
viewed socialism’s internationalism as a threat to German identity:
“But the features that contributed most to estrange me from the Social
Democratic movement was its hostile attitude towards the struggle for the
conservation of Germanism in Austria…”
What set Hitler apart was his emphasis on race. His core concept of
racial superiority was fundamentally rooted in collectivism,
seeing the Aryan race as embodying the ideal of self-sacrifice for
the community:
The greatness of the Aryan is not based on his intellectual powers,
but rather on his willingness to devote all his faculties to the service
of the community…. for the Ayran willingly subordinates his own ego to
the common weal and when necessity calls he will even sacrifice his own
life for the community.
Compare this to Marx’s
assertion that “all previous historical movements were movements of
minorities, or in the interest of minorities. The proletarian movement is
the self-conscious, independent movement of the immense majority, in the
interest of the immense majority.” Both philosophies promoted visions of
collective good, differing only in the identityclass or racethat served
as the unifying force.
For
Hitler, the individual existed to serve the collective, with the
state as the enforcer of this vision: “...the State is looked upon only
as a means to an end and this end is the conservation of the racial
characteristics of mankind.” While he opposed Marxism’s internationalism,
he
saw
it more as a rival than a fundamentally different
philosophy:
Only when the international idea, politically organized by Marxism,
is confronted by the folk idea, equally well organized in a systematic
way and equally well led--only then will the fighting energy in the one
camp be able to meet that of the other on an equal footing; and victory
will be found on the side of eternal truth.
Language Matters Although sophisticated exploration of these subjects in the
literature is important, what benefit would it bring if these ideas don’t
reach the masses? How can we serve our passion for liberty if we fail to
assert it daily through its most powerful toollanguage? Should we
tolerate the perception that our ideology is just a matter of degrees
from Nazism and Fascism? Meanwhile, the most impactful irony is that
these ideologies are often categorized as being on the “right!”
Are we unaware of the implications of this neglect? Or, if we are aware,
have we been passionate enough to address it? What we need is an
abundance of daily discourse that blends factuality with simplicityone
that consistently reinforces its implications through language until it
becomes widely accepted.
Conclusion The debate over whether Hitler and Nazism belong to the left obscures
a deeper truth: their collectivist roots align them more closely with
Communism than with individualism, classical liberalism, or
libertarianism. The qualities of Hitler and Mussolini differed
significantly; their denial of individualism was philosophical, whereas
their resentment of Communism was more of a passionate rivalry. By
highlighting the shared foundations of these ideologies through promoting
alternative political categorizations, we should incorporate these facts
into everyday political discourse and reestablish their significance as
the only truly distinctive ideology.
Recognizing these less-explored, but fundamental, common features would
help societies to have a broader perspective towards political relations
and avoid falling for runaway collectivist movements simply because they
offer a new leading identitywhether defined by class, nation, race, or
gender. Classical liberalism has played a groundbreaking role in shaping
the modern worlda world that, despite its flaws, is far removed from the
hardships of earlier times. It should now become the mission of classical
liberals to uncover the truth.