JUNE 01, 1994 The Fascist Epithet Democratic Fascism Suffers the Same Fatal
Flaws as All Socialist Systems Mack Tanner
Mr. Tanner, who lives in Moscow, Idaho, is a retired American diplomat
and freelance writer.
Epithets are always good political weapons. If they are well chosen,
they paint the opponent’s reputation so black that further discussion is
no longer required. If an opponent is inherently evil, then one has no
reason to expect that rational discussion and debate would produce any
useful result. Therefore, once a political opponent has been
appropriately labeled, that person can be shouted down and driven from
the podium without the need of further discussion.
Using epithets is obviously not engaging in logical political discourse,
but politics isn’t about logic, it’s about winning and who gets to use
legal force for their own advantage. Anyone who looks seriously at the
American political system can only conclude that elections are won on an
emotional level, not through rational debate. Usually, the politician who
scares the voter the most is the one who wins.
Lovers of individual freedom generally agree that politicians, news
commentators, and government bureaucrats who want to increase the size
and power of government, raise taxes, further limit personal freedom, and
give us socialized medicine are misguided at best, or crooked,
power-hungry thieves at worst. If we believe that they support evil
ideas, shouldn’t we use an epithet that makes it clear what we think
about them? Ultimately, freedom can only be won by those willing to fight
for it, and the first weapons in any fight are fighting words.
We need a single-word epithet that paints the enemy as black as we
believe the enemy to be.
Words like statist, liberal, or conservative simply don’t
get the blood boiling. Use them, and the listener yawns and continues to
ignore well-reasoned arguments. More important perhaps, the targets of
such sweet-sounding epithets usually accept the words as compliments that
explain what they consider themselves to be.
To be effective, an epithet must make the target angry. An effective
epithet must also have a basis in truth. The best epithet is one that
describes a truth that the targets refuse to recognize about themselves
and their political positions. By making an angry target deny the truth
of the epithet or to try to explain it away, we might finally get a
rational, logical discussion going as we explain why the epithet does
honestly apply.
There is a very appropriate epithet that fits perfectly everyone who
favors more government control of business, the economy, society, and
health care. But first some political and philosophical
background.
With the collapse of Communism as a threat to our modern society, it’s
not surprising that the two most damning political epithets that can be
hurdled these days are Fascist and Nazi, the second epithet
being an even more dangerous mutation of the first evil. Those who
usually throw those hated epithets think they know what they accuse an
opponent of being. In the popular mind, the two words are assumed to mean
anyone who is a bigot, a racist, an extreme nationalist, or a political
ultra-conservative.
Understanding Fascism If we examine the political evolution that produced fascism, we find
that fascism has an entirely different meaning. Once we understand what
that meaning is, it’s easy to understand why it is that while the epithet
fascist is so popular with liberal politicians and commentators,
little is ever written about fascism as a political philosophy. Liberal
statists don’t want the public to know that when they point the finger of
fascism at someone else, they are pointing four fingers at
themselves.
From a logical perspective, a fascist may be a racist, a bigot, an
ultranationalist, a violent sociopath, or a blond Swede, but all racists,
bigots, ultranationalists, sociopaths, and blond Swedes are not fascists.
Fascism is a specific form of government, just as feudalism, monarchy,
socialism, communism, and constitutional democracy are specific forms of
government.
The roots of fascism are found in the French Revolution. While the
American Revolution was founded on the philosophical idea that all men
should be free, and that the primary role of government should be to
guarantee that freedom, the intellectuals and politicians of the French
Revolution argued that government should guarantee not only freedom, but
economic equality as well.
While this is an appealing idea, the reality is that as government goals,
freedom and economic equality are mutually exclusive. When people are
free, those with greater intellectual capacities, creative abilities,
physical prowess, initiative, or good luck will probably end up with the
most economic wealth. The only way a government can create economic
equality is to take wealth forcibly from the most productive members of
society and redistribute it to less productive citizens. The economically
successful lose their freedom so that the unsuccessful can share the
wealth. The more economic equality the government guarantees, the more it
must restrict the freedoms of its most productive people.
Socialism The original political philosophy that promised both freedom and
equality was socialism. Socialism proved to be a powerful rallying cry
for revolution in economically backward countries where tyrants ruled,
especially in countries where foreign tyrants ruled. However,
intellectual supporters of the socialist dream soon discovered that it
was hard to sell socialism in democracies or even in those nondemocratic
countries where rulers had allowed the population a degree of economic
freedom.
The voters in the Western democracies not only didn’t want socialism,
they were terrified of the prospects of a violent socialist revolution.
In the United States, most citizens quickly decided that socialism was
un-American.
Not willing to give up the impossible dream that a government could
guarantee both freedom and equality, the utopians proposed an alternative
to socialism: the idea of a strong, nationalistic government which would
allow private enterprise and privately owned property, but would control
and regulate it to ensure that the property owners and entrepreneurs
served the public good instead of their own selfish greed. Under this
scheme, politicians promised that they could achieve the goals of
socialism without the otherwise inevitable pain of revolution and
confiscation.
It is not surprising that these utopian intellectuals began calling
themselves Progressives. What they were proposing was progressive
socialism rather than revolutionary socialism. They also pre-empted the
word liberal, redefining the liberalism of the American founders
which held individual freedom as the ideal of a limited government into
modern American liberalism in which the government limits individual
freedom in order to ensure economic equality.
The Promises of Progressivism Academic economists like John Maynard Keynes threw in the promise
that a strong central government could also smooth out economic cycles of
boom prosperity followed by bust depression. Progressive
democratic government thus not only promised freedom and equality, but
also the good life of economic prosperity and perpetual growth.
The liberal democracies proved to be especially vulnerable to this
philosophy which promised the voters significant improvements in their
economic station without the need for great sacrifice on their part.
While the successful and wealthy did have to pay the bill, initially, the
bill presented extracted only a minor portion of their personal wealth
and they accepted the argument that it was a cheap price if they were to
avoid a socialist revolution.
In America, this system of progressive, socially engineered economic
democracy was adopted so slowly that only a few thinkers recognized that
it represented a total and complete break from the philosophy of
government as espoused by those who wrote the American constitution. By
the mid-1930s, this progressive idea that a strong government
could resolve all problems of human society had thoroughly permeated the
popular political thought of Western democratic governments.
Fascism This philosophical counterpoint to socialism in which people were
permitted to retain property and personal wealth while the state
regulated how private property and wealth would be used to achieve the
common good was given a name by Benito Mussolini when he founded the
Fascist Party in Italy. He promised to give the Italians the same things
that Roosevelt promised to give Americans. Mussolini called the political
process for doing that Fascism.
In like manner, Adolf Hitler promised the Germans equality and
prosperity through regulation and control of private wealth and industry.
Hitler called his movement National Socialism (which was shortened to the
acronym Nazi) because he was promising the same utopian benefits as the
socialists promised, but without the pain of the immediate confiscation
of all property and wealth. Like the democratic progessives, the fascist
tyrants argued that the fascist way to prosperity and equality was the
only hope for defeating the Communists.
Fascism was and is a political philosophy in which a strong central
government permits, but regulates and taxes, private wealth and property
in order to achieve the utopian socialist ideal.
Hitler played on frustrated national pride and used hate and envy of the
German Jewish population in selling his fascist dream. To be a fascist
one must not necessarily hate the same things the Germans hated at the
time Hitler rose to power. But hatred is an inevitable by-product of
fascism.
A primary fallacy of fascism and socialism is the belief that
intelligent, selfless people can be found within any societypeople who
are so wise and knowledgeable that they can determine what constitutes
the common good and what individual sacrifices are necessary to achieve
that good. The fallacy dictates that such wise citizens are morally
entitled to do whatever is necessary to ensure that all other members of
the society make the necessary sacrifices. Other members of the society
have a moral obligation to make the personal sacrifices, even if in
making them, they suffer a significant decrease in the level of their own
comfort and personal happiness. By definition, anyone who resists making
such a personal sacrifice is deemed an immoral, evil, selfish beast who
deserves whatever punishment the state decides to inflict.
Because fascist controls of business and private property can never
produce the promised result of equality, freedom, and economic prosperity
any more than socialist promises can, fascist politicians must always be
looking for someone to blame for their failures while continuing to
promise even greater future economic and social miracles. Both socialists
and fascists must demonize those who object to the state taking over
control of their property, businesses, and lives in order to justify the
violence that the political leaders will inflict on them. Fascism and
socialism grow only in the soil of envy and hate.
Like socialism, fascism has fatal flaws that can lead to excesses like
those of Nazi Germany just as socialism led to the gross excesses of
violence in the Soviet Union, China, Cuba, and on down to the killing
fields of Cambodia. But the excesses of racism, the violent suppression
of minority views, ruling class elitism, and aggression against other
states are symptoms of fascism, not descriptions of the
political-economic system.
Hitler picked the German Jews as hate targets. Modern fascist politicians
demonize Wall Street bankers, entrepreneurs, well-paid CEOs,
pharmaceutical and insurance companies, illegal immigrants, creative
financial managers, gun owners, fundamentalist religious leaders, and
dead white guys who wrote criticism pointing out the fallacies of fascism
and socialism.
World War II started out as a confrontation between the two competing
utopian systems for building a brave new world. Hitler expected that the
democratic fascist countries of England and the United States would
either support his efforts, or remain neutral. How we ended up on the
side of the most extreme socialist country in the world rather than the
most extreme fascist country requires a complicated historical
examination beyond the scope of this essay.
Nevertheless, once Germany was defeated, the ongoing world-wide struggle
immediately reverted back to a conflict between fascism and socialism and
continued on for another 45 years. The primary issue of the Cold War was
never freedom or slavery; it was whether total state control would be
achieved through Communist revolution or through progressive subversion
of the democratic process.
Now that socialism has collapsed under its own weight, we will next learn
how long it will take democratic fascism to collapse because of the same
fatal flaws in economic and political theory that are common to all
socialist systems.
Much of modern American liberalism is fascism and always has been. We
ought to start calling it that. By calling it what it really is, we can
draw attention to what is happening in our country and explain why we
keep losing freedom while violence and hate grow and spread through our
society.