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To: Richnorth who wrote (77330)9/24/2001 9:27:41 PM
From: Broken_Clock  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 116752
 
The Coming US Fascism

In 1944 the Old Right journalist John T. Flynn wrote:

"The test of fascism is not one’s rage against the Italian and
German war lords. The test is – how many of the essential
principles of fascism do you accept and to what extent are you
prepared to apply those fascist ideas to American social and
economic life? When you can put your finger on the men or the
groups that urge for America the debt-supported state, the
autarchial corporative state, the state bent on the
socialization of investment and the bureaucratic government of
industry and society, the establishment of the institution of
militarism as the great glamorous public-works project of the
nation and the institution of imperialism under which it
proposes to regulate and rule the world and, along with this,
proposes to alter the forms of our government to approach as
closely as possible the unrestrained, absolute government –
then you will know you have located the authentic fascist.

"But let us not deceive ourselves into thinking that we are
dealing by this means with the problem of fascism. Fascism
will come at the hands of perfectly authentic Americans, as
violently against Hitler and Mussolini as the next one, but
who are convinced that the present economic system is washed
up and that the present political system in America has
outlived its usefulness and who wish to commit this country to
the rule of the bureaucratic state; interfering in the affairs
of the states and cities; taking part in the management of
industry and finance and agriculture; assuming the role of
great national banker and investor, borrowing millions every
year and spending them on all sorts of projects through which
such a government can paralyze opposition and command public
support; marshaling great armies and navies at crushing costs
to support the industry of war and preparation for war which
will become our greatest industry; and adding to all this the
most romantic adventures in global planning, regeneration, and
domination all to be done under the authority of a powerfully
centralized government in which the executive will hold in
effect all the powers with Congress reduced to the role of a
debating society. There is your fascist. And the sooner
America realizes this dreadful fact the sooner it will arm
itself to make an end of American fascism masquerading under
the guise of the champion of democracy.

"It should be equally clear that all this is in no sense
communism.... [A] reason for the confusion is the character of
the men who are authentic and honest New Dealers but who were
not communists.... They began to flirt with the alluring
pastime of reconstructing the capitalist system. They became
the architects of a new capitalist system. And in the process
of this new career they began to fashion doctrines that turned
out to be the principles of fascism. Of course they do not
call them fascism, although some of them frankly see the
resemblance. But they are not disturbed, because they know
that they will never burn books, they will never hound the
Jews or the Negroes, they will never resort to assassination
and suppression. What will turn up in their hands will be a
very genteel and dainty and pleasant form of fascism which
cannot be called fascism at all because it will be so virtuous
and polite." (As We Go Marching [Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday,
Doran & Co., 1944], pp. 252-255.)

In 1969, at the height of the so-called Sixties, a New Right
essayist – alarmed, apparently, that Jane Fonda still enjoyed
freedom of speech and that college administrators were too
spineless to have the police clear student radicals out of
their offices – called for "some variety of expediential
fascism":

"The very nature of the situation creates competing codes and
doctrines extreme in content and alien to the balancing
compromises of liberal polity. The stringent demands of such a
rudimentary struggle of power and ideas invites political
approaches that are totalitarian in nature: not quite in the
original fascist sense that puts all aspects of life under the
aegis of political authority, at least in the general sense
that political theory can no longer restrict itself to general
conditions and procedural rules, but must offer a
comprehensive, authoritative resolution of a number of
specific political and social questions." (Donald Atwell Zoll,
"Shall We Let America Die?", National Review, December 16,
1969, pp. 12-62-1263, italics added.)

The phrase emphasized above ("political theory can no longer
restrict itself to general conditions and procedural rules")
abolishes constitutions and expresses the long-standing wish
of some "conservatives" for a Government of National
Emergency. FDR and Truman taught them well. National Review
lives in a mental state of siege. There may be no antidote for
it, but the following quotations may be of some use:

"Perhaps it is a universal truth that the loss of liberty at
home is to be charged to provisions against danger, real or
pretended, from abroad."

~ James Madison, 1798 (italics added)

"Is it not just possible that we may become corrupted at home
by the reaction of arbitrary political maxims in the East upon
our domestic politics, just as Greece and Rome were
demoralised by their contact with Asia?"

~ Richard Cobden, 1850

"Wartime brings the ideal of the State out into very clear
relief, and reveals attitudes and tendencies that were hidden.
In times of peace the sense of the State flags in a republic
that is not militarized. For war is essentially the health of
the State."

~ Randolph Bourne, 1919

Copyright © 2001 LewRockwell.com