I want those who have been asking to be clear on a few things:
When I speak of fascism, I speak as a tactic of capitalism. That is a Communist position. The 1935 Comintern "Popular Front Against Fascism and War" started by Bulgarian Communist Georgi Dimitroff was the Communist reponse to the "Anti-Comintern Axis" of Germany. Italy and, later, Japan. see Gruber
Soviet Russia Masters the Comintern as well as Shirer's
Rise and Fall of the Third Reich
Fascism is: a condition in a nation where the forces
most hostile to the working class are IN POWER and the organized sector of the working class has been routed. This assumes that there has been a contest, between "fascist" forces and the organized sector of the working class. In Italy, it was when the fascisti combatimenti either attacked or simply sat out the labor unions on strike and established fascist party hegemony in Italy. See Gruber's
International Communism in the Era of Lenin In Germany, it was when the Nazis were granted the executive powers under Hitler, etc.
Read the book on the subject of fascism and its criteria,
Friendly Fascism by Bertram Gross. Fascism took different forms in different countries.
Many countries had fascist movements and "Fifth Columns," as well -- Roger Mosley and the Silver shirts in England come to mind, the Franco 5th column in Madrid, the Croix de Feu in France. US participation in the liberation of Europe was to a large extent delayed via pressure from the likes of Charles Lindbergh and the "America First" Committee (Lindbergh loved Hitler) and by the likes of IBM and Ford, who made money selling punch card systems and trucks, respectively, to Nazi Germany. (c.f.
Labor's Untold Story )
I am not calling all extreme right movements "fascist." The Tea Party Movement is NOT "fascist," they are not "fascists." Glen Beck is not a "fascist," nor is Rush Limbaugh -- wait, maybe he is.
Not all fascist movements came from the right, in fact, most came from the left (Franco in Spain, was definitively NOT from the left). Mussolini, don't forget, was once a member of the Italian Socialist Party, a student of Angelica Balabanoff (one-time Lenin secretary) and was editor of its organ
Avanit. Many left-wing socialists in Germany joined with Hitler in the Reichstag, and many in the SA were "socialist" -- that is, until the night of the long knives.
I am fairly specific about who I refered to as "Fascist." I included Chiang in China, and I can include Batista in Cuba. Interestingly enough, The German Communist Party adhered to at least one of the
21 Conditions for Admission to Comintern in that they recognized the German "Social Democrats" as "Social Fascists." (c.f. Griber
International Communism in the Era of Lenin
I have learned this through 21 years of revolutionary practice and study. I have read everything from Fisher and Gehlen to Shirer on Nazi Germany, and I have read everything from Joseph Davies to Adam Ulam on Soviet Russia, and I have read more non-Communist biographies of Stalin, Lenin and Mao than I care to mention. I have read Jomo Kenyatta, Fidel, Che, Debray, Marx, Engels, Lenin, Stalin, Mao, Lui Shao-chi, Amilcar Cabral, Ho Chi Minh, Vo Nguyen Giap -- I could go on.
I work 12 - 14 hours a day, and I read about 10 - 14 books a year, so I have a few things to say if those interested want to learn more. I am currently reading
Open Veins of Latin America by Eduardo Galleano. I have also read
Men and Politics by Louis Fischer this year, and he was in Europe during the rise of fascism in Germany, Italy and Spain -- oh, yeah, and Vichy France.
As far as the communist movement in this country goes, there is still a CPUSA. John L. Lewis of the CIO in the US in the 1930s said that about 1/3 of his top labor organizers were members of CPUSA. (c.f
Labor's Untod Story, UE Publication). He said "If management employs them, can labor do less?"
CPUSA's NYC cell met every Saturday night in the 1930s IN MADISON SQUARE GARDEN!!! FDR hired communists in his adminstration.
Since I have now become the lighting rod of the CFC anti-Stalin brigade, forced by my own big mouth to defend
a (as in one of many) communist position to non-communists on the legacy of Stalin, I suggest you debate me over at this forum:
http://forums.civfanatics.com/showthread.php?p=12277035#post12277035
I
am interested in what you would have to say, just not here.
Please feel free to ask any questions.