Tahuti
Writing Deity
- Joined
- Nov 17, 2005
- Messages
- 9,492
The whole point of Fascism was that "you" don't exist. You're just a part of Italy, or wherever. (And since Fascism itself didn't really gain a whole lot of popularity outside of Italy...) The Soviet Union, on the other hand, began at least theoretically with explicitly anti-nationalistic goals and structure and retained that structure for its entire existence before it helped bring the whole country down. The cynical employment of nationalistic propaganda in times of military extremity doesn't really affect that. Kazakhs, for instance, were not urged to consider themselves as part of "Russia". Neither were, say, Azeris.
Theoretically, the USSR was anti-nationalist, but then again, theoretically, the USSR was far-left and dedicated to absolute equality of its citizens. However, nothing could be further from the truth than saying USSR fulfilled Marx' theories and predictions. In practice, the USSR was staunchly nationalistic, particularly after the rise of Stalin. And while the USSR indeed didn't try to assimilate or destroy minorities in the fashion Nazi-Germany did, neither did Fascist Italy, who instead sent ethnic Italian colonists to such exotic far-away paradises like Libya, Albania or Abyssinia with the intention to make the indigenious ethnic groups minorities in their own native country. And guess what, that's exactly what the USSR did in the Baltics and Kazakhstan! This combined with the totalitarianism and militarism of the Soviet state, made it not at all unlike Fascist Italy. If the Third Reich was Fascist, than the USSR was as well.