Winner
Diverse in Unity
You say Europe would never return to fascism, but that doesn't make it true. If you asked a rank and file Party member of Soviet Russia in 1920 whether Russia would soon, for all intents and purposes, return to a monarchical and feudal society, he probably would have said no, and quite vehemently. But realistically, Soviet Russia was not a true communist state where everyone was actually equal, it was a brutal authoritarian state where the people were kept in virtual serfdom by the ruling elite. Just because a people say that they will never return to a terrible past doesn't mean that they never will - even under the guise of distancing themselves even further from that past.
Fascism is about control, the control of the State. There is a reason fascism is so much more of a danger in Europe than in the US, and that is because we have totally different ideas of what the State should be. In the US, we believe it is the People that are sovereign and should be in charge. In Europe, you believe that it is the State that should be in charge and tell the people what to do. Oh sure, you have democratic elections and you say the government is controlled by the People - but whenever the People want something the government doesn't approve of, the response is "Bad! Bad citizens! We know what is best, and you can't have this!" The People should be telling the State where to jump, and how high, not the other way around. Accepting the State's supremacy over the People is the first step on the road to totalitarianism and fascism.
You totally didn't get my point. I said that propagation of fascism is not restricted because the government wants it, but because people want it. It's self-imposed restriction, not a governmental order.
As for the rest - you also have a wrong impression of Europe. I guess people in many European countries would find certain US rules very restrictive, even authoritarian. There are indeed countries with statist mindset (France for instance), but if you think that Europeans are inherently more open to governmental control, you can't be more wrong.
We ban smoking in public places like libraries or government buildings. We don't ban smoking in private homes.
You can shout "Sieg Heil" and listen to Nazi music at home all day long, so long as you don't propagate it in public, so it's actually very similar to ban on smoking - in principle.
I understand that American and Europe are very different.
No, they're not. We're different in certain aspects, but not nearly as much as you think.
I'm not particularly interested in forcing Europe to become more like the US. What I'm interested in is seeing Europe free and strong, as a valuable ally to the US on the global stage. But as things are, I see only three paths for Europe to take: take over by Islamic extremism, virtual collapse, or fascism. I very much hope I'm wrong, but the things you say lead me to believe I'm right.
All three are very unlikely.