Community "Organizers" in the US are often seen as left wing or... gasp... "commies". So that word can trigger rightists to assume stuff. To conservatives, "organizing" means labor unions, socialism, strikes, rights for people of color etc.
Nazis had little to do with todays right wing thinkining of "I am free to do whatever I want ..." in the US.To conservatives, "organizing" means ...
So, the word "organize" is so associated with Marxism that a preceding sentence literally about Nazis doesn't make people think the faux-quote is what those Nazis say to each other? Y'all read a question about Nazis, saw the word 'organize' slightly below it, and went "welp, this is obviously about Marxists".
Nazis had little to do with todays right wing thinkining of "I am free to do whatever I want ..." in the US.
Nazis controlled almost every little thing society did by some kind of organization or law.
Nazis and "US right wing" or conservatives can not simply be thrown into one basket.
Their ideologies and world view were really quite different.
Nazis were absolutely totalitarian, they had no wish to give individuals lots of freedom.
In a Nazi regime no private person would ever wear a gun, because it would be dangerous to the rule of the regime.
whoah whoah whoah hold up bruh I didn't just assume it or go "it obviously is," I just thought maybe you were talking about that, but if you say you weren't I of course believe you.
Yes. George Lincoln Rockwell was a Nazi and didn’t say America needed to expand.If a political cohort has all the bells-and-whistles of being Nazis (without the self-identification), but has no actual plans for violent expansion, would we call them 'Nazis'?
Yes. George Lincoln Rockwell was a Nazi and didn’t say America needed to expand.
If a political cohort has all the bells-and-whistles of being Nazis (without the self-identification), but has no actual plans for violent expansion, would we call them 'Nazis'? I'm trying to find what people's Platonic Conception is.
If the meaning of terms cannot be agreed upon communication is difficult.Why do we need a formal definition of "Nazi" in the first place? Anyone who objects to its use when describing openly fascist political movements is unpersuadable lest the fascists target them.
There are a load of people in this thread who disagree about the meaning of the word who are not in the "demonstrating that they are unpersuadable" category.What's the point in attempting to communicate with someone who is demonstrating that they are unpersuadable? Nothing you say matters.
Why do we need a formal definition of "Nazi" in the first place? Anyone who objects to its use when describing openly fascist political movements is unpersuadable lest the fascists target them.