Because both use the same means: government ownership and that is what determines the day to day life implications. Though the vague dream utopia of course differs(commune with endless material hapiness vs ethnical moral dreamland)
Yes I'm totally going to listen to the anarcho-capitalist while he talks about the similarities between fascism and communism![]()
(But then, some people seem to cling to a definition of "communism" that is entirely utopian...)
No, I have no problem with utopians. I do have a problem with strictly conceiving communism as an utopian ideology, ignoring all failed attempts to establish communism on Earth "because they were not communist" at all.
JEELEN said:Similarly I could argue that fascist regimes weren't fascist at all, because they looked nothing like their propaganda. Or separating the Christian view of the world from how Christianity turned out historically. (Capitalism, BTW, isn't a philosophy, nor is, strictly speaking, communism IMHO - nor did Marx intend it to be. But that, perhaps, is rather a matter for another thread, of a more philosophical nature.)
Worth noting that both the Stalinist and Maoist blocs, as well as those few that diverged from either such as Yugoslavia and North Korea, were essentially populist-ultranationalist in nature, rather than socialist. While they may have drawn on Marxist theory, in practice they diverged rather heavily. Marxists consider them to be "devolved" and "deformed workers' states" for a reason.Because in practice, they are the same thing.Both cater to the most common denominator, the poorly-educated working class, and use the same means to achieve their ends(state capitalism). Just ideological fuzzy talk is the difference, with a nationalistic utopia on one side, and a materialist utopia on the other.
Well given that they universally were not, that would be a fairly reasonable position to assume. Hitler had Strasser shot for a reason, after all.No, I have no problem with utopians. I do have a problem with strictly conceiving communism as an utopian ideology, ignoring all failed attempts to establish communism on Earth "because they were not communist" at all. Similarly I could argue that fascist regimes weren't fascist at all, because they looked nothing like their propaganda. Or separating the Christian view of the world from how Christianity turned out historically. (Capitalism, BTW, isn't a philosophy, nor is, strictly speaking, communism IMHO - nor did Marx intend it to be. But that, perhaps, is rather a matter for another thread, of a more philosophical nature.)
Well, I suppose it's accurate to say that the regimes were not a fully realised form of fascism, rather than they were not fascist at all. Fascism is, at heart, an anti-capitalist ideology, sometimes incorporating elements of socialist thought, but neither Mussolini or Hitler carried out the social revolution which they had initially promised, instead remaining, for as long as they lasted, in a phase of authoritarian capitalism. Perhaps they would have carried out these later revolutionary changes after they had eliminated their perceived foes, perhaps not; the opportunity for them to do so, thank god, never came about.I think a pertinent difference between fascist regimes and communist ones is that even though the reality of fascist regimes differed from their propaganda, the regime itself was certainly run on fascist lines. What I mean is that no-one could accuse Mussolini or Hitler of only claiming to be a fascist, but really being something else. The crimes and injustices their regimes perpetuated were a result of their fascism. Whereas there is a good case, as people have pointed out, for saying that communist dictators such as Stalin were not proper communists at all. The disparity in their case is not between the hoped-for utopia and the actual dystopia - it is between the practices of communism and the practices actually put into place. So those who take this position hold that these regimes were not communist not because they were failed attempts to put communism into practice, but because they weren't even attempts at communism in the first place, even though they might have claimed to be.
Overly simplistic, and certainly not universally correct; the extreme racialist program of the Nazis was something of a quirk, one not inherently shared (although diplomatically adopted) by Mussolini's Fascists, who generally possessed a more "traditionally" racist viewpoint, while it is explicitly contrary to the ideology of such groups as the Brazilian Integralists.4.) Fascism: Differs from Communism substantially, as Fascism uses Racism and indifference aimed at a minority within its Countrys Society {i.e - WW II Fascist Germany/Jews} in order to fuel a war time economy. One leader. One party. Marx was against Racism, Imperialism etc... Fascism without Racism and Imperialism - is just Hitler without his moustache.
Plenty of people have done just that actually.What I mean is that no-one could accuse Mussolini or Hitler of only claiming to be a fascist, but really being something else
True. Just look at the co-option of the Spanish Falange into Franco's distinctly ultraconservative regime.Plenty of people have done just that actually.
Or Balbo's and Strasser's private/public regard of Hitler and Mussolini as rank opportunists.
Gentile tends to be the obvious go to guy on that matter. Pretty heavy theoretical background to Fascism, based on Hegelian notions of freedom and self. For economics that was more Ugo Spirito's bag. Sorrel also provided loads of framework, even though he never claimed to be a Fascist, he never claimed not to be a Fascist either. Also, while he's pretty unorthodox, Lawrence Dennis made a pretty damning critique of the economics of capitalism, which at least was read by the theorists and probably influenced Fascism across the pond.That is quite compatible with Schmitt's view, though.
Still, I struggle to think of an extensive Fascist theoretical body.
Gentile tends to be the obvious go to guy on that matter. Pretty heavy theoretical background to Fascism, based on Hegelian notions of freedom and self. For economics that was more Ugo Spirito's bag. Sorrel also provided loads of framework, even though he never claimed to be a Fascist, he never claimed not to be a Fascist either. Also, while he's pretty unorthodox, Lawrence Dennis made a pretty damning critique of the economics of capitalism, which at least was read by the theorists and probably influenced Fascism across the pond.
While alot has been made by Fascism's lack of theoretical infrastructure, all in all when you consider the history of the movement, the breadth and depth of it's theoretical underpinnings is quite impressive. Considering that the movement began in 1919, and theoretical development essentially shut down in either 1940 or 1945 (depending on how much you want to count the sudden outpouring in 1943) so you're looking at a history of 21 to 25 years, start to finish, while Marxism had been around for nearly seventy years before it formed a government.