Fascist

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From time to time MRAs, others in the manosphere and supporters are called fascists.[1][2]

The term Fascist is notoriously difficult to define. Two definitions, narrow and broad are offered here.

Narrow

The narrowest possible definition is membership in the Italian National Fascist party. Using this definition the ideology of Fascism is easy to define because it can be found in the manifesto of the party.

Broad

Most broadly a fascist could be seen to be an adherent to Italian fascism, Nazism, the ideology of Francisco Franco in Spain, or someone that seeks to re-establish a very similar system. In this context fascism can be seen as nationalist, dictatorial and corporatist. Fascists argue that democracy is fundamentally flawed and doomed to fail. Unlike communists and socialists, fascists do not seek to nationalise industry, preferring for private enterprise to continue to operate. Fascists do expect, however, that private enterprise be entirely subordinate to the state and support state initiatives.

Even the broadest possible definition of fascism does not intrinsically include opposition to immigration or xenophobia since these were no more prevalent in Fascist Italy or Spain under Franco than contemporary states. Benito Mussolini did eventually start persecuting Jews in Italy but only did so under pressure from Adolf Hitler.

Nor does the broadest possible definition of fascism include an aggressive foreign policy since Fascist Italy's attempts to expand were modest for the time, and Franco's Spain made no attempt to expand at all.

Conclusions

Definitions broader than this are meaningless.

Even if Spain under Franco was fascist, no fascist state has lasted more than a few decades so the long term prospects for such a system remain untested.

Given these definitions China and Russia may be sliding towards fascism but neither is there yet.

References