Counterexample: Consider fascism-as-non-communistic-authoritarianism. The corporation control game mechanics of Eve Online result in corporations operating in authoritarian manner, but do not support a communistic system very well. The corporation control game mechanics of Eve online can therefore be described as fascistic.Samuel wrote:Correct.For any purpose at all?
Concise. Accurate. Specific enough that it identifies relevant attributes, but general enough that it covers the possible variation in the situation under consideration. Sounds like a purpose for which that definition is meaningful.
[Wherein I reminded you that I am not saying that a particular definition is universal, but that Roger Griffin's should not be assumed to be by default.]
[Wherein I implied that you saying so is insufficient to settle the matter.]BR7 [url=http://bbs.stardestroyer.net/viewtopic.php?f=24&t=136356&start=21]also[/url] wrote:By whose judgment?
So it was a setup to show that a different definition doesn't apply to situations that don't meet the defining criteria! Note that "having 5-year plans" is unrelated to the definition you were arguing against, so, by that definition, they do fit the fascist label if the actual criterion is met (that being non-communistic-authoritarianism). Arguing that situation X does not qualify for label F by definition B does not address situation X qualifying for label F by definition A, or the validity of definition A as a definition.Samuel wrote:Yeah, countries with 5 year plans don't really fit into the fascist label. Especially when their are actual fascist parties.So? What if they were fascistic according to that definition? Is this a setup to show that a different definition doesn't apply to situations that don't meet the defining criteria?
So we seem to agree on this. How does that relate to the things we seem to disagree about?Samuel wrote:The link you are citing says that fascism isYes, that sounds like a handy definition of authoritarianism. Now, how does it relate to the discussion?Today used to describe any authoritarian government that is not communism
Yeah, if they are authoritarian (not all Roman dictators, viceroys, and populists are/were) and not communistic (some populists are/were). The textbook might have used this definition to compare societal attitudes towards things like rule of law in such situations. And this makes the definition invalid how?Samuel wrote:Words fail me. What they are saying is fascism includes absolute monarchies, Roman dictators, viceroys, populists...Seeing as how fascism-as-non-communistic-authoritarianism made it into that textbook. Anyway, note that I haven't been arguing that that's the only valid definition of fascism, but that Roger Griffin's should not be assumed to be the default when not specified. What do you have to say about that, the actual point?
So, back to my actual point: What do you have to say about Roger Griffin's definition of fascism not being used by default?
Actually, it's more like defining vegetables as edible parts of plants, then claiming that bananas are vegetables. It's true according to that definition, but it runs counter to the usual consideration of bananas as fruit and not vegetables, as vegetables have a more common, more restrictive meaning.Samuel wrote:It is like saying that all fruit are bananas because they are edible plants. I can't think of any other analogy tortured enough.
You're the one who supplied that definition, not me. If you disagree with my application of it, could you explain your objection in detail?Samuel wrote:Wow. You used such a vague interpretation that my school qualifys as a nation. You want to try something more accurate?
And yes, your school might qualify as a nation by that definition. Schools are quite capable of analogues of nationalism (That's a crazy documentary. Check out the preview.).
By "that" I meant analogues of racism in contexts where actual race doesn't apply.Samuel wrote:You said there are no communists in ever because it is impossible to abolish private property. You see the contradiction?What do you have to say to that?
I'm assuming your point here addresses a different line of conversation with my point that corporations in Eve can't institute communism because they can't abolish private property. That real communist governments didn't completely abolish it isn't a contradiction. Real communist governments could, in principle, check to see whether a person is hoarding private property, running a black market, etc. and, if found, could confiscate that property. Corporations in Eve can do neither.
Yes, and they can use them to coerce members to do things if they stay in space in corporation territory. Guns can't hit people docked in stations though. Guns also aren't useful if you can't identify someone to shoot. With regard to establishing a communistic corporation, the game mechanics of corporation control don't give tight enough accounting of member assets to know whether or not members are actually giving all their property to the corporation, and there is no mechanism to take members' private property even if it is known to exist.Samuel wrote:I'm getting mixed messages. Don't corporations have guns?