I think you have missed Eco's point somewhat, in that the 'cult of tradition' refers specifically to the idea of ancient knowledge (not just "when I was young," but ancient) is somehow special. Mussolini fetishized the Romans; Hitler obsessed over a grab-bag of largely fictitious pseudohistory intended to make the 'Aryans' of his imagination impressive. By contrast, there is simply no such cult of ancient tradition in modern America among almost any relevant political faction.Patroklos wrote:I am not going to discuss your assessment point for point as I don't really have a major issue with what you say as mere data points, only how you interpret them. More on that after my assessment of HRC.Simon_Jester wrote:Among the elements I perceive, either latent or explicit, in the words and deeds of Trump and his supporters in this campaign, I perceive the following elements. I number them as Eco numbered them in his article The Eternal Fascist, so certain numbers are missing.
1.) The first feature of Ur-Fascism is the cult of tradition.
I think you have let Trump off the hook on this one, though I won't do the same for Hillary. Trump for instance, in the "Make America Great" message, is essentially hankering back to some mythologized past where the answers are clear. HRC does the same thing with all these allusions to an imaginary mid 20th century where the middle class lived some utopian lifestyle, tax rates were proper, civil rights were somehow better, etc. These are both build around a fetishized narrative of a traditional America that has all the answers.
Its mild relative to actual fascist examples in both instances, but it is present.
There is a difference between saying "it used to be better" and having a cult of the past, especially when one can cite statistics. In any event, this is assuredly not an area where there is an advantage favoring either side.
There's a reason I didn't accuse Trump of this.
I think you need to go into more detail about which of these things Clinton is offending against, and in what ways.2.Traditionalism implies the rejection of modernism
Rejection of Globalization. Market Protectionism (almost mercantilism in some rehetoric). Assaults on due process. The worship of obsolete economic models like heavy manufacturing over modern models. The derailing of academic freedom. Even the rejection of the due process of law for sexual crimes. Sure we get talk about how cool Teslas are, but just as your source noted about past fascists these are thin veils to cover a true longing for antiquated and imagined return to how things ought to have remained from decades past.
Moreover, you have missed Eco's point; "modernism" does not just mean "some things which have happened in the past few decades." Modernism means the entire tradition of reason, intellect, enlightened self-interest, and freedom that stretches back to the Enlightenment. There is, again, a reason I did NOT apply this to Trump.
Literally every political viewpoint that exists will say "some of the things that have changed in the past X years were bad." "Que sera, sera" is not a meaningful ideology and no serious candidate for office would espouse it. So "rejection of modernism" digs a little deeper than just disagreement about whether globalization is a good thing.
Again, missing Eco's point.3. Irrationalism also depends on the cult of action for action's sake.
N/A. She is an opportunist, and that means doing nothing if its expedient.
There is more to this question than just whether a person acts or declines to act. Eco is not just talking about what people do, he is talking about what a movement reveres. Hillary does not have followers honoring her for being a bold woman of decisive action who shoots first and asks questions maybe afterward if she feels like it. Trump does, except for the 'woman' part, obviously.
Nor does she have a mass of supporters who disdain 'culture' or 'intellectuals' for overthinking things.
This is a point you can justly accuse some figures on the left of.4) The critical spirit makes distinctions, and to distinguish is a sign of modernism.
This is damning indictment of the left in general including HRC. If you are not on the exact narrative you are a bigot, a racist, a sexist, a war criminal, etc. You don't even have to be on the right to get the treatment as Bernie supporters found out in spades. Trump is definitely a with us or against us type of guy, but that's in regards to support of him. He doesn't really five a crap what you think as long as you vote for him. Only one side is working off of ideological purity tests in the current atmosphere.
What you're missing, though, is that this isn't just about the candidates. It's about the movements they associate themselves with. Trump personally will say whatever he feels like and accept anyone's vote. But he encourages his supporters to think of 'different' people as traitors, not just to the party but to the nation at large.
Clinton tolerates this and maybe encourages it in the context of her own personal candidacy. But you don't see her trying to drum up support by saying, or even implying, that Sanders supporters are a fifth column of potential traitors who should be rounded up and deported. Whereas Trump does exactly that when talking about Muslims and illegal immigrants.
I don't even understand how you think you're accusing Clinton of this element of Eco's profile of a fascist. Could you please finish supporting your thesis, rather than expecting me to fill in the blanks for you and agree with you automatically?5) Disagreement is a sign of diversity
Hell, there are few more talented class warriors out there than HRC. She is only marginally less talented at race baiting.
Clinton and Trump are, yes, both digging into the frustration of the middle and upper-lower class. Then again, the middle class is frankly rather frustrated with the current state of affairs- whether they're male, female or neuter, and whether they're black, white, or green. Most Americans aren't happy with the status quo, so in and of itself trying to tap into that to get elected isn't proto-fascism in my opinion.6) Ur-Fascism derives from individual or social frustration.
This is the bread and butter of the HRC only with the boogey man coming from the top rather than the bottom. Of course now her and Trump share the distinction of using the job stealing penny wage masses of the developing world as their economic scapegoat on top of that.
If it were just a class thing and Trump were trying to appeal to everyone who works for a paycheck, I wouldn't have held this one against him.
However, he's not just doing that. He's also been digging into the racial frustration of whites who resent black and brown and yellow people who don't stay subordinate- which is the basis of the birther movement and just about the only reason it lasted past about mid-2008 at the latest. Trump hopped on that bus in 2011, so you can bet he knows he's cashing in on latent racism. And he's also been exploiting xenophobia, a related issue.
So while both candidates are tapping into the frustrations of their potential voters, Trump has chosen to exploit nastier frustrations. And one of the hallmarks of fascism is that the Party likes to designate acceptable targets for the nasty frustrations of the masses, then uses a mix of mob violence, legislation, and denial of due process to destroy those targets in a very public way, so that The People get to feel like progress is being made. That's what worries me- that if elected, and especially if he wants to get re-elected, Trump is going to have every reason to make vicious examples of the same groups he dumped hate on during his campaign.
Clinton has no incentive to do that. Even minorities she's willing to allow to suffer, she has no incentive to heap extra suffering on. She doesn't get extra points with her voter base for trying to criminalize homosexuality or launch massed expulsion of immigrants and refugees, even if she'd stand by and let others do it if it were the convenient choice.
But if Trump does that, there is a high chance he'll be rewarded for doing it. Because that's the sort of movement he created- one with that type of fascist leaning.
This... doesn't really relate to Eco's point (7). Now, it does tie into (8), so I'll answer it there.7) To people who feel deprived of a clear social identity, Ur-Fascism says that their only privilege is the most common one, to be born in the same country.
How many times do we have to be lectured about the majority minority nation and how this is sooooo much better, how the current America doesn't embody REAL American values, and how we have to live up to our potential, and the white people are screwing you? There is a weekly diatribe about how the "corporate fat cats" are colluding to destroy the American way of life. Kochs and co orchestrating the destruction of anything not old and white? She coined the term VRWC after all
The reason I object to the way you pitch this is that it is not always the case that any group which is in some way victimized is proto-fascist for objecting and trying to resist their bad treatment. A great deal depends on how it is presented, and on what specific rights and policy measures the self-identified victims call for.8 ) The followers must feel humiliated by the ostentatious wealth and force of their enemies.
Again, this is HRCs bread and butter. The rich people are screwing you. The white people are screwing you. The police are screwing you. The men are screwing you. Globalization is screwing you. At the same time you are destined to overcome them all because you are on the right side of history.
In other words... If Bob thinks wealthy bankers are undermining his country and his solution is to stage pogroms and drive out all the Jews because there are lots of Jewish bankers, then Bob's a fascist. If Bob thinks wealthy bankers are undermining his country and his solution is to reinforce the SEC regulations limiting their actions, Bob is probably NOT a fascist.
Now, a "my-faction liberation" movement can BECOME fascist. But it isn't born that way automatically.
That's a fair criticism of that particular element of the left. Permitted to run out of control I can imagine a 'fascism of the left' which tries to crush its idea of the establishment in the name of a poorly defined coalition of minority interests. However, while the right has been trying to make people think of this as a threat for about the past forty years, there is very little evidence of it having ever amounted to more than a tempest in a teacup. I'm not very concerned.9. For Ur-Fascism there is no struggle for life but, rather, life is lived for struggle.
This is basically SJWism 101. Everyone is a victim, everyone is struggling against injustice. There is a new strain of this, picked up by HRC and others, where its no longer sufficient to be an "ally," you have to be in the street with us or you are just a collaborator. This was especially outspoken in the HRC crowd regarding gun control recently. But we get the same thing regarding women's rights and others. You better be actively fighting the man, or you are gain a label of racist, misogynist, homophobe, etc. This is used against their own as often as against the other.
This is true, and I strongly disapprove of Clinton's tendency to think of herself as above the law. If she were running against a Republican who didn't seem to have at least as strong a sense of narcissist entitlement, I would be taking that weakness in her character more to heart.10) Elitism is a typical aspect of any reactionary ideology, insofar as it is fundamentally aristocratic, and aristocratic... elitism cruelly implies contempt for the weak.
We couldn't have had a better example of this regarding HRC than her email fiasco. She is not a NORMAL, she doesn't have to follow the rules. She knows better because of her supposed experience and can't be bothered to follow basic rules like everybody else.
Uh... how so? Can you provide evidence for that? Note that wanting to appoint people who have a lot of knowledge about a thing to run that thing is not in itself being a technocrat. Technocracy requires an extra level of contempt for, or rejection of, the normal safeguards in place to keep authority from running rampant. While you occasionally get that in the American left it has not been a common thing to my knowledge.Rule by the enlightened intellectual or technocrat is baked into the cake with pretty much any mainstream left candidate.
This is, frankly, a gross misunderstanding of Eco's original point. If you want to try to update his analysis to a 21st-century version that includes the cult of personality in female politicians go ahead... but you need to lay a lot of groundwork to explain that.12. Since both permanent war and heroism are difficult games to play, the Ur-Fascist transfers his will to power to sexual matters.
"If you don't vote for Hillary you are a misogynist" is a major element of HRCs campaign even if it isn't always overtly spoken. It has, however, been overtly spoken before by official HRC campaign surrogates such as Albright and company's missteps regarding Sanders. You want to make herstory right? Why would you not want to may herstory...
Again, this is not an issue where you can just blow the dogwhistle and expect people to draw the 'correct' conclusion that you expect. By all means, go ahead and actually make your case.
You have asserted without proof once again. And you have, yet again, missed a major part of Eco's point, which is that there is no real place in fascism for activism, except to have overzealous goons doing the specific will of the Leader.13) Ur-Fascism is based upon a selective populism, a qualitative populism, one might say.
This is just everyday leftist politics. HRC is well versed in in. I will quote Eco in particular regarding "Wherever a politician casts doubt on the legitimacy of a parliament because it no longer represents the Voice of the People, we can smell Ur-Fascism." Thats a dead ringer for HRC and her surrogates.
By contrast, the left has always been a playing ground for activists, often to the extent that the lunatics among the activists wind up running the asylum (e.g. the 1968 Democratic convention).
Because in fascism, The People is carefully defined down to include only the 'correct' sort of people. Namely, the people who do as they are told. Whereas the left's version of populism tends to include a supermajority of the population, including people who do not necessarily do as they are told and do not fit into a hierarchy but who have genuine reasons for wanting what they want and pursue them independently.
This is, for instance, how gay rights became a left-wing issue even though most 1990-era left wing politicians would have been just as happy not to take it on. Because the left's definition of The People is generally not exclusionist, and you can join it and get them to work for your interests by appealing to them with "hey, we deserve a better deal too!"
There are other ways the left can fall to the dark side, but the selective populist approach of fascism generally isn't one of them.
I think in many cases, you apply these points to Clinton by abusing or misunderstanding Eco's point in his article, so I must disagree with you there.So I count 12 which apply directly to HRC, with three being relatively mild. Note I would expand your assessment of Trump by one as well.
My view is that nearly every politician taps into at least some of this some of the time, ESPECIALLY if you are willing to abuse Eco's definitions by saying "any politician who disagrees with anything that's happened in the past thirty years is a traditionalist and is therefore part of the cult of tradition."But this is my issue with lists such as this. There isn't any party or politician that does not fit into most of these categories in a superficial way which is how I would describe what I did with HRC and you Trump for the most part. The context matters, the severity of the activity in each category, etc.
However, we can reasonably 'index' this in some sense, and have some kind of "fascism-o-meter" scale. Say, calling Mussolini 100% a fascist, and Hitler 150% or something. And certain kinds of 'strongman' political figures might be running around at, say, 50%. And picking a random not-very-fascist historical politician like, oh, Dwight D. Eisenhower, and calling him 1% fascist or something.
My argument is that Trump is too high on this scale, even if he's a hell of a long way down the scale from Mussolini. Maybe his score would be 20%, or 10%. Whatever. That is still too high, for anyone you actually want to elect in a democracy.
And my argument is also that Clinton is significantly below Trump on this scale, because she rings those fourteen bells much less forcefully, or not at all.
Actually if you'd like to talk about that more, I'm open to it.For instance, if I really wanted to make a fascist comparison the most direct link would be the recent violence from organized left groups stalking Trump supporters from event to event with the explicit and proudly announces purpose of interfering with their freedom to engage in political activity via violence. As heinous as that is, its still stupid because compared to Brownshirts the gulf between them on the spectrum becomes so significant to make an equivalency ridiculous.