Palin Resigns as Governor

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Partha
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Re: Palin Resigns as Governor

Post by Partha »

The book's whole cloth, as anyone with a basic knowledge of political thought would understand. Fortunately for Goldberg, that leaves a lot of gullible people.

http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2008/ ... ndex2.html

Read this, because this shows as nothing else does (Well, besides one quote from the book that I'll point out in a minute) how little Goldberg understands.
You've talked about Mussolini remaining on the left and remaining a socialist, and in your book you've got a lot of quotes from the 1920s about that, but I'm wondering -- how does that fit in with what he wrote and said later, especially "The Doctrine of Fascism" in 1932?

I'd need to know specifically what he wrote in "The Doctrine of Fascism." It's been about three years since I've read it.

He says, for example, "Granted that the 19th century was the century of socialism, liberalism, democracy, this does not mean that the 20th century must also be the century of socialism, liberalism, democracy. Political doctrines pass; nations remain. We are free to believe that this is the century of authority, a century tending to the 'right ', a Fascist century."

Yeah, I'm perfectly willing to concede there's a lot of stuff Mussolini says, but you've got to remember, by '32, socialism is starting to essentially mean Bolshevism. (My note: Yes, by 1932, The Communist Parties in Germany and Italy were fighting against Communism. Right.) And if you get too caught up in the labels, rather than the policies, you get yourself into something of a pickle. (Because, of course, Stalin was governing EXACTLY THE SAME WAY as Hitler and Mussolini. Right.) The right in Europe back then was authoritarian; the right was a kind of right-wing socialism ... What was dead, according to intellectuals across the ideological spectrum, was 19th century classical liberalism.

But in the book you say, "Mussolini remained a socialist until his last breath," and in 1932 he's writing, "When the war ended in 1919 Socialism, as a doctrine, was already dead; it continued to exist only as a grudge," and he also says, "Fascism [is] the resolute negation of the doctrine underlying so-called scientific and Marxian socialism."

Yeah, but that's the point. Scientific and Marxist socialism, and certainly the people who subscribed to that stuff, was international socialism. That's what made Mussolini a right-winger, because he was against international socialism and he was for national socialism.

But [Mussolini] never gave up on the program of socialism, he never gave up on this idea that the state was the ultimate arbiter and director of economic arrangements. He never gave up on the idea that the rich should be brought under the heel of the state. And there's this funny thing -- we still live with these categories where nationalism and socialism are supposed to be these opposite things. This is sort of a hangover from the days where socialism was defined as international socialism and nationalism was defined as national socialism. But at the end of the day, nationalism and socialism are essentially the same thing. When we nationalize an industry, we're socializing it. And when we say we want socialized medicine, we're saying we want nationalized medicine. We need to understand that that's the context Mussolini was coming from. (No. Just...no. National Socialism is about government controlling the means of production for the benefit of the businessman - which is why I.G. Farber, Krupp, and the like were not destroyed like Marxists would have done, they were instead coddled and given the benefit of almost unlimited state backing. Communism/Marxism does not treat capitalists well, to note one fairly obvious point. All this proves is that Goldberg just don't get it.)

And he said a lot of stuff. He was sort of a buffoon in that sense; he was constantly changing his definitions of fascism and talking out of one side of the mouth, then out of the other side of his mouth, largely because of the sort of pragmatic idea he had about politics. But in terms of the policies he implemented and where he came to, once again, at the end of his life, he always clung to the policies that were associated with the left side of the political spectrum.

That brings up something else I wanted to ask you -- if I'm reading this right, one of the things you're saying about the student radicals in the 1960s is that they were essentially fascist even if they might have called themselves Marxist.

Yeah.

But isn't it easy to distinguish, since Mussolini repudiated the central doctrine of Marxism?

Well, I mean, I bet you if you gave me an hour I could find places where he once again says nice things about Marxism in 1933 or 1937. (How I WISH the interviewer had given him that hour.)

But he repudiated historical materialism, dialectical materialism.

Yeah. But I think the problem is you get into one of these sort of overly doctrinal, "let's go to the text" approaches where words get confused for things. Stalin never repudiated Marxism, but in almost every way, the checklist for the anatomy of fascism applies to Stalinism ... Saying that you still believe in the dialectic and the cold impersonal forces of history found in "Das Kapital" or "The Communist Manifesto" isn't an abracadabra thing where all of a sudden that means Stalin was really a Marxist or wasn't a fascist in terms of how he actually operated.
Really, do I HAVE to draw up why that last statement is so incredibly wrong?

Finally, for Dd, I have three quotes from the book.
Jonah Goldberg wrote:Liberal Fascism differs from classical fascism in many ways. I don't deny this. Indeed, it is central to my point.
Jonah Goldberg wrote:The white male is the Jew of Liberal Fascism.
Jonah Goldberg wrote:The quintessential liberal fascist isn’t an SS storm trooper; it is a female grade-school teacher with an education degree from Brown or Swarthmore.
That last quote? It's from the frigging BOOK JACKET! Forget the 'reasonable groundwork'. Jonah never made it INTO THE BOOK before he went off the rails. He's a bad writer and a worse historian.
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Re: Palin Resigns as Governor

Post by Fallakin Kuvari »

Thanks for that interview link, Partha. Thats definitely insightful.

Last bit from that page, too:
What I thought was interesting about your definition of fascism was that nationalism seemed to be missing ... Stanley Payne, whom you quote and say is "considered by many to be the leading living scholar of fascism," in his definition of fascism, the first thing he says is that it's "a form of revolutionary ultra-nationalism." How does that fit with contemporary liberalism, which is often derided as being unpatriotic, anti-American?

That's a perfectly legitimate question. I think classical fascism, the fascism that we all think of when we hear the word "fascism" -- Italy, Germany and to a certain extent Spain, they were ultra-nationalistic, I don't dispute that, I think that is absolutely the case. I just would want to emphasize that that ultra-nationalism comes with an economic program of socialism. There's no such thing as a society undergoing a bout of ultra-nationalism that remains a liberal free-market economy. The two things go together.

I don't say that contemporary liberalism is the direct heir of Nazism or Italian fascism. I say it's informed by it. It's like its grandniece. It's related, they're in the same family, they share a lot of genetic traits, but they're not the same thing.

I think that you do have nationalism percolating up in the form of left-wing economic populism, the John Edwards branch of liberalism, which is for raising trade barriers. He says time and again, the first thought of every economic decision of a president should be what protects the American middle class, which -- according to some fairly doctrinaire understandings of fascism, it's an ideology of the middle class, nationalist economics and all that kind of stuff -- there's some meat there. So I do think you do see nationalism in that regard, in terms of economics.

Today's liberalism, there's a strong dose of cosmopolitanism to it, which is very much like the H.G. Wells "Liberal Fascism" I was talking about ... These trans-national elites, the Davos crowd who really want to get beyond issues of sovereignty so they can organize and guide the planet on issues like global warming, invest a lot more in the U.N. I think that is much more of the threat coming from establishment liberalism today, but I do think there is a lot of nationalism there too.
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Re: Palin Resigns as Governor

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See, this is part of the problem. Fascism is not an ideology of the middle class. The composition of the parties that instituted fascism in it's classic form shows that the poor and lower-middle-class were the key engine of the party. The slogans and proposed programs were not aimed in general at the middle class, but rather at the dispossessed. You'll also note a distinct LACK of class based rhetoric or policy from any form of National Socialism. When Goldberg makes the claim that Communism/Marxism (which is based almost ENTIRELY on class warfare and class distinctions, with the aim of government controlling the means of production for the benefit of the lower classes) is exactly the same as National Socialism (which is not based at all on class warfare or distinctions, and whose aim in the ideal is NOT government control of the means of production [since the businessmen will still own the businesses], but of government control of the aims of production*), then he's obviously not a very deep thinker and he shows no scholarship on the very subject he's going to tell you about. Of course, his lack of scholarship has meant that he's ignoring the work of people on both sides of the political spectrum, and arguing something that virtually no serious historian believes, with no good scholarship to back up his arguments.

* when I spoke earlier about 'controlling the means of production', I was being too lazy. My apologies for any confusion.
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Re: Palin Resigns as Governor

Post by Embar Angylwrath »

Partha wrote: When Goldberg makes the claim that Communism/Marxism (which is based almost ENTIRELY on class warfare and class distinctions, with the aim of government controlling the means of production for the benefit of the lower classes)
Partha is correrct on his analysis of Communism/Marxism. And I'll ask you to consider the similarities between that philosophy, and Obama's repeated statements to increase taxes on the rich (because he needs money to distribute to another class).

I will give him this though, if he has the chones to tax health benefits as income as a way to pay for healthcare reform, regardless of income level, I'll get behind it. That shares the pain.
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Re: Palin Resigns as Governor

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Heh. Embar considers a progressive tax system to be class warfare. Most people, including most wealthy people, consider it to be basic fairness. Most people also realize the poor and middle class have been "sharing the pain" for a long time now.

Anyways, wouldn't you be thrilled to get a tax increase and finally start paying your fair share, Embar? Sure, we're all knuckleheads who don't understand rich people, but we do have long memories.

Share the pain, indeed.
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Re: Palin Resigns as Governor

Post by Embar Angylwrath »

Lurker wrote:Heh. Embar considers a progressive tax system to be class warfare. Most people, including most wealthy people, consider it to be basic fairness. Most people also realize the poor and middle class have been "sharing the pain" for a long time now.

Anyways, wouldn't you be thrilled to get a tax increase and finally start paying your fair share, Embar? Sure, we're all knuckleheads who don't understand rich people, but we do have long memories.

Share the pain, indeed.
When you partition the social structure into strata, and then extract unequally from segments of that strata only to redistribute wealth, yes, its class warfare. It is pitting one segment of the social mix against another. It is taking from some to give to others.

And I'd daresay the upper wage earners agree with you. otherwise they'd mostly be leftists, and not moving money overseas.
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Re: Palin Resigns as Governor

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Partha is correrct on his analysis of Communism/Marxism. And I'll ask you to consider the similarities between that philosophy, and Obama's repeated statements to increase taxes on the rich (because he needs money to distribute to another class).
That's much too superficial, and you should know it, Embar. Communism/Marxism, you wouldn't HAVE an upper class in ideal, because the state would distribute everything equally AND they'd take the holdings of the rich. Taxation isn't the same thing at all, and when you consider how many tax shelters and evasions the rich have that the poor don't, one could argue that the rich pay proportionally LESS in taxes than the poor. (Warren Buffett will tell you all about it.)

Besides, Obama's not talking about 'distributing the money to another class' in the form of a giveaway. Rather, he's talking about investment in infrastructure and job creation that increases incomes for the lower classes. Rich people still make money in progressive times in our democracy, you know - Clinton proved that.
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Re: Palin Resigns as Governor

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Partha wrote:Taxation isn't the same thing at all, and when you consider how many tax shelters and evasions the rich have that the poor don't, one could argue that the rich pay proportionally LESS in taxes than the poor.
That's exatly what Embar said here. Of course, he had a different agenda in that thread so he couldn't whine about how high taxes were, he had to say they were too low.
Embar wrote:its class warfare. It is pitting one segment of the social mix against another. It is taking from some to give to others.
Yeah, that's why everyone is jumping on the Fair Tax bandwagon!

The vast majority of Americans support a progressive tax system. They don't see it as a battle between rich and poor.

And you didn't answer my question. Don't you want to finally start paying your fair share in taxes?
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Re: Palin Resigns as Governor

Post by Harlowe »

Now for something a little different...

Not Monty Python, but Auto-tune the News starring Michele Bachmann and Sarah Palin.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Psfn6iO ... r_embedded
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Re: Palin Resigns as Governor

Post by Fallakin Kuvari »

Thanks for the corrections Partha, I now see the errors I was committing.

I'll likely finish the book, but I'll definetly be a lot more skeptical of what I'm reading.
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Re: Palin Resigns as Governor

Post by Klast Brell »

Is it cliche to say godwin at this point?

Anyway. Hitlers foreign policy and social policies were horrific and earned him his legacies as one of the greatest monsters in history. But if you want to call his economic policies leftist, go ahead.
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Real wages in Germany dropped by roughly a quarter between 1933 and 1938. Trade unions were abolished, as was collective bargaining--which would have been of little use with wages frozen by government decree. The right to strike was, of course, abolished. And the right to quit disappeared as well: labor books were introduced in February 1935, and required the consent of the previous employer in order to be hired for another job.
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Re: Palin Resigns as Governor

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Thanks for the corrections Partha, I now see the errors I was committing.

I'll likely finish the book, but I'll definetly be a lot more skeptical of what I'm reading.
Don't apologize, you're learning, even if from bad sources to start with. :D

And you should ALWAYS wear a skeptic's hat when reading political books. Even The Shock Doctrine.
Well, it’s the Super-Monroe Doctrine: “Get off our oil, people who dress funny!” - M. Bouffant

"You're a bad captain, Zarde. People like you only learn by being touched, and hard. And you will greatly disapprove of where these men put their hands." - M. Vanderbeam.
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