• Re: Do you know the difference between Project 2025 and Mein Kampf?

    From Pluted Pup@21:1/5 to All on Tue Feb 18 17:11:14 2025
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.atheism

    OrigInfoJunkie wrote:
    On 2/18/2025 8:05 AM, Ubiquitous wrote:
    Hitler was a renowned socialist

    No. The Nazis were and are extreme right. Everyone knows that.

    They were socialist = democratic communist

    Trump is a left wing lieberal leftist. No real conservative is stupid
    enough to be Trump. He's a moron.


    Fascism, Nazism and Conservatism

    European fascism drew on existing anti-modernist conservatism, and on the conservative reaction to communism and 19th-century socialism.
    Conservative thinkers such as historian Oswald Spengler provided much of
    the world view (Weltanschauung) of the Nazi movement.

    In Britain, the conservative Daily Mail enthusiastically backed Sir
    Oswald Mosley's British Union of Fascists, and part of the Conservative
    Party supported closer ties with Nazi Germany.

    When defeat in World War II ideologically and historically discredited
    fascism, almost all Western conservatives tried to distance themselves
    from it. Nevertheless, many post-war Western conservatives continued to
    admire the Franco regime in Spain, clearly conservative but also fascist
    in origin. With the end of the Franco regime and Portugal's Estado Novo
    in the 1970s, the relationship between conservatism and classical
    European fascism was further weakened.

    Militarism is perhaps the most striking similarity between Fascism and contemporary American conservatism. Of course, there are many liberals in America who support the military and even call for increased military
    spending.

    Even so, American liberals are traditionally more skeptical of the
    military than American conservatives. It is often said that
    Neoconservatives, like Hitler, see the military as a paradigm for problem solving (even in situations that may render militarism impractical or unethical).

    The relationship of fascism to right-wing ideologies (including some that
    are described as neo-fascist) is still an issue for conservatives
    and their opponents. Especially in Germany, there is a constant exchange
    of ideology and persons, between the influential national-conservative movement, and self-identified national-socialist groups.
    In Italy too, there is no clear line between conservatives, and movements inspired by the Italian Fascism of the 1920s to 1940s, including the
    Alleanza Nazionale which is member of the governing coalition under
    premier Silvio Berlusconi. Conservative attitudes to the 20th-century
    fascist regimes are still an issue.

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