The Nazi Tar Baby

Guest Post by The Zman

35 years ago, or so, I sat in history class, as one of my coevals told Father O’Connell that Hitler must have been a liberal because he was a socialist. The old man smiled and said, “Then that would mean Teddy Roosevelt was an actual moose.” It took a minute, but eventually we got the joke and laughed. You can call yourself a leprechaun, but that does not make you a leprechaun. It simply means you are a liar or a lunatic. Politics, and therefore politicians, come in both categories, often simultaneously.

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Where to put fascism, especially Nazism, on the political spectrum is a big topic due to the use of Nazi iconography by some dissident movements and the publication of Dinesh D’Souza’s book that claims Hitler was Nancy Pelosi’s grandfather. It’s also important because our Prog masters are making the claim that any resistance to their nation wrecking program is automatically fascism. Everyone is now required to have an opinion about a political movement that stopped being relevant close to 80 years ago.

The first thing to note is that relying on a two-dimensional political spectrum cooked up by 18th century French radicals is not a good way to understand the world. Even the updated Cold War version that places internationalism at one end and nationalism at the other is of little value to our current age. Embracing the ahistorical Progressives worldview that insists history started when American Progressives synthesized their brand of universalism with Cultural Marxism is equally foolish. It leads to nothing but error.

There’s also the problem with the fact that there are no Nazis or fascists today. These movements were outliers that existed in the narrow space book-ended by the Great War on one end and the Second World War on the other. The late historian Ernst Nolte argued that fascism, broadly defined, was a reaction to the violence and mayhem created by the Russian Revolution and the spread of Bolshevism.  It should be noted that Bolshevism was also an outlier movement that has long since died off.

This is a point that Paul Gottfied makes in his book on the history of fascism as a political concept. Note the difference between concept and ideology. An ideology has a tight, well defined set of rules, while a concept is amorphous and changing. Progressive took the dead ideology of fascism and turned into a political concept to include the set of people who oppose the Progressive project. As the opposition adjusted, the definition adjusted to meet the new threat. As a result, fascism is as meaningless as it is non-existent.

Any effort to connect modern political movements to fascism, therefore, is nothing more than rhetoric or cynicism. The conditions in which both fascism and Bolshevism were born no longer exist and are unlikely to exist again. To Western Europeans of the age, the excesses of communism were frightening. It’s eastern origins appeared sinister. The ad-hoc and incoherent response called fascism, to what appeared to many people as a foreign conspiracy to bring down the West, was, in context, quite sensible.

Putting fascism on the “right” end of your antiquated political scale probably makes sense, as it was opposed to what is on the “left” end of that scale. That means, of course, you are embracing a base assumption of Progressives. They argue, as a matter of core morality, that all opposition to them is reactionary and incoherent. Therefore, nothing on the Right can exist in isolation. It can only exists in opposition to the Left. In that regard, they are correct about fascism. It was a devil with an expiry date that has long past.

A more reasonable argument, with regards to fascism and the Western Right, is that fascism was a rearguard action. It was a final last desperate gasp of the old culture before it was destroyed by liberalism. Fascism therefore is a grab bag of items from the ancien regime, bolted onto some modern industrial economics and sold to the public with modern public relations techniques. That would put fascism on the Right, but only when it is defined on a spectrum that has not had relevance for close to a century now.

The fact is, debating the place of fascism and the relevance of Nazism to our current age is a pointless waste of time. It lets grifters like Dinesh D’Souza peddle books to well-meaning normies and it lets internet pranksters generate some laughs, but otherwise, fascism, as a political force, has no relevance in our age. It’s as salient as free silver or calls to restore the king of France. There will always be people clinging to the detritus of past failures, but there are people that believe they are space aliens too.

The great divide today is not over economics. It is biological. The cultural struggle that is developing, therefore, will be how our people will thrive in a world of modern challenges and modern threats. What will drive politics in the West, in the coming decades, is what Steve Sailer calls the world’s most important graph. How to survive as a people in a world dominated by races unable to escape the neolithic without white people, is not something contemplated by Bolsheviks or fascists. Therefore, they offer us nothing of use today.

The debate itself underscores the fact that we are at the end of a cultural cycle, one born in the Great War, defined by the Second World War and formalized during the Cold War. Modernism as a cultural force has come to an end. Those in charge of the brittle husk that is the prevailing orthodoxy keep reaching into their past for villains to maintain support among the faithful. Those in opposition find themselves without fully formed alternatives in the present, so they are rummaging around in the past for whatever they can find.

Regardless, the place of fascism on the political spectrum then or now is as irrelevant as the spectrum itself. The arguments putting the fascists on the Right only make sense in the context of the long gone era in which they were born. Putting them on the Left only makes sense in the context of the dying era, if you are hoping to squeeze a few more bucks out of the Baby Boomer generation. Hitler is irrelevant to the current age and will have no more bearing on what comes next than Genghis Khan or Henry VIII.

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13 Comments
BL
BL
September 11, 2017 3:12 pm

Get a real day job Yoebbels after you are cured. Hope you will once again be part of the crew on a not-so-nazi level. 🙂

PROUD TO BE A TEAM GOY Local 285 MEMBER

james the deplorable wanderer
james the deplorable wanderer
September 11, 2017 3:13 pm

Bolshevism (as socialism and communism) exists on American college campuses and in Antifa disruptions. Those are the only incubators at the moment, since it has collapsed nearly everywhere else.
Cuba holds out, as does NKorea; a few other places. But except for those who admire death and inefficient government, the rest of the world has outgrown it. Not that crony capitalism is anything to appreciate, given its excesses of late.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
September 11, 2017 3:13 pm

Spot on.

AC
AC
September 11, 2017 3:55 pm

It should be noted that Bolshevism was also an outlier movement that has long since died off.

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Looks like nobody told the AntiFA Bolshevik terrorists that they have died out. I’ll let everyone know that the terrorists trying to murder them at the Trump rallies aren’t real. I’m sure it will help.

ubercynic
ubercynic
September 11, 2017 5:00 pm

“The party is all-embracing. It rules our lives in all their breadth and depth. We must therefore develop branches of the party in which the whole of individual life will be reflected. Each activity and each need of the individual will thereby be regulated by the party as the representative of the general good. There will be no license, no free space, in which the individual belongs to himself. This is Socialism – not such trifles as the private possession of the means of production. Of what importance is that if I range men firmly within a discipline they cannot escape? Let them own land or factories as much as they please. The decisive factor is that the State, through the party, is supreme over them, regardless whether they are owners or workers. All that, you see, is unessential. Our Socialism goes far deeper . . .”

“[T]he people about us are unaware of what is really happening to them. They gaze fascinated at one or two familiar superficialities, such as possessions and income and rank and other outworn conceptions. As long as these are kept intact, they are quite satisfied. But in the meantime they have entered a new relation; a powerful social force has caught them up. They themselves are changed. What are ownership and income to that? Why need we trouble to socialize banks and factories? We socialize human beings.”

— Adolf Hitler (quoted in Leonard Peikoff, The Ominous Parallels)

xrugger
xrugger
September 11, 2017 9:18 pm

Properly pinning the political tail on any given governmental donkey does not produce a linear spectrum. The spectrum is circular and it revolves a central core. That core is made up of two things: Control and Coercion.

The historical era does not matter. Nor does the particular milieu in which any given political system arises. The political spectrum is always and only about two things. It is about control and coercion. Put whatever label on it that makes you happy. It is still about control and coercion. These are the twin suns around which all the myriad of arbitrarily labeled political systems swirl.

Who gets to be in control and for how long? How and when is control established? Who gets controlled and how much control is exercised? These are the important questions. How control is established and maintained is the function of coercion. Since some type or variation of coercion is required to establish and maintain control, who gets to hold and use the instruments of force is of paramount importance. Are the instruments of force overt or subtle? Whether control flows from a constitutionally mandated judicial system or a kangaroo court, it is still control and control is, by its very nature, coercive and coercion must ultimately be backed up by the latent threat or actual use of some level of force.

It is no accident that the worst tyrannies of the modern age were predicated on removing the instruments of force from the hands of those to be controlled and giving a deadly monopoly on those instruments into the hands of those who lust to have the whip hand over the mass of the people.

It matters not whether it is the Nazis, Fascists, and Communists of the past, the SJW’s, Cultural Marxists, and rightist goons of the present, or some unknowable label applied to some nameless faction of the future. The central contest will always be about one thing: Whose hands will most ardently and completely hold the instruments of control and coercion. The butcher Mao Zedong said it best, “Political power grows out of the barrel of a gun.”

The labels that history affixes to those who seek control over others change all the time. The level of “success” they achieve determines the longevity of those labels. It appears that the greater the slaughter done in its name, the more persistent the label. The label is remembered. The slaughter is not. Ask any member of Antifa.

One of the salient differences between the United States and other countries (past and present) is that the instruments of force-by accident of history and geography-wound up largely in the hands of the people before there were any governments large enough or close enough to say any different. This was a fact long before the Founders enshrined that fait accompli in the Constitution. There are forces in this country and in the world, however, that would dearly love to change that reality.

The millions that have been murdered in the name of this or that “ism” did not die at the hands of an “ism.” They died at the hands of a human being who possessed a weapon and was willing to use it. The dead either did not possess the means of their own defense, or they were convinced that they should not defend themselves. They were just as dead either way. Millions will suffer the same fate in the name of future “isms.”

Are we on that dark road I wonder? Will we voluntarily give up the means of our own defense. Will we let some “ism” convince us that we have no right to defend ourselves. Will we allow a monopoly on the instruments of force to rest in the hands of those who march under the blood red banner of some innocuous-sounding political label? That banner was dyed red with the blood of millions who did just that. If I’m called a “Nazi” or a “Fascist,” should I throw up my hands, throw down my gun and give up? Will I let evil wear the mask of good and browbeat me and those I love into wearing some imaginary scarlet letter? I reject that label as well. Call me what you will. If you come for me and mine, you will not find a willing victim.

I pledge allegiance to no banner. I wear no political label and subscribe to no dogma invented by man. I am free because it is my nature. My God created me that way. It is a sad commentary on man that our very nature as free creatures must always and forever be defended tooth and nail. Power does indeed “grow out of the barrel of a gun.” So too does freedom.

Steve
Steve
  xrugger
September 12, 2017 8:03 am

XRUGGER, fabulous words. I couldn’t agree more.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
  xrugger
September 12, 2017 8:58 am

Deserves its own post.

Extremely well articulated and absolutely true.

TJF
TJF
  hardscrabble farmer
September 12, 2017 9:13 am

Just the thing I needed to read with my morning coffee. Well done Xrugger!

lmorris
lmorris
September 12, 2017 9:48 am

so are you telling me that the left will know longer steal from me or say I need to give them a free phone