Fascism
The first time I heard a U. S. president referred to as fascist was when Richard Nixon was president. The same charge has been leveled more recently against the current U. S. president, Donald Trump. This week Pete Hegseth, Secretary of the Department of Defense (newly-named Department of War) summoned more than 800 generals and admirals to a military base in Virginia. The contents of that speech were startling to some, and the charge of fascism was once again leveled. Since Trump endorsed that speech, and indeed was at the event and gave his own speech, he can rightly be assigned responsibility for what Hegseth said.
Benito Mussolini
credit: German Historical Museum. Public domain
To accuse someone of advancing fascism is a powerful charge. However, make the charge too often and the word loses its power. Who among the world's leaders, past and present, has called himself/herself a fascist? Only one, Benito Mussolini. And yet, many leaders have been charged with being fascist. How do we sort out the idle charges from those that have merit, that truly reflect a fascist orientation?
I look to Mussolini for guidance. He was the founder of fascism. Mussolini and his intellectual supporters defined clearly what they meant when they called themselves Fascisti.
In 1932 Mussolini published an essay, "What Is Fascism?" that gave a concise definition of this political philosophy/ideology. How does the theory formulated in that essay align with the actions and words of the Trump Administration?
War
I'll start with Hegseth's speech. In his position as head of the newly-named Department of War he has special significance, because of the importance accorded to war in fascist ideology.
Here is a quote from Mussolini's 1932 essay:
Fascism... believes neither in the possibility nor the utility of perpetual peace. It thus repudiates the doctrine of Pacifism born of a renunciation of the struggle and an act of cowardice in the face of sacrifice. War alone brings up to its highest tension all human energy...
And from Hesgeth's speech:
From this moment forward, the only mission of the newly restored Department of War is this: warfighting, preparing for war and preparing to win, unrelenting and uncompromising in that pursuit.
and
That’s why pacifism is so naïve and dangerous. It ignores human nature and it ignores human history...
John Locke
Hermitage. Public domain
The Rights of the People and the Rights of the State
The first part of Mussolini's 1932 essay was written by Giovanni Gentile, who could be described as the John Locke of fascism. Locke, the inspiration behind the U. S. Declaration of Independence and the country's Constitution, emphasized the natural rights of the individual. It was Locke's view that the state existed to protect those individual rights.
According to Locke, people have inalienable rights to things like life, liberty, and property that existed before the state was created. According to Locke, the power of the state stems from its obligation to defend these natural rights because they are fundamental liberties ingrained in human nature.
Gentile, the fascist philosopher, offered a completely different view of the state and its relation to the individual (in his own words):
The politic of Fascism revolves wholly about the concept of the national State; and accordingly it has points of contact with nationalist doctrines, along with distinctions from the latter which it is important to bear in mind. Both Fascism and nationalism regard the State as the foundation of all rights and the source of all values in the individual composing it.
Mussolini echoes this philosophy in his essay on fascism:
The foundation of Fascism is the conception of the State, its character, its duty, and its aim. Fascism conceives of the State as an absolute, in comparison with which all individuals or groups are relative, only to be conceived of in their relation to the State.
When Trump says, as he did recently, "I have the right to do anything I want to do. I'm the President", he is asserting that his power is inherent in his office, and therefore in himself. He does not acknowledge in his statement a higher or even another authority, such as the inalienable rights of the people, which might constrain his actions.
https://www.youtube.com/shorts/9wnbP3-AgHo
Trump's statement offers a theory of government a lot closer to Gentile's (fascism: power is inherent in the state, not the rights of the people) than to Locke's (Democracy: The state derives is power from the people and is answerable to the people).
It's interesting that after Nixon left office he asserted a similar perspective in an interview with David Frost. Nixon declared that "When the president does it, that means it is not illegal."
This statement implies (states) that there is no law, no authority that can check the president's power. This also sounds more like Gentile's philosophy than Locke's.
Religion
John Locke and Thomas Jefferson both argued for religious tolerance and for the state to stay out of religion. Both men had a role in the creation of the Declaration of Independence: Locke as its inspiration and Jefferson as its author.
Locke's position was that "One’s religious concerns with salvation, however, are not within the domain of civil interests, and so lie outside of the legitimate concern of the magistrate or the civil government." Jefferson's position was that," religion was a very personal matter, one which the government had no business getting involved in.
In Mussolini's fascist Italy, the Catholic Church played a strong role: "the Catholic Church was the state religion of Italy, and Mussolini’s regime supported Catholic religious practices. The Catholic Church, in turn, gained a degree of influence in shaping certain aspects of Italian law and education."
Where does Trump fall in this spectrum between no involvement of religion with the state and the establishment of a state religion? On the White House website one can find the following statements:
In a powerful address at the Museum of the Bible, President Donald J. Trump emphasized the enduring role of faith in America’s identity, highlighted his Administration’s unwavering defense of faith-based values...
The President also launched the America Prays initiative — a call for Americans to unite in prayer for the nation’s strength, peace, and prosperity.
The president has vowed to protect public prayer in schools and encourages Americans to gather in groups of 10 to hold weekly prayers.
In a public address Trump declared:
“They said, really there’s separation. I don’t know. Is that a good thing or a bad thing? I’m not sure, but whether there’s separation or not, you guys are in the White House where you should be, and you’re representing our country, and we’re bringing religion back to our country, and it’s a big deal.
Trump has established a Faith Office. Paula White, who heads the Faith Office asserted: "Prayer is not a religious act. It is a national necessity.
Does Trump's view of the relationship between religion and the state resemble more that of Locke/Jefferson, or Mussolini's fascist government? It is clear that for Trump government does have a role in religion--or, rather, religion does have a role in government. While Trump has not established a state religion, he has established a faith office, in the White House, which promotes the interest of religion.
Separation of Powers
As is suggested by the discussion (above), with regard to presidential authority, that the contrast between fascism and democracy centers most essentially on the extent and origin of the executive's/government's power.
Gentile on the Duce (in this case, Mussolini): The Duce controls the will and the consciousness of the people:
"...the need of the party and all the instruments of propaganda and education which fascism uses to make the thought and will of the Duce to thought and will of the masses." Hence fascism sets for itself the task of bringing "...the whole mass of the people, including little children, into the fold of the party".
Thus, in the view of Gentile, the leader's power over the people is absolute. It includes not only action, but the will of the people.
This fascist absolute model can be contrasted with Locke, who envisioned a government where the executive's power is 'checked' by other branches of government. And, the power of those branches is checked by the executive. Locke envisioned a structure of government where authority did not rest in one branch, or one individual but was preserved for the people by the branches 'checking' each other. This is the system of checks and balances which is at the heart of the design for government in the U. S. Constitution.
The evolution of the concept of separation of powers came to full expression in the writings of John Locke (who, remember, was the philosophical inspiration for both the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution). "Separation of powers became the complete doctrine of Locke's political system. He clarified the idea of separation of powers in terms of the essential aspects, the basis and some principles of the division of power into three branches: legislative, executive and Federative Power of the Commonwealth. Although Locke has not mentioned judicial power as a third branch of state power, his outlines have really created a separation of powers in the organization and operation of the state apparatus." (source: Universidade Católica de Petrópolis, Petrópolis, Rio de Janeiro, Brasi)
What is Donald Trump's view on the power of the two branches that are supposed to check him, as the executive?
He has declared emergencies in order to justify usurping the power of Congress. These congressional powers include the ability to impose tariffs. While Congress may delegate this power to the president under certain circumstances, the authority originates with Congress. Below is a video in which Trump imposes tariffs, and the argument against his authority to do that.
Trump has chaffed against the power of the judiciary to check his authority. In one instance, he sued the whole judiciary of a state:
https://www.foxnews.com/video/6374896948112
Summary
Obviously, this topic is far too broad to handle in a simple blog. I can't possibly justify or disprove charges of fascism leveled at the current administration. I attempt here to clarify why some may see in the current president an inclination to wield power in a way that suggests fascism, or fascist tendencies.
I have to stop here because I won't have any readers left at all if I continue. However, writing about this has been enlightening for me. Discovering the words of Giovanni Gentile was certainly an interesting intellectual exercise. Also, reading more carefully about the political philosophy of John Locke was a bit of an adventure.
I will certainly continue to explore.
Thank you for reading my blog. Hive on!
hahaha.. Trump the man (baby)
:P
but so true..
You read the whole thing??? Wow. Thanks
sure. its a good read. :) I hate bullies like Trump and the others like him!
Wow that was a really good work, you did a lot of research and analysis here... Mussolini and trump have different roots though, mussolini was born as socialist but after a kick in the ass the created fascism, Trump was never a dem switching side... Also Trump is milionarie while mussolini wasn't rich... So they probably have different views
It was very interesting. I do like to get into the weeds of things. I appreciate that you read it...not everyone is inclined to read such a piece.
You are apparently familiar with Mussolini, more than most people in the U. S. are. (are you in the U.S.?) Yes, a socialist and a journalist. He was educated. A thinker.
In my opinion, Trump doesn't have a point of view unless it serves his personal interests. He doesn't have an ideology, except one that makes him richer and more powerful. The view, the ideology, comes from those around him, those who support him and were responsible for his rise to power. These people are thinkers and they are committed to an idea of government.
It's interesting that the fascists in Italy arose because there was a fear of socialism and chaos. The people who back Trump likewise are reacting to what they see as a drift in government policy toward ideas they consider dangerous. When they shout Marxism, and socialism, I think they half mean it--although not entirely.
The people who back Trump, many the authors of Project 25, do have an ideology and that is what we see advancing in government today.
Anyway, that's the way I see it :))
I am from Italy 😅 that explains it... I'm not in deep on US politics, but dem doesn't look like socialists, maybe people were afraid of woke-ish things, or just the alternative was worse than Trump for many...
In the west nowadays all politicians are crap, I wouldn't be surprised if a new dictator arises and would get supported, on elections only 50% of people voted because they lost faith, a strong man could attract masses again
A very good read, about increasingly important policies. I have read but little on Mussolini, but have read that he said that Fascism was corporatism, where private corporations are able to participate in the governance and implementing policy decisions of the state it has also participated in formulating. I see that such corporatism is not only evident in the US - although it certainly is evident - but across the West as public/private partnerships, that core aspect of Fascism as I have heretofore understood it. Not just the West, but across Asia, S. America, and Australia and NZ.
The discussion on Morning Joe I can not comment on, as I am unfamiliar with these laws and their practice in the past. However, by nature I am aligned with Democratic checks on government, Judiciary and Executive, a Lockean to the core, because I am born, as are we all, with the exclusive authority over me to will myself to action, to think as I reckon right, and the state does not exist without an agreement of sovereigns whom have the right to rule themselves to agree to rule themselves by such mechanisms they prefer to institute in a state. I would on that basis refute Gentile's philosophies, and further disavow them as referent to Nationalism. It is the nation from which that political form derives - not a state or polity - but a people bound by common culture and ethnic heritage. Thus, again, it is the people that are the author of Nationalist states, and this does not convince me that it is the whole of the people that has rights, but rather that it is still the individual whom is born with rights and sole authority. I see Nationalism as governance in order to protect and advance a people, rather than merely a polity or jurisdiction, and frankly find that a far more palatable purpose.
However, you have raised issues I have not previously associated as defining of Fascism, and Gentile asserts them regarding Nationalism as well. I see that despite the frequent assertions in the Constitution that government is dependent on the will and reckoning of the people, in practice and cumulatively, the power of institutions and government in particular becomes inconvenient and even unassailable to democratic control, judicial restraint, or reason at all. Many bloody excesses of governmental power have resulted in claims of authority that conform neither to individual sovereignty, nor any particular constitutional institution, but simply became possible to ambitious men who took that power they could.
Certainly, for Trump to claim he could literally do anything he wants because he's President isn't even Fascism, but totalitarian Tyranny - which even Trump will not claim is the form of the Government of the United States. Even with the caveat he added 'when the country is in danger.', isn't actually in accord with Republican democratic government. I reckon Trump is less than precise with the particulars of his speech, rather often aiming vaguely at something he reckons is commonly understood, such as that on the battlefield a Commander in Chief gives orders to his military with no judicial nor democratic check, due to the nature of war. Even with the rhetoric about Antifa committing terrorist acts, he designating it a terrorist group, and the overly dramatic characterization of Portland being in a state of war, I don't think he means to wage war with military force as is being waged in the Ukraine. I think he seizes such power to effect such goals as seems meet to him (or his masters) because he can, not because he formally reckons with the political structure and has determined the definition of these things to have been met.
I don't doubt Trump is a Tyrant, and is implementing Fascist public/private partnerships, but that these aren't because of political definitions, rather because they are possible to gain power he desires to effect his ends, and doesn't doubt but that he is doing what he must to preserve 'liberty' and the sovereignty of Americans. He doesn't doubt it because he's given it careful thought, but because he's a Narcissist and doesn't reckon he has to. He's just always right. I don't think he has very precise definitions regarding those things, and doesn't give it much thought. There's a way he can get the things done he wants to do, and whatever claims or however he has to define the words he uses to get the power to do them is what he's going to do, what he reckons right to do. It is rather his being hell bent on a totalitarian surveillance state, in deploying digital currencies to force behaviours he wants, or is told to want, that I think Trump's true politics are revealed. He's not a Republican, a Democrat, nor even a Fascist, or Nationalist. He's a Tyrant.
Thanks!
Edit: I see that Trump is ushering in a global technocratic totalitarian tyranny, as are all their masters' minions, from Putin to Milei.
It is gratifying to read such an expansive, thoughtful reply. I spent a lot of time researching this. My hope was that it would shed some light on the discussion, clarify the issues that are surrounding what is happening to my country. I try very hard not to cast aspersions, not to level charges, because I always want to engage in reasoned discourse that will offend few. I don't want to lose my audience before that audience has had a chance to read my words and consider my information.
I like facts. When dealing with history it's hard to state true, absolute facts, because there is always disagreement about what actually happened, what someone actually said. That's why I like to quote the people, not the people who quote the people.
Thank you for engaging. Thank you for the points you make. I hope other people read the comments and consider everything that is being said. We have to hope more people understand what is happening in our country and more people want to prevent this from going further.
I recommend taking a bird's eye view of the world, because what is happening here is not happening in isolation. IMHO a global technocratic totalitarian tyranny is being imposed today. There are voluminous sources in which this globalist venture is advocated and supported by members of the various institutions (the WEF, UN, EU, Trilateral Commission, CFR, Bilderberg, Club of Rome, BRICs, ASEAN, OAS, etc.) that are working towards that goal. There are also a variety of secret societies, or those with obfuscated agendae, such as Skull and Bones, Masons, Rosicrucians, and many more, which all seem to be also intent on such development, from such historical record and whistleblowers as are available.
The extant polities of the world each have a unique set of features, strengths, and weaknesses that must be reckoned by them intent on incorporating all jurisdictions into their empire. Each polity is therefore being affected differently, in order to coordinate temporally in all of them the required conditions for incorporation within the whole. When these polities crash early, the risk of fresh, new institutions arising without the mature infestation of corruption that is the covert hand of the globalists, creates regional islands of resistance to the global conquest, and too many of them will prevent it from succeeding.
I completely agree with your appreciation for facts as opposed to opinions. Everyone forms their opinions, but few drill down to the factual foundation in order to form them. My grasp of Fascism exemplifies this, as my familiarity with Gentile was minimal, and my entire understanding, my opinion, was based on the one fact I knew, and the supporting opinions I read.
I have the opinion that a particular fact I am aware of is central to your expressed interest and concern. It is the lifespan of political institutions. Sir John Bagot Glubb wrote The Fate of Empire and Search for Survival ~20 pages discussing his research across 5000 years of history that revealed polities endure ~250 years. Imperial polities, at least. Historical evidence of lesser jurisdictions isn't well preserved over such scales. We may agree that the USA is an empire, and that it is today 249 years old.
The historical record suggests that the reason for the lifespan of polities is both ubiquitous and inexorable. Regardless of the form of institution government takes, regardless of the brilliance of it's statesmen or their courage and ambition, all senesce and die in about 10 generations.
Because of this I suspect there isn't much point in attempting to prevent it. But, that means there is enormous potential and reason to shape what comes after it. I personally understand the Lockean basis for human rights and how that pertains to political organization and power, which opposes me viscerally to tyranny. Further, additional research into imperial collapse and it's consequences in the Americas suggests that there is an inverse relationship to institutional political power and societal comity.
--https://peakd.com/life/@valued-customer/digital-id-and-hive in comment chain
Because we have almost no historical record from American civilization, we have acquired such information via the archaeological record, which unlike history is factually demonstrable.
Polities are created to defend civilization, to support a given culture and people whose enjoyment of civil society is challenged by intrasocietal and intersocietal competition, amongst other things. My observation is that relatively egalitarian cultures in which political institutions are less consequential, such as the Scythians, endure and maintain civil society best, while the more powerful political institutions become, the weaker and less durable civil society is, such that collapse of great empires is occasioned by genocidal population decline and loss of culture.
Because I also observe the sudden emergence of decentralization of means of production as the cutting edge of tech advance across every field of industry, I see that humanity is transcending a clinal boundary that deprecates centralization, and will eschew powerful institutions as a result. By preventing the successful imposition of a global technocratic totalitarian tyranny, I believe we will avoid centuries of suffering and create a free society of inconceivable prosperity with a decentralized economy with the most advanced technology.
This is what I seek to enable my local community to do, and what preventing America from being incorporated into, or incorporating, a global tyranny also will do. But simply preventing a global tyranny will not enable civil society to enjoy prosperity and endure, if communities are overpowered by institutions and polities. That requires employing decentralized means of production and decentralizing economic power, supporting merit and avoiding dependence on centralized institutions. Dark triad Machiavellian ambition requires powerful centralized institutions, while preventing subjugation to overlords will best be achieved by decentralization and production of the blessings of civilization such as food, fuel, power, and comms locally so that famine and shortages can't extort populations. Robust civil society must decentralize economic power, so it is dispersed and not concentrated in institutions that aggrandize ambition.
🐈 Not sure if I can read it but it is a great subject for me to enquire... I just prefer sources in Russian language (when it comes to such texts full of complex abstractions...)
😇
I have a little trouble reading stuff in Russian, myself :)
This year I watched several great video-essays on fascism in Poland, Italy, Japan. I am not going to recommend them to you, cause they were in Russian. Heh. The subject is complex, actually. Labeling a 'fascism' label is easy but that is simplification by 300% in most of the times; thats why this term has so much explanations - which are very very different to each other!
That's what my post says, exactly. I quote the only leader who ever called himself a fascist, Mussolini. And I quote the man Mussolini quoted, Giovanni Gentile. These people called themselves fascists. They founded the fascist ideology and they defined fascism. I label no one else a fascist, nor do I attempt a definition. I leave it to people to decide if any government fits the terms described by Mussolini and Gentile.
I was trained in history (undergrad...not grad.) I'm a skeptic. I don't throw labels around. If Mussolini says it's fascist, well, he should know :))
pps. may I advertise to you a few tunes in Russian?
https://ecency.com/hive-193816/@qwerrie/three-tune-tuesday-223
recently i developed a slight addiction to this great artist.
even if you could not get the lyrics... I am sure a pleasure
watching this artist performing is guaranteed. 😍
Thank you! I will listen to that later. The only thing I know how to say in Russian is "thank you" :))