if they are far right does that not mean they are fascist?
Results 1 to 20 of 32
I really think they are. Here's some background, they are theocratic Christian nationalists on the far-right. They're homophobic, anti-choice, and anti-immigrant. They're not openly racist, though I think most are racist, openly or not.
Ron Paul endorsed their Presidential candidate. The Constitution Party also has the distinction of being a party on the right that is anti-war, though they base that around the high taxes of war not the morality of war.
I think there may be a theory about fascism that says that fascists take a popular issue (like anti-war) and funnel into a reactionary right-wing ideology, instead of the left. It's funneling anti-war sentiment into xenophobia, homophobia, Christian fundamentalism.
I think it's similar to the BNP. But few people have taken notice like those in the UK did toward the BNP. But the Constitution Party did elect a member of the state legislature of Montana back in 2006. He was running against a Democrat with no Republican in the race.
The Constitution Party likes to call the Republican Party liberal and call itself the true conservative party. Of course, from their perspective anything is liberal.
if they are far right does that not mean they are fascist?
Want to learn more? Cant find that book on Communist theory? Check out The Marxist Internet Archive
Ní Neart Go Cur Le Chéile
One revolutionary act a day can change the world
Formerly - Rise As One
They are not fascist. OK they're far right, but they support smaller (federal) government and noninterventionist foreign policy. Not fascist.
Formerly zenga zenga !
but how does that not make them fascist?![]()
Want to learn more? Cant find that book on Communist theory? Check out The Marxist Internet Archive
Ní Neart Go Cur Le Chéile
One revolutionary act a day can change the world
Formerly - Rise As One
I don't know much about this party, but I guess they are more like highly nationalist, religious, isolationalist "paleo-conservatives". They're not similar to the BNP at all, the BNP is a traditionally fascist party that is currently putting on a populist mask.
There are all kinds of parties like this in America, a list of them: http://www.politics1.com/parties.htm
What's the matter Lagerboy, afraid you might taste something?
ok what does isolationist and paleo-conservative mean?
Want to learn more? Cant find that book on Communist theory? Check out The Marxist Internet Archive
Ní Neart Go Cur Le Chéile
One revolutionary act a day can change the world
Formerly - Rise As One
To Rise As One: A far right Libertarian agenda does not mean Fascism in the traditional sense. A lazie Faire economic system inevitbably leads to socail darwinism, which leads to authoritarian dominiation (presumably under a corporation rather than a state). The Constitutional Party is not fascit, but merely a bunch of dumb asses whose policies would lead to fascism.
War is Peace,
Freedom is Slavery,
Ignorance is Strength[COLOR=red]
They're right wing anti-fascist really.
Its a very USian concept.
I'm on their email list because I find the constitutionalist movement fascinating. I know a lot constitutionalists and some off their ideas are off the walls. There is some crossover between their politics and some elements of the racist right (but only certain sections of that movement, not the fascist section) but most of them are not racist, they're actually anti-racist, and like I said, anti-fascist.
Its hard to explain and I don't think anybody is really that interested in it. But right-wing anti-fascism does exist and is quite a force in the US.
Put capitalism in a bag of rice.
They're the libertarian stooges who are in reality lackeys for the fascist movement. Fascism and libertarianism are both middle class dreams of a return to feudalism: and therefore, even in opposition, they are united.
"We are now becoming a mass party all at once, changing abruptly to an open organisation, and it is inevitable that we shall be joined by many who are inconsistent (from the Marxist standpoint), perhaps we shall be joined even by some Christian elements, and even by some mystics. We have sound stomachs and we are rock-like Marxists. We shall digest those inconsistent elements. Freedom of thought and freedom of criticism within the Party will never make us forget about the freedom of organising people into those voluntary associations known as parties."
--Lenin
Socialist Party (Debs Tendency)
How, in the fuck, is lassiez-faire capitalism (i.e. classical liberalism, aka, what overturned feudalism) feudalism?
Put capitalism in a bag of rice.
One thing that makes leftists lame is the overuse of the word fascist
Formerly zenga zenga !
yep,
Orwell:
Because fascism at its core is about totalitarian centralised government.
Any movement that is against this cannot be fascist, no matter how racist they are.
I used to be one of the people who threw it around everywhere. Its really a bit silly when you think about it.
If a movement is not for a highly controlled society with a huge all powerfull state then it cannot be fascist.
Combine that with 'third way' economics and anti worker policies wedded to anti capitalist rhetoric and you have the core of fascism.
Fascism originally as it grew out of the futurist movement was about the nation as a spiritual concept. It was the nazis who took it and wedded it to scientific racism.
The constitutionalist party and the constitutionalist movement in general are non/anti racist.
Put capitalism in a bag of rice.
Because lassiez faire capitalism would not restrict the setting up of a feudal government. Lassiez faire capitalism is not classical liberalism but one of its many bourgeise bastard children
War is Peace,
Freedom is Slavery,
Ignorance is Strength[COLOR=red]
Feudalism is not a form of government, but a mode of production - a stage in the historical development of the productive forces defined by its prevailing relations of production. Under feudalism, peasants were tied to the manor of a feudal lord and the production of foodstuffs was carried out mainly for immediate consumption by the producers and as well as those who owned the land, and those who provided other services for the local community, and commercial activity (i.e. production of exchange values) was limited to a small class of artisans who lived in the urban areas. The destruction of feudalism meant the creation of a free labour market which allowed peasants to migrate to the cities and choose their employers instead of being forced to work for a specific feudal lord. A return to feudalism would require the abolition of the free labour market - something which no classical liberal would ever advocate.
I fucked up stating myself. I know damn well that fuedalism is a mode of production. But riddle me this; in coal country at the turn of the century in America, miners where paid in something we call script, which of course, was only accepted in company towns. The workers were bound to the town due to the fact they could not move out because they had no money. Is this not a tying to the land? America at the turn of the 20th century as largely lassiez faire...perhaps not total feudalism would ensue under a libertarian society, because people would choose their employers. But if they went back to the old company towns and what not, in two generations, majority of Libertarian Land would be serfs. No nobels, just corporation execs
War is Peace,
Freedom is Slavery,
Ignorance is Strength[COLOR=red]
This is a very simplistic definition of the word "fascism". Liberals (not calling you one BTW, just making a point) will usually argue that both the Third Reich and "Stalinist" Russia were totalitarian centralised governments. But obviously the mode of production in each country were different.
Yes, but totalitarian centralised government is a staple of fascism
and not something the Constitution party believes in.
Formerly zenga zenga !
I think the point is that what ultimately matters is not what kind of society the constitutionalist movement envisions, but what the implementation of their overall plan for society would logically result in. And like others have stated, it seems to me that extreme laissez-faire would result in some sort of neo-feudalism, wherein the major centers of power are private tyrannical corporations, unaccountable to the government or the people, the latter being bound to the land and the factories they work in because they simply have nowhere else to go.
Of course, one could argue that in light of a reduced state apparatus, it would actually be somewhat simpler to organize and struggle against private power than against the massive state that currently keeps the working class in check, not to mention that without any kind of welfare state, people would be more likely to become radicalized.
But of course, arguing any of this is merely intellectual masturbation, and would be akin to lending these idealists more of our time of day than they deserve. As we all know, the ruling class would never surrender their massive state apparatus without a fight, and if they advocate some kind of petit-bourgeois revolution wherein capitalism sort of "resets" and the big corporations are dissolved and many small enterprises take their place... well, we'd be where we were in the 19th century. And look where that led us. Those entrepreneurs would eventually merge into corporations again, and the cycle would repeat. It's futile to even waste time considering the pros and cons of a return to "true" laissez-faire, because that's not how the dynamics of history work.
YOU KNOW WHAT IT IS