i also think that delusional, angry, scared people (like trump, like so many of his followers) are sometimes a little dangerous when they sense that they're in danger. in this case, they're in "danger" of being pushed aside politically for a few years, but they may very well interpret that as "the apocalypse is here, and our job is to carry out the lord's will"
― @oneposter(✔️) (Karl Malone), Monday, 9 November 2020 18:42 (five years ago)
also, since i'm spelling out my own delusions here (and again, i stress that i don't this is likely to happen at all), the stuff i worry about has little to do with trump himself. he is a fucking idiot, so is his family. they are incompetent. it comes from the second or third order-effects, the people that actually believe the bullshit they're being fed
― @oneposter(✔️) (Karl Malone), Monday, 9 November 2020 18:43 (five years ago)
otm, kind of where i'm at
― Lover of Nixon (or LON for short) (Neanderthal), Monday, 9 November 2020 18:52 (five years ago)
the Esper firing/replacement with a Homeland Security goon who thinks it's fine to use military to quell protests is admittedly a little disconcerting and came just as I made my last posts.
i guess a slight bright side is that protests are likely to quell down soon anyway, because of winter, the worst wave of covid-19 we've seen yet, and the morale boost of already defeating trump. so perhaps a defense secretary willing to lend a violent hand to a fascist will find less people's lives to ruin
― @oneposter(✔️) (Karl Malone), Monday, 9 November 2020 18:55 (five years ago)
Perhaps it's worth mentioning that the police still love to murder Black people in cold blood at all times of year, so I wouldn't count on protests dying down, necessarily.
― healthy cocaine off perfect butts (the table is the table), Monday, 9 November 2020 21:59 (five years ago)
I more meant that you could read it as him preparing to pull some stunt that he expects to trigger unrest, that's all. It may very well be that Esper was about to resign so he just said "you're fired" instead. And it may just be a petty thing. But it seems odd to change secretary of defense just at this moment.
― longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Monday, 9 November 2020 22:19 (five years ago)
Just posted elsewhere but Sec of Def is supposed to be more than 6 years out of service. They can get a waiver (did for Mattis) but it does indicate another instance of a competence deficit
― mouts and shurmurs (Ye Mad Puffin), Monday, 9 November 2020 22:22 (five years ago)
he doesn't have much time left, i'm not sure how much power he can consolidate through force at this point
― treeship., Monday, 9 November 2020 22:40 (five years ago)
I've read more about fascism since the start of this thread, including Paxton's The Anatomy of Fascism. I think Trump and his followers are more accurately described as a right-wing authoritarians. Trump's suppression of the opposition was half-assed, and his foreign policy was too random to be considered expansionist.
― wasdnous (abanana), Monday, 9 November 2020 22:52 (five years ago)
i read austerlitz, by w. g. sebald, and ended up doing a little re-evaluating myself. the one thing that really struck me about that book's account of the reich's arrival in austria and the czech republic was the absolutely off-the-charts administrative energy behind every single aspect of everything they did, but especially the relocating and disappearing and destroying people part. like, insane amounts of time and energy devoted to accounting in the 1930s version of spreadsheets and being responsible for and reporting on numbers and just relying on that as an overwhelmingly destructive reorganizational force. the reich had an administrative energy to it that was so amped up, possibly methed up, whereas the trumpists are like standard-issue alcoholics. they don't actually *do* anything. except for ice and the border wall and a few other areas that had some competency and a *work ethic* behind them. i'm starting to think that you can't actually be a full fascist unless you pair it with a culture of work. you can buy into the aesthetics and lick boots all you want but if no one is actually doing anything but messaging and play-acting you're just con men and religious nut jobs smoking white-supremacist and male-supremacist crack in the basement. it turns out it's a lot of work to do genocide and such. trump himself is way too lazy for that.
― Give me a Chad Smith-type feel (map), Monday, 9 November 2020 23:29 (five years ago)
that's a really good post
― Li'l Brexit (Tracer Hand), Monday, 9 November 2020 23:32 (five years ago)
Indeed. Comforting, to boot.
― pomenitul, Monday, 9 November 2020 23:34 (five years ago)
i think there's also a difference between what sebald describes as an almost ecstatic religious conversion in germany among *a lot* of people there and the u.s., which in 2020 has some institutional fascist tendencies that mainly translate into steady violence against non-white poor people. some of the people in trump's camp i think attempted to ignite white supremacist fervor on the level of germany but i feel like there's an element to it where they were looking back on it and so it became, or was from the outset, too self-reflective to generate any real heat. like in the substantive numbers that could lead to a large-scale killing project. fun stuff to think about lol.
― Give me a Chad Smith-type feel (map), Monday, 9 November 2020 23:43 (five years ago)
The lack of a Nazi-like bureaucratic impulse in the modern American right is not at all comforting. Plenty of genocides have occurred sans pristine book keeping. All that spreadsheet shit is auxiliary to the main shit, not an essential feature of it.
― Dan I., Monday, 9 November 2020 23:48 (five years ago)
Reading "The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich," I was surprised (in that I didn't know) how patiently Hitler played the long game. Trump is all sloppy impulse, but Hitler had a legit (for him) plan that he put into play. And from the start he was basically all or nothing, total victory or death. That is not Trump, either.
― Josh in Chicago, Monday, 9 November 2020 23:51 (five years ago)
ok, show me genocides that happened without some kind of administrative competence behind them xp
― Give me a Chad Smith-type feel (map), Monday, 9 November 2020 23:51 (five years ago)
Lol are you serious? Like almost every single one. Do you want me to start at the chimp wars?
― Dan I., Tuesday, 10 November 2020 00:05 (five years ago)
Good posts map. Austerlitz is one of my favorite books ever.
― treeship., Tuesday, 10 November 2020 00:10 (five years ago)
― Dan I., Tuesday, November 10, 2020 12:05 AM (six minutes ago) bookmarkflaglink
no actually. i'm thinking of human genocides post third-reich.
― Give me a Chad Smith-type feel (map), Tuesday, 10 November 2020 00:12 (five years ago)
― treeship., Tuesday, November 10, 2020 12:10 AM (two minutes ago) bookmarkflaglink
it's extremely beautiful.
― Give me a Chad Smith-type feel (map), Tuesday, 10 November 2020 00:13 (five years ago)
Can you define your terms, map? Right now it's looking like you're saying that fascism isn't "full fascism" until it leads to organized genocide.
― Lily Dale, Tuesday, 10 November 2020 00:15 (five years ago)
The Order of the Day by Eric Vuillard was serialised on R4 last week and even in short 15 minute blasts was quite exquisite, might have to dive into that book some time soon.
― calzino, Tuesday, 10 November 2020 00:17 (five years ago)
I remember after Trump got elected I went on a major fascism reading binge - Wilhelm Reich, Trotsky, Adorno. The "18th Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte" was probably the best of the bunch though.
― Boring blighters bloaters (Tom D.), Tuesday, 10 November 2020 00:20 (five years ago)
Reich is good too but starts going a bit haywire two-thirds of the way in.
― Boring blighters bloaters (Tom D.), Tuesday, 10 November 2020 00:23 (five years ago)
― Lily Dale, Tuesday, November 10, 2020 12:15 AM (eleven minutes ago) bookmarkflaglink
that is what i'm saying, yes.
― Give me a Chad Smith-type feel (map), Tuesday, 10 November 2020 00:29 (five years ago)
i actually don't know much about the subject lol, would love to read more though.
It's deliberately provocative and by no means a work of non-fiction, but as a complement to Austerlitz, Jonathan Littell's The Kindly Ones, told from the perspective of a former SS officer who got off scot free, drives home the bureaucratic precision with which the Shoah was carried out to an almost nauseating degree.
― pomenitul, Tuesday, 10 November 2020 00:36 (five years ago)
while your posts are excellent, the Cambodian genocide during the 4 years of DK rule was not particularly well-organized. Yes, Tuol Sleung kept meticulous records, that is true. But there was also just wanton "cadres arrive in the village, kill everybody who won't sign up" energy.
― J Edgar Noothgrush (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Tuesday, 10 November 2020 00:38 (five years ago)
if that's the case, then does it really matter if something is truly fascism? once you reach a certain level of authoritarian, who cares about the underlying philosophy?
xxp
― la table sur la table (voodoo chili), Tuesday, 10 November 2020 00:39 (five years ago)
and much of this energy was absolutely directed at specific populations -- Muslim especially -- and seems to have been done without directives in place on any more than a "you know who to get" basis
― J Edgar Noothgrush (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Tuesday, 10 November 2020 00:40 (five years ago)
Same with Rwanda
― Dan I., Tuesday, 10 November 2020 00:41 (five years ago)
Disclaimer: I'm not particularly worried that either of these things will happen. But I do think either of these things *could* happen. One, Trump supporters (or, hell, one Trump supporter) could go nuts and start shooting, requiring a Biden admin to send in armed whomever in response, and two, something terrible happens to Biden. Both events would play in to right wing conspiracy theories and make those people even crazier and the country seriously unstable, which would create a power vacuum that a "law and order" person could exploit.
― Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 10 November 2020 00:42 (five years ago)
and Indonesia, no? xp
― it bangs for thee (Simon H.), Tuesday, 10 November 2020 00:44 (five years ago)
is it too obvious or not obvious enough that genocide is already foundational to & still performed by US & its neighbours ?
call it colonialism instead of fascism if you want but it’s part of the same thing. the bureaucracy & infrastructure which hitler admired so much already/still exists. trumpism never needed to be revolutionary
― a nice person (Left), Tuesday, 10 November 2020 00:59 (five years ago)
Indonesia in 65 was pretty well orchestrated by US intelligence. There's a reason why 'Jakarta is coming' was a slogan that the right used against the left in 70s and 80s S. and Central American regimes.
Rwanda a different story, Srebenica too.
― healthy cocaine off perfect butts (the table is the table), Tuesday, 10 November 2020 01:01 (five years ago)
Left otm
― healthy cocaine off perfect butts (the table is the table), Tuesday, 10 November 2020 01:09 (five years ago)
you don't have to be competent to be a fascist, and the ones who seem like blundering fools are still very, very dangerous. thinking of BlacKkKlansman which was kind of about this.
― Doctor Casino, Tuesday, 10 November 2020 03:31 (five years ago)
blundering fools with guns are dangerous, fascist or not.
― the unappreciated charisma of cows (Aimless), Tuesday, 10 November 2020 03:54 (five years ago)
Yes.
― pomenitul, Wednesday, 6 January 2021 20:30 (five years ago)
Man what the hell was actually motivating the “too incompetent to be fascist”
― “Big” Don Abernathy, Wednesday, 6 January 2021 22:53 (five years ago)
the “too incompetent to be fascist” takes.
― “Big” Don Abernathy, Wednesday, 6 January 2021 22:54 (five years ago)
ahistorical borderline apologist shit about trains running on time etc
all the fixed definitions just miss the point dangerously hard
ofc trump is a fascist. america is fascist. europe is fascist
― ftp (Left), Wednesday, 6 January 2021 23:23 (five years ago)
if we want fascism to not have a meaning then sure
― Fenners' Pen (jim in vancouver), Wednesday, 6 January 2021 23:24 (five years ago)
how's that
― ftp (Left), Wednesday, 6 January 2021 23:31 (five years ago)
Oh come the fuck on, the US is a settler colony that commits genocides and coups elsewhere in the world to maintain it's economic interests all while upholding itself as a beacon of freedom and denying those who would ever critique it in a substantive way.
The US is and has been fascist.
― Pere Legume (the table is the table), Wednesday, 6 January 2021 23:34 (five years ago)
the "he seems to be ok with democracy" posts here have not aged well
― like, I’m eating an elephant head (katherine), Wednesday, 6 January 2021 23:34 (five years ago)
I rather think it was other items in ilx poster lefts post that caused jim to snort tbf
― nob lacks, noirish (darraghmac), Wednesday, 6 January 2021 23:36 (five years ago)
I'm fascist Spartacus
― Eggbreak Hotel (Tom D.), Wednesday, 6 January 2021 23:38 (five years ago)
People are surprised, they become indignant. They say: "How strange! But nevermind-it's Nazism, it will. pass!" And they wait, and they hope; and they hide the truth fromthemselves, that it is barbarism, but the supreme barbarism, the crowning barbarism thatsums up all the daily barbarisms; that it is Nazism, yes, but that before they were itsvictims, they were its accomplices; that they tolerated that Nazism before it was inflictedon them, that they absolved it, shut their eyes to it, legitimized it, because, until then, ithad been applied only to non-European peoples; that they have cultivated that Nazism,that they are responsible for it, and that before engulfing the whole of Western, Christiancivilization in its reddened waters, it oozes, seeps, and trickles from every crack.
What am I driving at? At this idea: that no one colonizes innocently, that no onecolonizes with impunity either; that a nation which colonizes, that a civilization whichjustifies colonization - and therefore force - is already a sick civilization, a civilization that ismorally diseased, that irresistibly, progressing from one consequence to another, onerepudiation to another, calls for its Hitler, I mean its punishment.
https://b-ok.cc/book/834691/7bf6cb?dsource=recommend
― ftp (Left), Wednesday, 6 January 2021 23:58 (five years ago)
Césaire OTM, always OTM afaic.
― Pere Legume (the table is the table), Thursday, 7 January 2021 00:32 (five years ago)