-Caveat Lector-

from:
http://www.zolatimes.com/V3.6/pageone.html
<A HREF="http://www.zolatimes.com/V3.6/pageone.html">Laissez Faire City Times
- Volume 3 Issue 6</A>
The Laissez Faire City Times
February 08, 1999 - Volume 3, Issue 6
Editor & Chief: Emile Zola
-----
American Fascism

by Ace


You�re all a bunch of Fascists! At least that's what the left keeps
calling everyone who attempts to reason from the classical conservative
perspective.

But the issue of who is a Fascist can't be addressed by any measure from
the modern philosophical left because their fundamental tenet is the lie
. For them, that�s the first principle of the art of war. They use it,
they excuse it, and they in fact worship at its feet. They are the
masters of deception, the political prestidigitators of the modern age.
War is peace, freedom is slavery, and ignorance is strength. And one of
the truly clever feats of magic the left has perpetrated was convincing
John and Jane Q. Public that Fascism is necessarily a product of the
popular definition of the "far right."

"Clinton's an unusually good liar. Unusually good. Do you realize that?"


�Senator Bob Kerrey, as Chairman of the Democrat Senatorial Campaign
Committee, Esquire Magazine, January 1996

And of course we can argue definitions from now to eternity and never
get anywhere if we reason from the contemporary post-modern perspective.
Whether we use the Nolan analysis to determine political positioning,
the French memory of left and right chambers of government, or the
anarchy-to-dictatorship continuum, we still wallow around in the
rhetoric of abstraction. In the real world of non-revisionist history,
the problem of politics has always been the diametric polarization of
the individual and a governing elite. It's been a battle over who has
ownership of human rights��who possesses innate sovereignty��the
individual or the state. And the state has most often won this argument
by virtue of either deception or sheer force.

"The use of the word �royalty,� as fee to a proprietor for the
exploitation of a work or property, derives from the period when the
sovereign assumed title to all wealth of the realm. It was the struggle
for freedom from these encroachments of the state that chiefly marked
the Nineteenth Century, and established everywhere constitutional
regimes of limited authority. In the Twentieth Century, however, we have
witnessed a gradual and almost unrestricted movement back to state
authoritarianism, primarily in the economic sphere, accompanied by the
spread of state monopoly and intervention."��Elgin Groseclose, Money and
Man: A Survey of the Monetary Experience

Groseclose was right. But since he wrote that back in 1961, the
advocates of the Collectivist State have significantly expanded their
hold on power beyond the economic sphere. Almost daily they claim
eminent ownership of some new aspect of our lives. While they're still
perfectly willing to license these plundered liberties back to us as a
privilege and for a fee, the bipartisan, politically correct,
authoritarian American left has finally begun to behave like the
Fascists they actually are. But we dare not admit this openly, for the
phenomenon of mass denial has become our very own sacred cow. Don�t
touch it. Don�t question it. Just do it. So trudging along through the
lowland of cultural mediocrity, most on the Democratic left are no
longer even aware of the grand deception, or that others before have
made almost the same miscalculation. And also completely buried in the
doctrinal deception, a majority of those on the Republican right also
have no idea they have long subscribed to the same paradigm. They smugly
deny that the illusory quagmire of collectivist quicksand has dragged
down the minds of great individuals with an almost blind indifference.

Responding in ignorance and addicted to the fraud of the "free lunch,"
the public has taken to opposing the only prescription in history that
has ever even remotely remedied Fascism, which in fact is the
traditional American conservatism of the classical constitutional
republic. That is the ideology of the so called "far right," where the
individual makes the sovereign claim to all basic human rights, and
empowers the collective state only by consent and practical limitation
to manage, police, and protect those rights.

Fascism: Any program for setting up and centralizing an autocratic
regime with severely authoritarian politics exercising regulation of
industry, commerce and finance, rigid censorship, and forcible
oppression of opposition. �Webster's Unabridged Dictionary

Writing in The New Australian on January 24th, 1999, James Henry noted
that, "The state of American education being what it is, the vast
majority of people are totally incapable of recognizing a fascist
economic program, even when it is used to slap them in the face. This is
because they have not been taught that fascism means state direction of
the economy, cradle to grave �social security�, complete control of
education, government intervention in every nook and cranny of the
economy � and the belief that the individual belongs to the state."

And just in case you think you aren't included in that latter chattel,
consider that the popular expression used to describe labor these days
is human resources. Members of the executive committee of the White
House Health Project under Hillary Clinton's failed effort to monopolize
medicine were even excited about proposals for the mandatory
implantation of livestock identification micro chips in your body. If
you didn't submit you wouldn't qualify for any licensed health care. Now
admit it. Weren't there any myopic advocates on the left that even
momentarily felt like sheep at that proposal?

And in a January 26, 1999 piece for WorldNetDaily, Joseph Farah wrote in
 "Moving Toward a Police State" that, "President Clinton has declared
more 'states of national emergency' than any of his predecessors. And
he's done it in an era he boasts about as the freest, most peaceful and
most prosperous time in recent American history. President Clinton has
issued more executive orders than any of his predecessors. His top aides
have even boasted of using them as a political strategy to go over the
heads of the legislative branch of government. �Stroke of the pen, law
of the land,� boasted Paul Begala of the plan. �Pretty cool, huh?�"

Pretty cool all right. If there's any sensible readers from the left
still with us, they're probably beginning to squirm uncomfortably by
now. So let's step back and broaden our perspective. Where do we get the
word Fascism anyway? Isn�t it associated with the Roman "fasces," the
bundle of wooden rods covering the battleaxe Roman magistrates used as a
symbol of their authority? And wasn�t Benito Mussolini the man who took
as his symbol the "fasces" of classical Rome, and in doing so gave the
modern world the term, "Fascism"? And what was the political slant of
Mussolini? Was he a republican constitutional conservative, a product of
the "far right?" Or was he a socialist like Adolph Hitler?

"At first the claims of the propaganda were so impudent that people
thought it insane; later, it got on people's nerves; and in the end, it
was believed." �Adolf Hitler, Mein Kampf

Liberal revisionists insist that Mussolini was a product of the
political "right wing." In fact, there�s strong indication that he was
for years an orthodox Marxist, who (like Hitler) came to power through
democratic means. His dictum was "Everything for the State, nothing
outside the State, nothing above the State." So it�s a little unnerving
that the symbol of the fasces also appeared on the reverse of the
"Winged Head of American Liberty" or "Mercury" dime in 1916. That just
about coincides with the period the Marxist tenet of progressive income
tax became an American institution and the Federal Reserve Corporation
was inserted as a central banking monopoly inside the American banking
system. The schizophrenic symbolism of the Liberty Head obverse and the
fasces reverse on that design of the American 10-cent coin reflects the
very disturbance of opposing forces in American culture that we are
discussing.

And what do we really remember of Mussolini and Hitler from today�s
university history? Do we remember that socialist icon George Bernard
Shaw highly praised Mussolini for his collectivist policies, or that the
venerable Mahatma Gandhi called him a "superman?" Gandhi's term became
the catchword description of Mussolini for the cultural elite of his
day. And we�ve forgotten that the chairman of the U.S. House Foreign
Relations Committee told his colleagues in 1926 that Mussolini "is
something new and vital . . . It will be a great thing not only for
Italy but for all of us if he succeeds." And we for some reason can�t
remember that in the 1930's prominent banker Otto Kahn said that the
world owes Hitler "a debt of gratitude." Or that Arnold Toynbee thought
he was a "man of peace," or that the French intellectual Andre Gide said
that he "behaves like a genius . . . Soon even those he vanquishes will
feel compelled . . . to admire him." Neither can academia recall that in
1934 the president of Hunter College in America declared that Hitler was
"destined to go down to history as a cross between Hotspur and Uncle
Toby and to be as immortal as either."



Well, Hitler went down to immortal history all right. That much we all
agree on.

And yet, in a fit of modern denial, collectivist apologists compulsively
and erroneously distance themselves from the age of Neville Chamberlain.
They blithely forget the doublespeak of Giovanni Gentile, one of Fascist
Italy's leading philosophers stating that, "The maximum of liberty
coincides with the maximum of state force." Once again they fail to
remember that Mussolini's thesis was: "If historic fact exists it is
this, that all of the history of men's civilization, from the caves to
civilized or so-called civilized man, is a progressive limitation of
liberty." Somehow our educational system fails to remind them that the
collectivist advocate Herbert Matthews, a New York Times writer who was
instrumental in bringing Castro to power in Cuba, claimed that he was
"an enthusiastic admirer of Fascism."

The quasi-intellectuals of the left boldly proclaimed that the 1996
Republican presidential candidate Bob Dole was a "Fascist" for
criticizing violent, sexist rap music. But don�t ever point out that
Mussolini was fundamentally a socialist, or make any reference to Hitler
at all. For if you do, they insist that you lose the argument by
default. Then they either smugly pick up their toys and march home, or
arrogantly shout you down.

Sorry, kids, but Fascism is historically associated with National
Socialism, and National Socialism was a centralized, collectivist
federal authority. Fascism is an institution of statism, and unbridled
statism is antithetical to the true conservative thought of those on the
"right." And as much as tight-eyed crypto-Marxist intellectuals on the
collectivist American left many try to deny it, Marxism is unbridled
statism.

"Basically National Socialism and Marxism are the same." �Nobel laureate
Friedrich A. Hayek

F. A. Voigt, after years of close observation as a foreign correspondent
prior to and during WW2, wrote that, "Marxism has led to Fascism and
National Socialism, because, in all essentials, it is Fascism and
National Socialism." After spending twelve years in Russia as an
American correspondent only to have his own socialist ideals shattered,
W. H. Chamberlin concluded "socialism is certainly to prove . . . the
road not to freedom, but to dictatorship and counter-dictatorships, to
civil war of the fiercest kind." According to author John Toland, Hitler
himself said, "We are socialists, we are enemies of today's capitalistic
economic . . . system." But the children of the lie, those on the modern
left, know that perfectly well. The idolaters of the collectivist icons
Emperor Clinton and Empress Hildabeast just want the next collectivist
dictatorship to end up under their control. Their god is power, not
truth.

"We are the priests of power-do not forget this, Winston-always there
will be the intoxication of power . . . If you want a picture of the
future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face��forever." �O'Brien,
Inner Party member of the collectivist oligarchy and brain washing
specialist in the final scene of Orwell's 1984

Can't you hear them barking, "Oh, but get real! We�re not National
Socialists. We�re International Socialists!" Well��excuse me. But if we
rub the sleep from our pretty little eyes, what do we remember of
International Socialism? Besides Stalin, Mao, Pol Pot, and Kim Ill Sung
of course. I know, I know. It�s bad enough to have brought Mussolini and
Hitler into the argument, but completely unfair to bring the litany of
International Socialists into the picture as well. For years, if you
dared to point out liberal inconsistencies by analogy to certain
historic personalities, your own argument was painted an ad hominem,
illogical appeal to passion. But the times are a-changing.

Even ultra-liberal Jewish Harvard law professor and O.J. Simpson
defender, Alan Dershowitz, publicly stated before an assembly at Yale
that he'd defend Adolph Hitler. Furthermore, he insisted, he'd win. So
relax and consider concert pianist Balint Bazsony, author of America�s
30 Year War. He survived not only National Socialism under the Germans,
but International Socialism under the Stalinists as well. And here�s
what he tells us about his years in America after escaping collectivist
Hungary.

"During the late 1960s, I watched in despair as my brilliantly gifted
[American] piano students suddenly began to speak as if someone had
replaced their brains with prerecorded tapes. They spoke in
phrases�repeated mechanically�which were neither the product of, nor
accessible to, intelligent consideration. At first, these tapes seemed
to contain only a few slogans about "love and peace." Fruitful
conversation became impossible, but that was merely regrettable. The
situation became alarming when the "tapes" began to include words and
phrases that had become familiar to me in Hungary during the Nazi and
Soviet occupations, and which contributed to the reasons for my decision
to escape. Worse yet, the words and phrases were soon followed by
practices of similar pedigree.

"Reactionary," "exploitation," "oppressor and oppressed," and
"redistribution" were some of the words taken straight from the Marxist
repertoire. The term "politically correct" first came to my attention
through the writings of Anton Semionovich Makarenko, Lenin�s expert on
education. Adolf Hitler preferred the version "socially correct." Then
came the affirmative action forms which classified people by
ancestry�first signed into law in Nazi Germany�and the preferential
treatment of specific categories, introduced by the Stalinist government
in 1950."

That�s all very well and good, but Bazsony's students were just children
of the sixties. So be serious. What could America under Liberal
Democracy possibly have in common with the Fascist, dictatorial policies
of National or International Socialism? Well not much, I suppose. Unless
you include centrally monopolized banking, militantly enforced
progressive income tax, the involuntary military draft, affirmative
action for special cultural, racial, or political groups, oppressive
regulation of the environment, oppressive regulation of business,
oppressive regulation of commerce, a call to national service, a call
for a national identity system, a call for nationally monopolized health
care, a progressively intense call for a ban on private ownership of
firearms, a call for state assisted euthanasia, a call for legalizing
post-partum infanticide (can you imagine people dragging their toddlers
down to the "State Euthanasia Center for Baal Worshipers," complaining
that "this brat�s got a bad attitude?"), a call for a national police
force with Pentagon assistance, the creation of statutes by centralized
executive order, nationalized public education emphasizing radical
collectivist and politically correct propaganda, a centralized and
progressively unaccountable central government, personal and real asset
forfeiture for all manner of infraction, interest bearing State-
monopolized fiat money, a two-tiered legal system (one emphasizing an
apologetic waiver for cultural icons and bureaucrats on the left, and
quite another for "conservatives" on the right and the common man), a
phalanx of central ministry "alphabet soup" agencies attacking everyone
from licensed physicians to health food store proprietors, political
assassination, government cover-ups, Gramscian destruction of dissenting
traditional culture, disregard for the constitutional rule of law by the
appeal of popular propaganda or "democratic" expediency, a shouting down
of dissenters and objectors, redefinition of political terms to suit the
power elite, a call for the popular globalization of these "progressive"
institutions, and � well I don�t know. As I said, not much. Except that
every one of these proposals appears to be fact.

"For government consists in nothing else but so controlling subjects
that they shall neither be able to, nor have cause to do it harm."
�Nicolo Machiavelli

Joseph Farah recently reminded us that, "America is not slouching toward
totalitarianism, it is rushing headlong toward it. " And if so, are
there any apologists that can sincerely argue that a people rushing
toward a totalitarian police state aren't seriously flirting with that
harlot we call Fascism? And if we are, then denial herself is the
brutal, silent, black leather-clad dominatrix of the entire affair.
History would suggest she is an indifferent whore, much to the tragic
sadness of those throughout the ages who insist on getting involved with
her. She's just as likely to strike down her most powerful despots and
ideological advocates as she is the powerless and innocent.

Still, no matter how much you try, you can never backtrack after
considering these notions. There's a legitimate contention for
reasonable limitations to the possible abuse of central power. That goes
for the most justifiable causes, including nationally or internationally
homogenized education, health care, or militant police protection.
There's a popular line of reasoning circulating these days arguing that
governments are basically in the business of selling protection.
Protection from poverty, foreign invaders, thieves and other common
criminals, "class injustice," our "inability" to provide for ourselves,
those who would insult us, environmental degradation, our propensity to
drive without fastening our seat belts or ride without our helmets,
anything and everything they can think of. So when they come to sell you
this protection you may ask them what happens if you decline their
monopolized services. What happens if you should like to shop elsewhere
for these "necessities," in a more competitive market? What happens if
even from a reasonable posture, you refuse to unilaterally allow the
federal, state, or local authorities to take your money in exchange for
limiting your freedom to negotiate with them?

Well, there's a strong possibility that they'll read you your "rights"
and flat out tell you that then you'll need protection from them. That
this fact so reminds any reasonable thinker of the protection rackets of
organized crime should cause any rational person to look at the entire
matter from a different perspective.

"In order to become the master, the politician poses as the servant."
 �Charles de Gaulle

While to a certain degree the views presented here may be considered an
over-simplification, or hyperbole for the benefit of illustration, they
still color every further thought we might have about government. The
worst thing about seeing our aging collectivist king without his clothes
is that you can never get his fat, hairy, greasy image out of your mind
again.

-30-

from The Laissez Faire City Times, Vol 3, No 6, Feb. 8, 1999
-----
Published by
Laissez Faire City Netcasting Group, Inc.
Copyright 1998 - Trademark Registered with LFC Public Registrar
All Rights Reserved
Disclaimer
The Laissez Faire City Times is a private newspaper. Although it is
published by a corporation domiciled within the sovereign domain of
Laissez Faire City, it is not an "official organ" of the city or its
founding trust. Just as the New York Times is unaffiliated with the city
of New York, the City Times is only one of what may be several news
publications located in, or domiciled at, Laissez Faire City proper. For
information about LFC, please contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
-----
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
Omnia Bona Bonis,
All My Relations.
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End
Kris

DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion and informational exchange list. Proselyzting propagandic
screeds are not allowed. Substance�not soapboxing!  These are sordid matters
and 'conspiracy theory', with its many half-truths, misdirections and outright
frauds is used politically  by different groups with major and minor effects
spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRL
gives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers;
be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credeence to Holocaust denial and
nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://home.ease.lsoft.com/archives/CTRL.html

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to