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This post-war populist intention to create a new political tradition that could rule the nation but was different from fascism, and its eventual success in doing so, explains the complex historical nature of postwar populism as a varied set of authoritarian experiments
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Sometimes neofascists are fellow travelers of populism. Populists differ from neofascists in their desire to reshape democracy in authoritarian fashion without fully destroying it, but like the neofascists, right-wing Euro-populists identify “the people” with
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Populism started with the recognition that fascism was now part of the past rather than the present. For General Perón, the leader of the first modern populist regime in history, fascism was “an unrepeatable phenomenon, a classic style to define a precise and determined epoch.”
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返信先: さん, さん
Sounds a lot like the Lost Cause. Fascists who fail or face setbacks always seek to hide themselves behind new names, but the ideology remains intact. Just describe the political movement by detailing what its goals are. And if you do that, it’s easy just to say she’s a fascist.
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Well said. A new face for the same lie.
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