solacekames:

howlfromthecore:

solacekames:

Text: @danarel 10/28/18 

You are either 100% anti-fascist or you’re a fascist.

No more pretending there is some middle ground. There are only two sides in this fight.

There is no time for both-side-ism here. The debate isn’t even over, it never should have happened in the first place. The nazis killing Jews are from the same cloth that Sam Harris called “peaceful Nazis” when they confronted antifascists last year.

The people emboldened to build and send bombs to politicians, to kill POC in the open, are the same people who centrists said deserved a seat at the table and had a right to a platform. The same centrists who warned that the left was the problem, and allowed Nazis or organize.

I have not forgotten a single centrist who defended Nazis, fascists, added “anti-antifa” to their profiles, or gave platforms to these peddlers of death on their YouTube shows or podcasts.

You chose your side, you decided to align with murders in order to score anti-left points

You need to understand that people are surrounded by propaganda that paints a real ugly picture of antifa. From sources that people have been taught to trust. See…. This if you’re not a hundred percent with us and all of our tactics then you’re equivalent to Them" rhetoric really makes me take a step back. That means if I disagree with you on anything , I’m a target? Seems…a little…. authoritarian?

Here’s what YOU need to understand.

Let’s say fascists want to kill my family (they actually do want to kill my family, so I’m not being hyperbolic). If I have two people in front of me, a fascist who wants to kill my family and someone who claims to not be fascist, but who also says, “hey that fascist has a right to want to kill your family, and I will defend their freedom to do so,” then guess what? YOU ARE BOTH MY ENEMY. You are both a danger, the fascist and the fascist-enabler. You don’t get to wriggle out of enabling a bunch of genocidal maniacs just because Trump told you that antifa are bad hombres. As a targeted individual, I don’t have the time to ascertain your good intentions, and even if I did, I’d find out your so-called “good intentions” are really just a mess of willful ignorance, unexamined prejudice, and rejection of the principles of critical thinking.

And if people who enable fascism feel targeted… good! How the hell else are they going to change their fascist-enabling behavior? When we ask nicely, they just ignore us.

Also, keep in mind they’re only being targeted for what they believe and how they enact those beliefs: that it’s OK to enable fascists. And we’ll stop targeting them the second they change that stupid belief. In contrast, fascists don’t target people for their beliefs, they target them/us because they believe we’re not real human beings, that some aspect of who we’re born as makes us unworthy of life itself, no matter what we believe. 

jewish-privilege:

tikkunolamorgtfo:

redmensch:

argyrocratie:

berniesrevolution:

Full thread here by @JackSmithIV 

also after the war

i love how he says “older jews” were against it but “british antifa” went against them, as if old jews were particularly against antifascism & as if the majority of british antifa fighting the BUF weren’t london jews ??? what the fuck

Seriously, way to gloss over the fact that the march was meant to terrorise the large Jewish population living in the East End and that the Battle of Cable Street was mostly orchestrated by a leftist Jewish collective known as the Jewish People’s Council. You can read more about them here.

I also think that you can’t paint Jewish resistance to fascism without also acknowledging that they were literally putting their and their families lives on the line. For Jews it’s always a question of whether to fight or to keep our heads down because history (yes before the Holocaust) has shown us time and time again that it can always get worse.

The original thread on twitter, doesn’t gloss over that by the way. I don’t know why the OP decided to include “older Jews” but none of the following (link to the full thread):

ithelpstodream:

1) The Rich White Boys of the Far Right Don’t Need Their Speech Protected, Marginalized Communities Do.

2) Free Speech Has Not Led Us to Continuous Progress for People of Color.

3) The United States was Founded on Popular Protest, not Free Speech.

4) Not All Ideas Are Created Equal. Sorry. I Know That is a Hard Thing to Hear, But It is True for Me, and It Should Be True for Everyone With a Heart.

5) Their Speeches Aren’t Just Speeches, They Are Organizing Opportunities.

6) May I Present the Evidence? Free Speech and Nazi Germany.

7) Their Movement is Calling for Literal Genocide. Will You Do Nothing?

http://idavox.com/index.php/2017/10/24/free-speech-and-nazis-7-talking-points-for-your-liberal-friends/

// hit that link and read the arguments for every talking point before your reblog with commentary please, thank you

The road to fascism

noislandofdreams:

queeranarchism:

participatorydisillusionment:

queeranarchism:

I’ve been reading Martin Kitchen’s book ‘fascism’, who has an interesting theory about the rise of fascism. The theory is incredibly complex and those that love dense theory should probably read it themselves, but I’ve put together a little adaptation of my own (that Kitchen would probably criticize on many points): 

 

1. First you got your early fascist fringe groups, founded mostly by frustrated middle class men. Since the violent language of fascism is considered impolite in middle class circles, the first public supporters are frustrated working class men. At this stage there are sometimes attempts at a fascist coup. 

2. With increasing power, the basic language of fascism is gradually normalized. Within this period, fascists spread the idea that there is a threat (jews, immigrants, muslims, etc) that could destroy all you love. Sometimes part of the tone is anti-capitalist but in that case the target is not the whole middle and upper class but a segment of it (’the jewish capitalist’, ‘the cultural-marxist elite’) so the middle class supporters can feel safe knowing that they will not be a target. Being a fascist is not yet socially acceptable in middle class communities at this point. 

3. If there is an economic crisis or great economic uncertainty, the working class shifts to the left. But the middle class starts to consider fascism an acceptable option. Democratic politicians seem to fail to protect them against financial loss, scary foreigners and the growing of the left, so one strong leader who is going to restore traditional values and punish the rebellious sounds attractive. Most fascist supporters are lower-middle class who have property and could realistically lose that property and become poor. Being a fascist becomes socially acceptable in middle class communities. 

4. Once a part of the middle class openly accepts fascism, there is often a very quick development where the economic upper class (rich capitalists) start embracing fascism as well and pumping their money into its election campaign. The media also joins in at this point. If fascism ever had an anti-capitalist tone as part of it’s anti-establishment image, it now drops this tone. With a small but weaponized segment of frustrated working class men, a large middle class voter base, media support and MONEY, it becomes almost impossible to stop the fascists rise to power. 

5. Once voted into power (either alone or in a coalition), fascism suppresses left-wing movements and dismantles democratic systems. Disagreement within the fascist group itself is removed during this road to dictatorship. 

6. At some point, the dictatorship reaches a point of no return. It is so powerful and controls such a large amount of unquestioningly obedient violence and intelligence agencies that only massive armed struggle can destroy it.

So in short:

  1. Middle class founders with working class fight club
  2. Normalization of fascism 
  3. Economic crisis, middle class openly support fascism
  4. Capital and media support fascism, it becomes very difficult to stop
  5. Voted into power, removes political enemies & moves toward dictatorship
  6. Strongly established dictatorship can only be removed by force

Kitchen argues that this process can only take place in a late capitalist state with high levels of economic uncertainty, where the political left is large enough to scare the middle class but not strong enough to resist fascism.

I would add that a conservative right-wing that responds to crisis by expanding state force and dismantling human and civil rights does a big part of making the road from being voted into power to full dictatorship easier. 

I’d argue that a lot of European states are currently at 3 or 4 with a lot of the road to dictatorship being paved by the established right-wing, while some states already have fascists in their coalition (step 5) and the US has a significant number of fascists in positions of political power (also step 5). How much of the system has been dismantled towards dictatorship varies. 

Finally, it’s important to keep in mind that these processes are not always strictly linear and there are always competing fascist movements. Often a brutish loud fascist movement will be the first to normalize fascist language while a more polished, educated and polite fascist movement will be the one to win the support of the middle class and achieve power. 

I would expand point 5 to be about three steps, but its still alarmingly close to what we have seen

Yeah, or more. Establishing dictatorship tends to involve (without a strict order of events)

– suppressing political enemies

– suppressing people who could challenge the road to dictatorship from within your own movement

– supressing communication that disagrees with you (controling the media, setting up elaborate surveillance agencies, etc)

– getting unrestrained control of the political decision making process

– getting unrestrained control of the legal process (judges etc)

– ensuring unquestioning obedience of the forces of violence (cops, soldiers, etc)

Generally with a lot of little steps, each time testing obedience. Another terrible policy is announced. Do the cops follow orders? Who resists? Who publically disapprovs? Obedience is mapped and a next step is taken, and another.

This is closer to the reality I know in terms of seeing fascist groups emerge. It’s the people with money, not typically the working class, that bring fascism to life; the ones with something to ‘protect’ from whoever they’re targetting, not us that have fuck all. You can’t defend what you haven’t got. A lot of these fascists groups are about protecting their property, the suburbs, their good jobs, power, influence as business owners, landlords, and as privileged white men. The wc generally have none of that (obviously except their whiteness and gender), not even a fucking mortgage on a council house these days.

Those sons of odin muppets literally walk round the plushest comfiest middle class estates “policing it”. It’s clear who they give a shit about – it’s not us. And in their rhetoric about about “scum” and “filth” and “cleaning up the streets” – they mean estates like mine that look like shitholes thanks to capitalism and  deliberate government neglect. Ultimately, we’re the enemy, the tool that needs controlling. 

Also, just practically, all these demos, transport and high profile campaigns need paying for, and it’s the mc that pay for it, not the millions of people that don’t even have 100 quid left in the bank at the end of the month. They lure in rich donors where possible n all.

Also key is how the working class take all the flak. A desperately poor estate like mine that’s been left to ruin is considered a “hotbed of racial tension” and all that bollocks, while the wealthy suburbs, avenues, fashionable flats with the bankers and soliciters aren’t. This is where the bourgeois media do their thing and point the finger down, rather than at themselves and their masters. 

bilt2tumble:

turdfacethings:

adobsonartworks:

Had to include the screen-cap because otherwise I’d have a shit-ton of Trump supporters saying “this isn’t true” in my mentions. This IS true. This IS fucked up. And y’all should be TERRIFIED this is happening in our country.

Thank you @adobsonartworks for sharing. I wouldn’t have believed it either, but here we fucking are.

If anyone else is still dubious about this:

  • here is the link for the Slate article, where the USCIS director is quoted, “What we’re looking at, when you boil it all down, is potentially a few thousand cases” – and this even though there have only been about 300 denaturalization cases since 1990
  • here is further background from The New Yorker: “Historically, denaturalization has been an exceedingly rare occurrence, for good reason: by the time a person is naturalized, she has lived in this country for a number of years and has passed the hurdles of obtaining entry, legal permanent residency, and, finally, citizenship. The conceit of naturalization is that it makes an immigrant not only equal to natural-born citizens but indistinguishable from them. So denaturalization, much like the process of stripping a natural-born American of citizenship, has been an extraordinary procedure reserved for very serious cases, mostly those of war criminals.”
  • and here’s a link a Chicago Tribune article which notes that “2,536 naturalization cases have prompted an in-depth review so far”

Re-reblogging links for the doubtful. They are talking about snatching up Naturalized Citizens and deporting them. This has become a thing to discuss. In THIS country.

bumblebeebats:

raccoonhandler:

choking-onholywater:

choking-onholywater:

raccoonhandler:

choking-onholywater:

raccoonhandler:

choking-onholywater:

yall ever heard about the wave

???? like the thing you do at sport events??

no, i mean this social experiment started by a history teacher in calofornia in 1967

im Intrigued 

it’s creepy not so much like paranormal but as in it’s a scary look at human nature. hang on a sec ill explain it

alright so. in 1967, a new history teacher at Cubberly High School in Northern California named Ron Jones was teaching his class about the Holocaust and Hitler’s rise to power. At some point during the lesson, many of his students began to ask why the rest of Germany had stood by and done nothing, and how afterwards they could have said they didn’t know. Many said that they would never allow something like that to happen, but most simply couldn’t understand how the population had allowed it back then. This made Ron curious: what was the answer? Why had so many Germans joined and tolerated the Nazis as their neighbors were dragged away? He realized there was no way of knowing, not without being there, and certainly no way of teaching it – unless, maybe, they could experience something similar. 

The next day, Ron came in and began to command his class differently than usual. He had stricter rules, making students stand when asking or answering questions and having them fix their posture. He said it was a lesson on discipline and the phrase “strength through discipline” was written on the board. 

The students, shockingly responded positively to the stricter rules; it was as if they had just been waiting for this and wanted more. They worked as a team and answered questions correctly, even sitting quietly until Ron dismissed them at the end of class. 

In the next two days, the phrases “strength through community” and “action” appeared on the board. Ron announced to the class that their new rules and ideas were now the cornerstones of the group called the Wave. Their mottos were the three phrases on the board, and he introduced them to a salute (made by curling one’s right hand into the shape of a wave and tapping one’s left shoulder with it). The kids practiced both the motto and the salute that day.

Everything was going well in this experiment: Ron was increasingly seen as an incredibly important leader, the kids were being more well behaved, they were ahead in their studies, all good things, so Ron decided to continue the Wave. In class, he gave the students Wave membership cards, some of which had red x’s on the back. The x’s indicated that those people were to monitor the other members of the Wave and report directly to Ron if someone broke a rule. 

Additionally that day, Ron gave the instruction to recruit members to the Wave; all were invited and all were equal in the Wave.

And recruit they did.

Later that week, there were over 200 members of the Wave. The pep rally became an official Wave rally where dozens of new members were sworn in. As the group grew, most everyone joined. However, if someone did not join, they were likely to find themselves very alone and possibly being threatened or hurt by Wave members. 

By the 5th day, Ron knew things had spiraled out of control. He had grown into a mythical leader, and the students carried out his orders without hesitation, even if these orders never existed in the first place and were grown from within the Wave. He decided to tell the students that there would be a televised announcement of the Wave’s candidate announcement for the presidential election, and that all members should attend the rally later that day. 

When they arrived, the hundreds of students were greeted with a blank screen and Ron. He told them the true nature of the Wave; how it had been born as an experiment that had grown exponentially until he had to end it. The students were shocked, and some even cried. They had all believed in the Wave wholeheartedly after just 5 short days.

The Wave is terrifying because it is real. Not so long ago, a history teacher fresh out from college was able to turn a school into a military state in just 5 days. We as humans are so easily led into fascist dictatorships and we so rarely question what goes on around us. The Wave is a testament to that, and a scary one. 

There’s a really great German film of the same name (“Die Welle” – The Wave) based on this experiment – rather than stopping after 5 days however, the teacher lets it continue and things get much, MUCH worse. It’s a terrifying movie, but fascinating too.

socialistexan:

socialistexan:

@realphilosophytube , “The Philosophy of Antifa

“If you’re a political enemy of fascism though, either they lose or you die”

Transcript of the gifs:

If you’re a fascist and anti-fascists come for you, you have a choice. You can give it up. You can renounce what you said. You could go on with the rest of your life and stop turning up to fascist rallies. Anti-fascists probably aren’t going to be your best friends, but they’ll move on.

But if you’re a person of color, if you’re trans, or a person with a disability, or gay, or Jewish and fascists come for you, there is nothing you can do to make them happy except stop existing.

That’s the key difference between the far-left and the far-right. Anti-fascists organize themselves against those that are building fascism. If you are doing that, that is something you can nonviolently stop doing. If you’re a political enemy of antifa, you can become a friend. If you’re a political enemy of fascism though, then they lose or you die.