Originally posted by lord of the mark
and again, as Berman, points out, fascism, as a reaction against modernity, adopts to what works as a reaction again in the local cultural context.
and again, as Berman, points out, fascism, as a reaction against modernity, adopts to what works as a reaction again in the local cultural context.
Berman identifies the core of fascism NOT in ultranationalism, but in a cult of death and violence, and a revulsion at the "moral breakdown" associated with liberalism and modernity.
Hostility to liberalism/individualism is certainly common both to European-style Fascism and Islamism, but that's, in itself, no more a reason to consider the later a variant of the former than the fact that both Islam and Judaicism embrace monotheism is a reason to consider the one a subset of the other.
Comment