The F-Word and Its Consequences
In a new book, left-wing writers debate whether America is going fascist.

Did It Happen Here?: Perspectives on Fascism and America, edited by Daniel Steinmetz-Jenkins, W.W. Norton, 384 pages, $28.99
The debate about what fascism is—and whether America is standing on its precipice—is not merely an academic argument. It guides how many people vote, and even how they think about their neighbors. This debate has been active since 2015 in many political corners of the country, including the left, where liberals, socialists, and everything in between have squabbled over these questions.
For readers not of the left, this debate may come as a surprise, given the narrative dominance enjoyed by corporate liberal outlets, which all seem to agree that fascism is indeed happening here. Seeking to convey the broad strokes of this discussion is a new anthology, Did It Happen Here?, edited by the Wesleyan historian Daniel Steinmetz-Jenkins. The collected volume's title, a play on Sinclair Lewis's dystopian novel It Can't Happen Here, brings together several academic voices to debate whether fascism has, can, or will come to America's shores.
For the contributors who believe that fascism is indeed here or on its way, the modern populist right and similar movements overseas are fascistic because their political vision hinges on racial hierarchy, nativism, national renewal, authoritarianism, and a disdain for majority rule, all to be enforced by violence and intimidation. Several of these writers argue that America's history of nativism and racial violence was itself a form of proto-fascism, a history they claim is being resurrected by a new anti-democratic right.
Part III of the volume—"Is Fascism as American as Apple Pie?"—centers on such arguments. The Yale philosopher Jason Stanley highlights the ideological overlaps between eugenics-inspired American immigration laws and the subsequent Nazi extermination policies, among other ideological borrowings. Turning to the present, Stanley then points to the rise of immigration restrictionism, strict electoral laws, and other policies preferred by conservatives as evidence of a throughline in fascistic American thought. "If we think of fascism as a set of practices," he claims, "it is immediately evident that fascism is still with us."
Other contributors in the affirmative camp eschew historically rooted arguments and call for an expansive redefinition of the term fascism to match modern political circumstances. Geoff Mann, a geographer at Simon Fraser University, opines that the "problem with demanding a precise definition of fascism is that it exaggerates both the 'exceptional' character of fascist politics and the distance between us and its historical calamities." Leah Feldman and Aamir R. Mufti, both professors of comparative literature, argue that mores ranging from antisemitism to traditionalism to "Orthodox Nationalism" fit the f-word too. For such contributors, the stakes are too high to worry about precision: It's better to err on the side of antifascist caution and cast an extra-wide rhetorical net.
But not everyone in this book agrees. The dissenters take issue with the comparisons to fascism on technical, operational, and conceptual grounds, noting that the Trumpian right does not share the material, ideological, or organizational capacity displayed by classical European fascism. They point out that the modern American right is not a mass movement reacting to a potent communist party, motivated by the anguish of a lost world war and disciplined by a competent leader who espouses a cohesive ideology.
Several of the dissenters note that the other side leans on contemporary or historical phenomena that are not exclusive to fascism. Some take issue, for example, with Stanley's argument that fascism hinges on an attitude of "us vs. them," noting that such adversarial attitudes exist within democratic systems, too. These writers show no sympathy for Trump, but they do not want—in the term of one dissenting contributor, the Yale historian Samuel Moyn—to "abnormalize" him. To do that, they argue, is to conceal that Trump "is quintessentially American, the expression of enduring and indigenous syndromes." As you may have noticed, that overlaps with some arguments on the other side: the ones that argue that Trumpism is fascist, that Trumpism is in the American grain, and that this is no contradiction because fascism itself is in the American grain. But to writers like Moyn, using the fascist label to describe such movements catastrophizes otherwise normal electoral politics.
On a similar note, the dissenting group points out that the use of the fascist label can, and indeed has, led to abuse of state power at home and abroad. The New York University historian Nikhil Pal Singh's chapter is especially poignant in this regard. Singh argues that imagining a future civil war is a form of political pornography that distorts the "marbled grain" of American political life, creates an incentive to inflate threats, and expands the security state, a theoretical tradeoff not without its historical precedents. Running parallel to its long history of curtailing left-wing radicalism, the U.S. government has long used the fear of fascism (and its close cousin "extremism") to curtail fundamental rights, such as speech and association. Such abuses were not merely reserved for card-carrying members of the German American Bund or other fascist organizations, but also ensnared others deemed subversive. Be it the FBI's covert campaign against the America First Committee, the Federal Communications Commission, and Internal Revenue Service's regulatory war against the first generation of conservative talk radio, or modern calls for hate speech caveats to the First Amendment, the specter of fascism has long served as a tool to undermine fundamental liberties.
Other contributors warn that the use of the fascist label conceals the material causes of right-wing populism, such as the Iraq War and the economic fallout of the Great Recession, and rehabilitates the politicians responsible for them. (They call this process "Trump washing.") The University of Washington historian Daniel Bessner and the Rutgers philosopher Ben Burgis argue that the war in Iraq, "extraordinary rendition," and the general erosion of civil liberties during the George W. Bush presidency mean that "by any reasonable metric," Bush "inflicted far more damage on the world" than Trump has done.
I think the dissenters have the better case, as fascism has a distinct historical meaning that does not neatly or evenly crudely define the political actors of our time. Classic European fascism did contain elements drawn from classical conservatism, such as the centrality of order and hierarchy, and these ideological pillars do also appear in many modern illiberal political philosophies. But fascism also contained modernist and even revolutionary political and sociological developments, impulses that, according to the paleoconservative historian Paul Gottfried (among many others), sought a "scientifically organized national community"—a far cry from premodern European societies built of competing matrices of political and social authority. Indeed, it was from this modernism that fascism and its most extreme iteration, National Socialism, drew its greatest oppressive aspects, such as its biological and materialist concepts of race and its practice of eugenics.
To make their case, the affirmative camp dehistoricizes fascism, treating it as a buffet, choosing elements that make their case and ignoring those that do not, all the while losing sight of ideological feuds within the modern right that undermine their arguments—fissures over eugenics, for example. Whatever it is that ails modern America, it is not fascism, nor is it socialism; it is something else.
But I also think that even the dissenters are missing some key points, largely because the book is limited to left perspectives. Despite the book's breadth of contributors, it mostly ignores critiques of fascism, and therefore judgments of Trump's relationship to it, from classical liberal or traditional conservative viewpoints.
Steinmetz-Jenkins frames the collection by arguing that "the fascism debate is a Rorschach test for understanding what is truly ailing American society." The contributors' verdicts mostly rest on whether the right's current trajectory undermines democracy, a word that frequently devolves into meaning "progressive policy preferences." Meanwhile, they overlook several aspects of contemporary society whose forms and historical origins resemble historical fascism but exist within the confines of electoral politics. The book's contributors who argue for the affirmative rarely define fascism as rooted in corporatism, an intrusive security state, an aggressive foreign policy, or the homogenizing and atomizing tendencies of mass society, to cite some aspects of fascist systems that libertarian or conservative critics are likely to highlight. (The contributions by Anton Jäger and Richard J. Evans do touch lightly on some of these elements.)
So there is little here for people who share the libertarian economist Charlotte Twight's critique of the modern American political economy as a form of "participatory fascism." Her fellow economist Robert Higgs, who extended the critique, argued that the American political economy, while neither liberal nor socialist, bore many of the corporatist hallmarks of earlier fascist systems, parallels that the government obscures through democratic political rituals that engender "the sense that somehow the people control the government."
Maybe you don't agree with such critiques, but if you're going to debate the question of fascism in modern America, you should at least engage them. To deemphasize them obscures maladies within our body politic that arose long before Donald Trump's political career and will likely long outlast its end.
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The Yale philosopher Jason Stanley highlights the ideological overlaps between eugenics-inspired American immigration laws and the subsequent Nazi extermination policies, among other ideological borrowings. Turning to the present, Stanley then points to the rise of immigration restrictionism, strict electoral laws, and other policies preferred by conservatives as evidence of a throughline in fascistic American thought.
Immigration laws, electoral laws, and conservative backed policies are fascistic huh?
Once again, never disarm for these creatures They want you dead.
the modern populist right and similar movements overseas are fascistic because their political vision hinges on racial hierarchy, nativism, national renewal, authoritarianism, and a disdain for majority rule, all to be enforced by violence and intimidation. Several of these writers argue that America's history of nativism and racial violence was itself a form of proto-fascism, a history they claim is being resurrected by a new anti-democratic right.
So a book using the modern leftist definition instead of its actual definition or commonality with the state controlled form of actual fascism.
Other contributors in the affirmative camp eschew historically rooted arguments and call for an expansive redefinition of the term fascism to match modern political circumstances. Geoff Mann, a geographer at Simon Fraser University, opines that the "problem with demanding a precise definition of fascism is that it exaggerates both the 'exceptional' character of fascist politics and the distance between us and its historical calamities."
So redfine it away from its historical definition to push it as a declaration against the right instead of its historical use regarding modern DNC policy structure.
Some take issue, for example, with Stanley's argument that fascism hinges on an attitude of "us vs. them," noting that such adversarial attitudes exist within democratic systems, too.
So this is where idiots like sarc and Jeff get it from.
*tosses a bag of popcorn into the micronuke*
When the fascists get to define what fascism is, it's never what they do.
Remember when Antifa called people peacefully protesting against arbitrary government edicts "fascists"?
National Socialist German Workers' Party:
Socialist? Yep absolutely right wing.
Worker's Party? Yep absolutely right wing.
The only difference between the Nazi party and the democrats is that the Nazi party was nationalistic, and the democrats are globalist.
Same for Italian fascism.
Italian fascism promoted a corporatist economic system, whereby employer and employee syndicates are linked together in associations to collectively represent the nation's economic producers and work alongside the state to set national economic policy. Again, nationalist .vs globalist is the difference.
State control and no individual freedom; this is the way.
I would argue the modern form of racialism performed by the left, including indentitarianism is more harmful than what the left now calls nationalism (any one who is not a globalist). During fascism racialism and nationalism were mixed pretty damn heavily.
Longtobefree: So you necessarily believe that East Germany was democratic and North Korea still is, because both have "Democratic" in their name.
How did the Nazis treat socialists and communists? How did they treat capitalists?
Some of you righties are so insecure about your politics, so afraid that your moderate right-whingeing (sic) might be confused with the far-right, that you feel it necessary to represent Nazism as on the left.
0h the retarded irony. He is calling out the capture of terms. Something you and your ilk love doing shrike.
It’s like they’ve never read the Nazi Party platform and completely ignore all of the industries they subsumed and forced to work for the common good of the fatherland.
American Nazi Party
The American Nazi Party (ANP) is an American far-right and neo-Nazi political party founded by George Lincoln Rockwell and headquartered in Arlington, Virginia. The organization was originally named the World Union of Free Enterprise National Socialists (WUFENS), a name to denote opposition to state ownership of property, the same year—it was renamed the American Nazi Party in order to attract 'maximum media attention'.[1] Since the late 1960s, a number of small groups have used the name "American Nazi Party" with most being independent of each other and disbanding before the 21st century. The party is based largely upon the ideals and policies of Adolf Hitler's Nazi Party in Germany during the Nazi era, and embraced its uniforms and iconography.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Nazi_Party
Educate yourself.
I like how you continue to use wiki, which is no better than leftist narrative bullshit on most topics, after having been given primary sources from both the Nazis and Italian fascists here dozens of times.
Fascism was fully developed to save socialism. Mussolini was very clear about this. Same outcome, different process. But idiots like yourself argue that socialists fight each other over who is in power, ergo no true socialist.
The end goal was the same. The tools were different. Again. You've been given speeches, books, and letters from the very people you seek to lie about now.
It’s epically hilarious that he thinks he could educate anybody about anything.
And notice his link was to American Nazi’s, not to the National Socialist German Workers’ Party that Longtonefree specifically referenced.
I'm sure all 4 of those guys are a problem.
KKK, American Nazi Party praise Trump’s hiring of Bannon
https://thehill.com/blogs/blog-briefing-room/305912-kkk-american-nazi-party-praise-trumps-hiring-of-bannon/
Bannon is today's Goebbels. He crafts the message.
Need the grand dragons supporting Hillary again?
I remember when at least one Grand Dragon represented Democrats in the Senate. Wasn't that long ago, either.
'Longtobefree' is an idiot that never responds to anyone and just regurgitates Fox News talking points.
Or maybe just a bot.
Talking to yourself?
Just like there is social conservatism and economic conservatism, just like there is social liberalism and economic liberalism, I propose that there is also 'social fascism' and 'economic fascism'.
'Economic fascism' would be the economic policies of fascists: namely, the fusion of corporations and the state to such an extent that private ownership is merely a facade for actual government control. That is the type of fascism that the left tends to support more and more.
'Social fascism' would be the social policies of fascists: strong national identity, traditional moral values, all enforced by a strong national leader willing to impose them by force if necessary. That is the type of fascism that the new right tends to support more and more.
This understanding of fascism gets around the whole "you're the real fascist!" idiotic arguments and also tells us who are the real anti-fascists: the ones who reject economic fascism, i.e., strong defense of private property rights, AND who reject social fascism, i.e., letting peaceful people live their lives free of government interference, are us libertarians.
Ctrl F:
FDR 0/0
New Deal 0/0
Wilson 0/0
You could have taken the left-wing writers of this book to task by explaining how those two presidents already ushered fascism into the US.
*actual definition of fascism
*actual definition of fascism
See, there's your problem right there.
Stop using primary evidence and switch to the preferred narratives already.
I have been properly shamed.
American fascists hated FDR, you moron. They called him a "commie" because of the New Deal.
American fascists hated FDR
Care to show your work?
"What is fascism? It is like your New Deal!" - Benito Mussolini
This was when, in the early 30's, the Italian Fascists and FDR's cabinet had a mutual admiration society going on.
And of course the usual suspects insist that fascism is exclusively "on the left".
If that is the case, why do the actual Nazis tend to associate *themselves* with the right?
I don't doubt that some, if not all, of them have left-wing economic beliefs. But it sure seems like, just like with the 'culture war' issues, the most animating issues for the actual Nazis are in the realm of 'social fascism', which IMO properly belongs on the right.
“If that is the case, why do the actual Nazis tend to associate *themselves* with the right?“
In fact actual Nazis do not associate themselves with the right, instead they believe they are outside the left/right framework and disdain both groups. It is the left, including jeffey, which associates Nazis with the right as smear by association is their primary propaganda tool.
This.
Correct.
In fact actual Nazis do not associate themselves with the right, instead they believe they are outside the left/right framework and disdain both groups.
Well, there is plenty of evidence of actual Nazis praising and supporting figures on the right.
But even if you are correct, then you can't have it both ways. If actual Nazis believe they are "outside the left/right framework" then fascism/Nazism should not be considered either "leftwing" or "rightwing".
So jeffey's new "principle" is supposed to be that self-identification determines reality? Yet never once has he applied this supposed principle to his enemies. It's yet another fake principle developed and deployed solely because it's the only argument that can save his previous stupidity. It's amusing watching him flounder about grasping at one contradiction after another to justify his claim that everyone he hates is a Nazi. What a farce.
It is the left, including jeffey, which associates Nazis with the right as smear by association is their primary propaganda tool.
I will agree that many on the left smear right-wingers as Nazis as a lazy insult, and that is unfair and wrong. As for my views, see what I wrote above about how I think fascism/Nazism should be regarded.
see what I wrote above about how I think fascism/Nazism should be regarded.
Go fuck yourself, shitweasel.
I'll take that response as scoring another point for me. Thanks!
This as well.
Maybe it’s because Fascism, being a system where nominal control of capital is in private hands but everything is directed by the national government “for the good of the country/fellow citizens”, is an inherently collectivist ideology.
Oh I think we can all agree on that. It's just that collectivism is not limited exclusively to the left.
Fascism's rationale for being collectivist stems from similar philosophical sources as socialism and communism. They are brother ideologies.
if you're going to debate the question of fascism in modern America, you should at least
engage themdefine your terms.If we can't agree on the definition of the word maybe we should quit using it and come up with a different word.
Leftists will just redefine terms to suit their purpose...
“When I use a word,’ Humpty Dumpty said in rather a scornful tone, ‘it means just what I choose it to mean — neither more nor less.’
’The question is,’ said Alice, ‘whether you can make words mean so many different things.’
’The question is,’ said Humpty Dumpty, ‘which is to be master — that’s all.”
"If we think of fascism as a set of practices," he claims, "it is immediately evident that fascism is still with us."
This is particularly true if we consider one of those practices to be creating a street army which violently advocates on behalf of a political movement and in exchange receives graft and protection from policing authority.
And suppression of free speech when it undermines the regime's ideological imperatives.
Other contributors in the affirmative camp eschew historically rooted arguments and call for an expansive redefinition of the term fascism to match modern political circumstances. Geoff Mann, a geographer at Simon Fraser University, opines that the "problem with demanding a precise definition of fascism is that it exaggerates both the 'exceptional' character of fascist politics and the distance between us and its historical calamities" . . . . For such contributors, the stakes are too high to worry about precision: It's better to err on the side of antifascist caution and cast an extra-wide rhetorical net.
And this right here is the exact problem.
Redefine "fascism" to make it match something going on in contemporary politics and then behave as if you didn't redefine fascism and pretend that the people you've designated fascist are actual Nazis.
What is a woman?
The definition of fascist in the 1945 Dictionary of American Politics goes on and on for 150 words slopping on gobs qualifiers to spare the feelings of U.S. nazis aiding Christian National Socialism before December 7, 1941. The real answer is to read the 1920 Hitler platform. Big Pharma in June 1931 needed an angry xenophobe to block Bert Hoover prohibitionism then grafted onto the League of Nations. Japan had similar problems, as did Al Capone. Hoover-Anslinger meddling led to WW2 as directly as TR-Wilson-Hamilton Wright prohibitionist meddling led to WW1. Everyone killed in those wars was killed to please prohibitionist fanatics eager to stamp out opium.
Exactly.
I think there is some mis-labeling here. There is a difference between fascism – which is well-defined as well as “I know it when I see it” – and fascistic tendencies. Fascistic tendencies are clearly encoded in the human genome, along with all of the other human tendencies including altruism, heroism, belonging, faithfulness, xenophobia, loyalty and community. At any given time, any society can be analyzed for the predominance of any or all of those characteristics as well as their trends over time.
>>"If we think of fascism as a set of practices," he claims, "it is immediately evident that fascism is still with us."
at the very least it is immediately evident fascism-as-practice can be weaponized if left ambiguously defined.
FTFY:
Indeed, it was from this modernism that fascism and its most extreme iteration, National Socialism, drew its greatest oppressive aspects, such as its biological and materialist concepts of race and its practice of eugenics.
Exactly. In the case of both communism and fascism it’s exactly the belief that the past is the source of evil that convinces people to support change, and the desire to break gives the new designers the ability to do anything. That’s why the left demonizes our past, to make people feel like any alternative is better.
If we think of fascism as
a set of practicessomething other than what it is, we can conveniently graft it onto an already absurd predicate that supports my bullshit argument.Fixed. Of course, I'm not a biologist, so what do I know.
Are Republicans Nazi? Compare their platforms and see! Nazi (https://bit.ly/47hu8Nt) This particular infiltrator can learn from Goebbels: poor nazis (https://bit.ly/42CPToD)
The NSDAP platform in its 25 points was published by UTexas as "Nazi Ideology Before 1933" by Lane and Rupp. Interestingly, devout socialist Goebbels was shocked, SHOCKED, that Hitler abandoned the nationalization of trusts plank. What happened was that Dry Hope Hoover got the League of Nations to pressure Germany to sign a Narcotics Limitation convention in July 1931, as Al Capone was indicted on tax charges. German pharma promptly funded the Nazi party and Hitler ran the country 2 years later. 1931 collapse (https://bit.ly/3ElSyZL)
"Other contributors in the affirmative camp eschew historically rooted arguments and call for an expansive redefinition of the term fascism to match modern political circumstances."
These guys are sure late to the party. This "expansive redefinition" has been going on for generations now.
Trump and his MAGA crew are christofascists promoting a one party dictatorial government. There I saved you a read and laid down the facts in easy to understand terms.
Good summary of the DNC talking points.
Hahahahahahahahahaha
I will say this: You don't have to call yourself either "Fascist" or "Communist" to be Statist, Collectivist, Authoritarian, and Totalitarian. U.S. politicians are just their own neither-fish-nor-fowl Flavor of the Month.
For the contributors who believe that fascism is indeed here or on its way, the modern populist right and similar movements overseas are fascistic because their political vision hinges on racial hierarchy, nativism, national renewal, authoritarianism, and a disdain for majority rule, all to be enforced by violence and intimidation
Projection much from the left? I mean, FFS. Do you seriously believe that garbage comes more from the right than it does from the left?
eugenics-inspired American immigration laws and the subsequent Nazi extermination policies
"Eugenics-inspired American immigration laws????"
How is "Immigrate here LEGALLY" even remotely eugenics-inspired? And how is the party of abortion, euthanasia, drug abuse, gender mutilation, Islam, fatherless communities, DINK, environmental-based extinctionism, and lowest common denominator socialism/Marxism - whose entire cultural/legislative HISTORY has been one of overt contempt for racial minorities and the disabled/retarded - even using the word "eugenics" with a straight face?
The whole problem with this nonsense is the repeated lie that "fascism" is somehow "right-wing" (or "conservative" or "Christian" or "American").
It's not, and it never has been. Fascism, and other forms of oppressive, rights-abusing authoritarianism (eg. Marxism, socialism, despotism, etc.) have always been in the wheelhouse of the political left. It's a branch of the Collectivist tree, not the Individualist tree.
And yea, you'll notice I left out populism - that's also a branch of the Collectivist tree. So, for all you Trump-lovers (or haters) - maybe engage your tiny pea brains a little more and try to realize which side he's really on.
Because if you think the "sides" are Left/Right, Democrat/Republican, Liberal/Conservative, Atheist/Christian - you're wrong. It's Individualist vs Collectivist. And "fascism" falls squarely in the latter category.
^Well Said! +100000000000000.
Though I think the propaganda of 'populist' Trump is about as crooked as 'Christian National Socialists'. Both labels of pure BS and Leftard self-projection tactics.
The left is so retarded; listening to them is down-right humorous.
"When we have to think; we conclude we are indeed the fascists."
They still haven't figured out the USA isn't a democracy and that Hitler was a product of democracy.
"because their political vision hinges on racial hierarchy, nativism, national renewal, authoritarianism, and a disdain for majority rule, all to be enforced by violence and intimidation."
"The dissenters take issue with the comparisons to fascism on technical, operational, and conceptual grounds, noting that the Trumpian right does not share the material, ideological, or organizational capacity displayed by classical European fascism. They point out that the modern American right is not a mass movement reacting to a potent communist party, motivated by the anguish of a lost world war and disciplined by a competent leader who espouses a cohesive ideology."
When 'the people' start recognizing the left is so wrapped up in selfish entitlement that their criminal narcissistic mentality is nothing but a mental disease of repeating self-projection and blame shifting for everything they themselves are the political climate all makes sense.
To an extent. Except it was called "war socialism" under Wilson, and "The New Deal" under FDR.
And who right now is scapegoating and socially penalizing specific demographic groups? We have the Left blaming all woes on "white supremacy" and the "patriarchy" with some quite explicit policies discriminating against those classified as "white" and "men" with those of East Asian descent also discriminated against because they do too well.
With the Progressive's deciding that ideological dissent should be forbidden, see developments in the Wesr like the hate speech implemented in Scotland, the one that is proposed for Ireland, and the Biden Administration collusion with social media platforms to suppress "misinformation", shows the primary illiberal threat is the Left, not the Right.
The US has been fascist for a long time. We just lack the overt militarization of society that European and South American fascists have. Our corporatist economic system is Mussolini's corporatism.
Lefties like to call anything that is not socialist as fascist. But fascism has a definition. We have been fascist to some degree ever since FDR. And it's been creeping wider ever since.
As I said, all we are lacking is the overt militarism. Which we are damned close to already. The only reason Trump is not fascist is because he seems opposed to starting new military interventions (although perfectly happy keeping the old ones). Biden is a bit too sleepy for a proper El Jefe, but whoever is VP pick is will be arguing for increased military interventions. So GOP is better? Hah! Trump is the Old Man as well, he won't be around forever, and the GOP has a long history of militarism.
What's holding fascism back is that we still have a Constitution that some legal scholars suggest is more important than the dictats of the Strong Man.
"What’s holding fascism back is that we still have a Constitution"
Well Said.
The roots of fascism are not complex at all: fascism is the agenda that alleges that society is more important than the members of that society. That the survival and strength of any society depends on the unity of purpose of the entire people; and that that unity of purpose must be compelled if necessary and recalcitrant residents must be weeded out of society. Nothing else is necessary to define fascism. Anyone who alleges slippery slopes here is trying to create a panic in order to further an adjacent agenda.
https://libertarianinstitute.org/articles/fascism/
As an economic system, fascism is socialism with a capitalist veneer.
In its day (the 1920s and 1930s), fascism was seen as the happy medium between boom-and-bust-prone liberal capitalism, with its alleged class conflict, wasteful competition, and profit-oriented egoism, and revolutionary Marxism, with its violent and socially divisive persecution of the bourgeoisie. Fascism substituted the particularity of nationalism and racialism—“blood and soil”—for the internationalism of both classical liberalism and Marxism.
Where socialism sought totalitarian control of a society’s economic processes through direct state operation of the means of production, fascism sought that control indirectly, through domination of nominally private owners. Where socialism nationalized property explicitly, fascism did so implicitly, by requiring owners to use their property in the “national interest”—that is, as the autocratic authority conceived it. (Nevertheless, a few industries were operated by the state.) Where socialism abolished all market relations outright, fascism left the appearance of market relations while planning all economic activities. Where socialism abolished money and prices, fascism controlled the monetary system and set all prices and wages politically. In doing all this, fascism denatured the marketplace. Entrepreneurship was abolished. State ministries, rather than consumers, determined what was produced and under what conditions.
Americans of a certain age remember “third-way” politics and public-private partnerships.
Anyone thinking about the Roman Empire?