Isn’t Ukraine proof that it’s a bit more than sabre rattling? You’re still not saying whether you think what we’re living through is the closest thing to the 30s in our lifetime's though, and, if you don’t, when has it been more like them.
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What evidence do you have that we are?
Aren't minorities better protected than ever?
Aren't people coming in boats to enter the UK from abroad at the moment? I think the opposite was happening in 1930s Germany.
Aren't far-right parties getting lower votes than at any point in the last 50 years?
Is our country not being praised by Ukraine for standing up to Putins behaviour?
It would strike me as a reverse example of the Red Scare if it wasn't the case that some on the left always think that fascism is just around the corner.
There are worrying transfers of power from the individual to institutions that technology is enabling more than anything, but the government aren't slowly building fascism.
And still no one answers my question.
Whats the question? Is it "when were we more on the road to fascism than now?" I can't speak from experience as I was only born in the 1980s, but the question is a bit skewed really.
It's like asking "if not now, then when were you closest to beating your wife?" The answer quite feasibly can be never.
I dont think the UK has ever been on the road to authoritarianism for hundreds of years. Of course, in the 1920s and 1930s (an into the 70s too) much of the world was tempted by extreme examples of the left and right but Britain never was. What was the best any far right or far left party has ever achieved in the UK? A handful of seats over a 30 year period? The National Front never got more than 0.6% of the vote. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Front_(UK)
I wasn't around, but I would assume the closest the UK was to fascism was the 1950s during red scares and wars in Korea etc and when there was far more open racism towards newly arriving immigrants. If anything, we were closer in the early naughties with the BNP on the rise and a feeling of lost control over immigration etc.
But no, I dont think this country has ever been remotely far down the road to fascism, and I am proud to say it isn't so now either.
In my view, Communism has never been too much of a factor in Western Europe and the USA since the thirties when it enjoyed something of a high in the years leading up to the Second World War. One of the reasons for this was the proliferation of "strong man" , nationalist leaders influential countries like Germany, Italy and Spain who all ricked many of the fourteen boxes in that article that has been posted in this thread. In Britain, Oswald Mosely is surely the most famous British fascist of the last hundred years and, undoubtedly, the peak of his popularity was in the 1930s.
Oswald was a Conservative and Labour MP in the 1920s and, apparently, switched parties quite often before he formed the British Union of Fascists. This tends to support the view expressed in this thread that you can have fascism on the political right and left - I accept that, but I don't get why it needed to be raised in the first place in this thread, unless it was to try to argue that my OP asking about Fascism on the right was somehow precluded by the fact that you can have Fascism on the left as well.
Given that Communism and Fascism (as practised by Hitler, Mussolini and Franco) was more prevalent in Western Europe in the thirties and the decade ended in a World War, it has always seemed the most traumatic decade of the last century to me, but the last ten years has seen the election of nationalistic Governments with strong man leaders in former Soviet countries, other European countries (e.g. Turkey), Brazil and the USA, while, although Putin's Russia hardy seems Communist to me, it has become more expansionist and so with the potential flashpoints we have in Taiwan, Ukraine and the middle east, the threat of another World War seems as strong currently as it has been since the last thirties.
I'd say the leaders of some of the countries I mention above could legitimately be called Fascists, but, as far as the UK is concerned, although I'm sure our soon to be former PM would have loved to have been thought of as a strong man leader, he was too lazy, too much of a clown and too indecisive to be one in real life. However, he and an awful lot of Conservative MPs have backed the prorogation of Parliament which was found to be illegal and articles like these
https://www.dazeddigital.com/politic...g-the-pandemic
https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/ope...no-punishment/
show a disregard for rules which has resulted in law breaking in some cases which points to the "rules don't apply to us" type criticism that was often aimed at the Johnson and members of his Government.
This brings me back to the first post in this thread where Johnson loyalists and, to a degree the new Prime Minister in waiting are advocating that an enquiry into conduct which could see Johnson have to face a by election if it is found that he misled Parliament (it's pretty clear that, willingly or otherwise, he did) should be shelved for reasons which range from it's a witch hunt to hasn't the poor man suffered enough. More menacingly, the Daily Mail and the likes of Dorries, Rees-Mogg and Lord :hehe: Goldsmith are putting pressure on Tory members of the relevant Select Committee (and one who has resigned from said Committee) to step down rather than carry out the task they are duty bound to.
I mentioned before that some of the posts in this thread strike me as somewhat complacent - Fascism is alive and well in the world today and we have a Government that is closer to being fascist than any other in my life. Okay, there is a question of degree as to how close they are, but they're closer than any Government we've had going back to Wilson's first one in the sixties (the first one that I had a degree of political awareness about) and I don't see that changing under "strong woman" Truss.
Point six on the fascism list
https://www.theguardian.com/media/20...bc-news-output
Jesus christ you don't need to have read Oswald Mosley to know what fascism is.
It's like saying you can't know what a car is because you've not read an instruction manual by Henry Ford from the 1920s. You keep going back to this point because you have nothing else.
This forum is full to the brim of old clueless racist bootlicking right wing nutjobs. Just go to the other Cardiff forum where you'd feel more at home.
Anyone who watched Newsnight could tell she was a raving Marxist. As is Ian Katz, the head of Newsnight. The beeb is Maŕxist to it's core, this is only news worthy because of how rare it is to have a "Conservative" pulling in an impartial direction. The modern Conservative party isn't really that Conservative, it's liberal and have ceded ground in the culture war for years. Bob Wilson hasn't read Fascist intellectuals, i have and the idea that the modern day Conservative party is Fascist is for the birds. It's the stuff of left wing fear mongering from activists on Twitter.
Are you sure you know what Marxist means? It seems to be a catchall term you use for anyone or anything you don't like.
The idea that the very pro-establishment BBC is marxist to the core is genuinely hilarious.
Yes we know you've read Oswald Mosely's musings and nobody is in the least bit surprised or impressed.
Of course the current Tory parts aren't fascist, but their actions in a lot of areas are quite possibly enabling some future government to take that dark path.
How about we stop throwing around Marxism and Fascism accusations so much? All a bit daft.
The BBC is pretty signed up to most 'identity politics' ways of thinking, and I do query many of it's editorial decisions - I don't think it's reflective of the country. On the other hand, it is neither government nor commercially run, it has a commitment to (a degree of) balance which many countries are envious of and it is generally a reliable source for topics.
I think that Emily Maitlis is completely wrong. She cites her being reprimanded for what was undeniably a political polemic piece, but will ignore things like this, which show the channels flagship debating programme having a 2:1 Remainer bias during years when that was the biggest political debate going.
https://www.spiked-online.com/2019/0...er-stronghold/
More on that BBC bias btw:
https://iea.org.uk/media/iea-analysi...al-programmes/
There’s a lot of assumptions being made by people in this thread (including by me I’d guess) that they know what living in a fascist state is like - we don’t and I would argue that we may be closer to it than we suspect.
I’ve said before on here that, in the manner of Rick on the Young Ones, I’d use the word “fascist” to describe those who I suspected of being mildly right of centre, but it was a joke which I grew out of decades ago. Reading Lither’s latest contributions, I can only assume that he’s still using “Marxists” in the same manner from the other side of the political fence.
She's just bitter..and trying to prove the BBC doesn't have a middle class, left-wing, liberal bias by writing in Britains foremost middle class left-wing liberal newspaper :hehe:
Essentially, what she said was opinion and it wasn't impartial. She said:
"Dominic Cummings broke the rules. The country can see that but it is shocked the government cannot [and] Boris Johnson has chosen to ignore it. Tonight we consider what the blind loyalty tells us about the inner workings of number 10"
The bit's in Bold are NOT facts. They are her opinion and not backed up by reality. Durham police investigated and he was not charged.
It's no different to someone on the BBC saying Keir Starmer broke the rules but is shocked the Labour party cannot see it etc etc.
If that happened can you imagine the uproar?
The BBC needs to stick to facts and be impartial. It's not hard. She was rightly rebuked. If she wants to air her personal opinion, there are plenty of places for it..and she's found one in the guardian there.