RangerDave wrote:
Again, I suggest you read more carefully, Khross. My point seems quite clear, but if you're honestly missing it, I'll clarify. Conservatism, Fascism, and Nazism are all traditionally viewed as being on the Right of the political spectrum.
Really? So, you're post is a glorified appeal to tradition that ignores the actual facts of the situation? Are you familiar with the Nazi platform? Have you read the Political Manifesto of the Italian Fascist Party? Did you research what Franco's government did with regard to policy and social engineering in Spain?
RangerDave wrote:
That association makes contemporary conservatives uncomfortable, so they want to convince people that Fascism and Nazism are actually on the Left, thus transferring the guilt-by-association to liberals.
No, we don't transfer the guilt by association to anyone. We simply refuse to accept revisionist history as either traditional or fact. Again, your argument, per your own words, is that militant nationalism makes these things Right Wing. If that is the case, then Europe is a Right Wing Continent by your own definition. The era of militant European nationalism never ended. National identity, xenophobia, and all sorts of things anathema to your politics play out every day on the Old Continent. People still get lynched at Soccer Games.
RangerDave wrote:
To do this, they are trying to argue that collectivism, and collectivism alone, is the key factor in categorizing an ideology as Left or Right.
Except, I very briefly disproved this statement. Have you ever read Goldberg's book? Did you bother to even look at this bibliography, which includes more academic sources and peer reviewed literature than your average academic political science treatise these days? He did his homework. You may not like his conclusions or his political leanings, but you're speaking of ignorance on his text and from an already debunked version of history.
Again, what part of expansive government is even traditionally conservative?
What part of government control of both the means and manner of production is traditionally conservative?
What part of enacting social change (no matter how abhorrent it actually was) by government force is traditionally conservative?
What part of universal suffrage is traditionally conservative?
What part of social security and social pensions are traditionally conservative?
RangerDave wrote:
In their formulation, any ideology that embraces collectivism is automatically on the Left, regardless of the reasons for the collectivism, the form it takes, or whatever other features the ideology in question may have. That is a ridiculous (and revisionist) oversimplification. With regards to Nazism and Fascism in particular, it completely ignores the fact that militant nationalism was the actual core organizing principle of both, which is vastly different than, and indeed totally contrary to, the internationalist, economic "justice" principles underlying Leftist ideologies.
Except, all of the governments in questions actually tried to implement economic justice principles. And they campaigned and acted on platforms that mirror the very "internationalist, economic justice principles" you continually espouse as "core" Leftist ideologies. You simply haven't been taught or bothered to read enough history to see what happened behind the "atrocities". And even then, you seem to be forgetting that Europe spent the better part of the 18th and 19th centuries fighting wars of nationalistic identity; and that trend still isn't over on the individual and social front.
So, no, my position is neither reductivist nor revisionist. Quite the contrary: you're repeating the socially convenient pablum that legitimates your political position and demonizes your enemies without actually bothering to learn what you're discussing.
_________________
Corolinth wrote:
Facism is not a school of thought, it is a racial slur.