"Fascist" and "anti fascism" get thrown around a lot, and I feel like people aren't using the same definition, or maybe don't even know the definition. CW for length
@ansugeisler@scholar.social
I copied and pasted from Miriam Webster, the dictionary. Is there a better dictionary definition to use?
That would mean there's a lot of fighting between groups that share much in their ideologies.
I think this helps untangle it for me - ideology of tactic VS ideological end game. Part of the problem may be that those who agree with fascists on forcing suppression of others is that they label themselves anti fascists, a negative definition, rather than anything positive. Are they generally communist in ideology? I could see not wanting that label and seeking to be seen as "the enemy of my enemy."
I'm so anti fascist that this includes being against using force to suppress oppositional ideas from being spoken aloud. But that apparently makes me an enemy of both any fascists and the "anti fascists".
@ansugeisler@scholar.social
But their ends are entirely at odds. Fascism is authoritarianism in one nation, and each nation has their own flavor to suit the taste of its rulers. Communism is universalist, claiming authority over the entire world, and allowing for no competing institutions or loyalties.
Antifa terrorists have a patchwork of deranged ideas which are more a mental illness than a political philosophy.