Source: https://stopbadscience.wordpress.com/2009/07/16/difference-between-national-socialism-and-fascism/
There is a painting, by the French
Revolutionary Jaques-Louis David, that effectively sums up the difference
between fascism and national socialism. It was painted in 1789 and is titled
“The Lictors Bring to Brutus the Bodies of His Sons”.
After having led the battle against
the monarchy, Lucius Brutus condemned his sons to death for fighting on King
Tarquin’s side. This was the beginning of the Ancient Roman Republic. Brutus
showed that his loyalty was to the Roman Republic (the State), whose symbol was
the fasces, rather than to his own family. Contrastingly, Germanics have
traditionally always put race, blood and kinship first. A Germanic would rather
have gone into exile, renouncing his political power, with his sons than to
kill them for the sake of the State. Germanics were renowned for holding
liberty , blood, race and kinship sacred.
A fasces refers to a bundle of rods
wrapped together with an axe. It is the symbol adopted by fascism, and implies
that the people are tied to the State, with the axe representing force. The
idea is that, by being thus bound, the State is made much stronger.
The political ideology of fascism
was formulated by Benito Mussolini in Italy post WWI. He was greatly influenced
by the Roman Empire and Republic. Mussolini founded the fascist movement 1919,
calling it “Fasci Di Combattimento” which means “fighting sheafs”. The idea of
the sheaf was popular already with socialists, who liked the idea of the
“unbreakable union“. Mussolini himself had originally been a Leftist socialist
in his ideology, and was anti Nationalist – but his ideas were to undergo a
dramatic change by the time he had founded the fascist movement. He became very
anti-communist and a nationalist.
In the Roman Republic, and the
Empire, Law took precedence over kinship, and that has always been a
characteristic of fascism. The very term “King” comes from the idea of kinship.
In national socialism, as with traditional Kingship, tribal cohesion is
paramount. In democracy, the individual is supposed to be paramount, and, when
the state comes first, you have fascism.
It is a characteristic of fascism to
allow foreigners who show an allegiance to the State to become citizens. In
ancient Rome, despite several wars being fought to prevent this from happening,
eventually foreigners were allowed to become Romans. Similarly, the fascist
States in Spain (under Franco) and in Italy were not founded on blood, race and
tribal cohesion. Franco used Muslim Moroccan troops to rape women in white
towns which he had identified as being sympathetic to communism.
Ever since foreigners were allowed
to become Roman citizens, there has been weak racial tribalism in Italy.
Patriotic feeling, and dynastic loyalty there has surely been, but the concept
of race has suffered in Italy, and only truly exists as a nostalgia for the
earliest period of Rome. The patriotic loyalty is to the State. Thus fascism is
ideally suited to the Italian, and Southern European nations, for whom race
tends to prove somewhat divisive. After a period of eugenics this situation
would change.
The national socialist program was
worked out by Hitler in 1919, before he had heard of Mussolini, yet he still
regarded events in Italy to have been an important influence. Mussolini’s march
on Rome in 1922 was Hitler’s inspiration. It showed what it was possible to
achieve. Hitler, in turn came to greatly influence Mussolini, causing him to introduce
racial loyalty into Italian fascism towards the end. While the two leaders had
initially been hostile towards each other, with Mussolini initiating this
animosity with his public speeches denouncing Hitler as a “barbarian” and even
as a “pederast”, they eventually became close friends. Hitler even organized a
rescue mission when Mussolini ended up in prison, after the Fascist Council had
decided they no longer wished him to be leader.
From
Walther Hadding’s introduction to Mein Kampf:
“Hegelianism and neohegelianism
justified the state as an end in itself. National-Socialism did not regard the
state as an end in itself, but because the examples of Prussia and Fascist
Italy loomed large at the time, it was tempting for people not thoroughly
familiar with national-socialism to see it in this light (and even today it is
not unusual for careless sources to mislabel national-socialism as “fascism”).
Mussolini’s Doctrine on Fascism:
“Therefore,
for the Fascist, everything is in the State, and nothing human or spiritual
exists, much less has value,-outside the State. In this sense Fascism is
totalitarian, and the Fascist State, the synthesis and unity of all values,
interprets, develops and gives strength to the whole life of the people.” From
paragraph 7.
Alfred Rosenberg on the relationship of
National-Socialism to Totalitarianism:
“The
State is only a means to an end. Its end and its purpose is to preserve and
promote a community of human beings who are physically as well as spiritually
kindred. “
Alfred Rosenberg:
“On
all these grounds it is recommended for all national-socialists to speak no
longer of the total state, rather of the completeness (totality) of the
national-socialist worldview, of the NSDAP as the body of this worldview, and
of the national-socialist state as the tool for the preservation of the soul,
spirit, and blood of national-socialism as the powerful phenomenon which made
its beginning in the 20th century. “
The far Left is especially keen that
the term “socialism” should belong to them, and not to the ideas of the Third
Reich, so they perpetuate the term “fascism” to describe National Socialism.
Stalin started this by calling the Nazis “fascists” while, oddly enough, the
democratic West was keen not to confuse the two ideologies, and political
analysts kept them conceptually apart. When reading about WWII events, it used
to be easy to tell if the speaker or writer was inspired by communism. If he or
she talked about Nazis as “fascists”, then the argument or point of view had in
all probability originated in communist circles.
Confusion also arises, for
the public, because both National Socialism and fascism are dictatorial and
anti-democratic.
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