Understanding
Fascism
by Robert
Brady
In the twentieth century no set of ideas has been so vilified and
misunderstood as that of Fascism. Prewar Fascism has been depicted, through the
machinations of the social democratic media and countless works of political
comment, as a political system based on reactionary oppression and the
antithesis of all that is good and necessary for human advancement. In the
present day it appears that its original significance has been abandoned and it
is now invariably employed as an abusive epithet for the purpose of defaming
political opponents, most of whom do not qualify for being so dubbed. A degree
of blame rests with the perpetual polarisation of politics into battalions of
"Left" and "Right" whereby all shades of political thought
are considered only in these obligatory terms.
The purpose of this article is to explore the reasons why Fascism does
not conveniently fit into the spectrum of "orthodox" politics and to
demolish the current misconceptions. Firstly, it is a foolish misnomer to
regard authentic Fascism as reactionary or "Rightist". In fact, the
principal protagonists of the Fascist creed in the nineteen thirties, Benito
Mussolini in
To be properly understood, Fascism has to be viewed in the context of
that period after the First Great War. Fascism was the product of the horror of
1914/1918. The eruption of 1914 was the consequence of a deep rooted malaise. The
apparent tranquility of the civilised world was a very thin veneer over hidden,
seething forces. The faith in the nineteenth century idea of
"progress" had lulled European man into a false sense of security. The
First Great War came as a great shock and its effects were spiritually
shattering as the great age of "unending progress" was dramatically
terminated. That war replaced optimism with pessimism and, in consequence,
unleashed all that seethed beneath an old order on its last legs. After that
nothing was certain again and the spirit of
Fascism was undoubtedly revolutionary. At the same time it differed from
the "Left" and, in particular, Marxism in many vital respects. It was
anti-materialistic and did not involve a cataclysmic break from man's historic
past. The philosophical positions of Fascism and Marxism were the most
distinctly different. As is well known, Marxism is intolerably and rigidly
dogmatic. Very austere Communists are inextricably bound by the gospel of Karl
Marx, the glosses of Lenin and the maxims of "economic determinism",
leaving nothing for free thought or empirical examination. On the other hand,
Fascism was liberated from dogmatism and its philosophy was one of pragmatism,
that is to say, it simply asked if a particular notion could be used and made
to work in the interests of the nation. Fascists, like soldiers, do not permit
their minds to crystallise around any formulas but simply use them as working
hypotheses which, in the event that they become detrimental, are easily
discarded. This dynamic pragmatism was Fascism's hallmark and genius. With this
philosophy Fascism protested a revolt against all forms of phrase worship and
useless sentimentality which are all inhibitive. The theoretical abstractions
of social democracy, "liberty", "equality" and
"inalienable rights", were attacked by Fascism simply because they
were abstractions. They are words without any concrete importance meaning
nought. They are used as objects of worship and, therefore, prevent objectivity
and creative thought. Within the Fascist context the concept of
"rights" had meaning only when connected with service and duty, and
so fascism emerged as a revolt against the cult of unrealities to become the
force for pragmatic realism consistent with the new age of science.
The
Fascism was neither "Left" nor "Right" but was a
synthesis of ideas above those which existed. "It combines the dynamic
urge to change and progress with the authority, the discipline and the order
without which nothing great can be achieved", Mosley affirmed in "The
Greater Britain". In that phrase can be detected two sentiments which,
when separate ideas, are of little consequence. The idea of progress, as Mosley
explained, is regarded as belonging to the Left whereas the tradition of order
is regarded as belonging to the Right. Progress can not exist without order or
stability... and stability can not exist without progress and the need to adapt
to a changing world. Separated they bring chaos in a world where action is
needed. The Fascist synthesis, with characteristic realism, was the only
alternative.
The charge that Fascism was coercive is one of those tragic
misconceptions which only serves to illustrate the hatred and bitterness of
those who despise the heroic and the visionary. The prattle about
"dictatorship" emanates from people who prefer the cataleptic inertia
of social democracy in contrast to the dynamic will to action of the Fascist
temperament. The term "dictatorship" is not always synonymous with
coercion. By his use of the word "dictatorship" Mosley interpreted
this as "leadership" and in the nineteen thirties he explained,
"Fascism is not dictatorship in the old sense of that word, which implies
government against the will of the people. Fascism is dictatorship in the
modern sense of the word, which implies government armed by the people with
power to solve problems which the people are determined to overcome'. In order
to function and work Fascism depended on the will of the people; without that
will there would be no Organic Nation. In this context Fascism deviated from
Left Socialism in that the essence of Fascist action was based on leadership
and initiative and, in practice, was seen to be the leadership of the people
with their popular consent. It had nothing to do with the stifling controls of
Socialism in this respect, rather Fascism tended to lead and only intervene
when any section threatened the interests of the organic whole.
The tragedy of Fascism was that it was not given a chance to blossom. A
second disastrous war with all the hysteria and propaganda blurred a lot of the
truth. Fascism should be remembered for its dynamism, its heroism and its
vision during a time when something new was desperately needed to save man from
self destruction. Fascism faced the facts of the pre-war world; and now we face
the facts of a world which has changed so rapidly. What new force for the
future can inspire hope in the same way that Fascism did so many years ago?