I've often wondered about accusations that corporatism and fascism are 
fundamentally linked. Umberto Eco's essay on Ur-Fascism always seemed to be the 
best circumscription, to me. But I've seen many others talk about the breakdown 
of the boundary between government and corporations as a hallmark of fascist 
regimes (e.g. the current situation where Trump blocked money for the USPS in 
the covid19 stimulus). Eco's main attributes go something like the below 
(mostly my own summary phrases). How does corporatism fit in?

1) traditionalism
2) rejection of modernism/irrationalism
3) action for action's sake
4) dissent is treason
5) xenophobia
6) appeal to frustrated middle class
7) conspiracy theories
8) the (elite) enemy is both too strong and too weak
9) permanent warfare
10) exceptionalism 
11) hero worship
12) machismo and fixed gender roles
13) delegitimizing elections
14) minimized vocabulary and Newspeak


On 4/13/20 8:35 AM, Jochen Fromm wrote:
> The book is a few years old. Nevertheless Peter reports that many Chinese 
> back then saw both Hitler and Mao as great leaders (!), despite their crimes 
> and their millions of victims. Some even confuse the dictator in Charlie 
> Chaplin's movie "The Great Dictator" with the real Hitler. Of course in the 
> US and in the EU nobody shares this view. 
> 
> Peter also reports about the strong effects of lifelong propaganda from the 
> communist party of China. In Europe we have propaganda as well, but it is 
> mostly in form of marketing and advertising for corporations and their 
> products. Advertising for political parties only happens during elections for 
> limited periods of time. We have freedom of speech in EU & US, but there is 
> no freedom of speech in China. I believe that's a major difference between EU 
> & US and China.

-- 
☣ uǝlƃ

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