@rightwingsjw@admin Fascists are nationalists ("National Socialists.") Communists are globalists ("international socialists.") The only other significant difference is that Communists seek "de jure" (nominal) ownership of the means of production by the state, while Fascists seek "de facto" ownership of the means of production by the state, using the "state-corporate partnership" concept to dishonestly hide the fact that a state with a Fascist level of authoritarian control is the de facto owner of anyone and every thing within the state's jurisdiction. When you make the corporations your deputies, there is no de facto distinction between corporation and state.
“Fascism entirely agrees with Mr. Keynes. In fact, Mr. Keynes’ excellent little book, The End of Laissez-Faire (1926) might serve as a useful introduction to fascist economics. There is scarcely anything to object to in it and there is much to applaud.” ~ Benito Mussolini
@admin@GrumpyRabbit If the Confederacy had been allowed to leave peacefully, northern cities would've never been flooded by southern blacks and thousands of white Americans wouldn't have died
@admin All that matters is that his political views with respect to slavery and the Confederacy were strongly aligned with those of Democrats who controlled the States of the Confederacy.
That, and the fact that it is is far more probable that the alienated will use violence as a means of protest when they feel that their side is losing...or has lost. And we know which side lost that particular contest.
@GrumpyRabbit The Confederates had nothing in common with modern Democrats and to lump them together simply because of superficial party affiliation is absolutely dishonest. The Confederates, however misguided they might have been by that warmongering kike Judah P. Benjamin, were nevertheless pro-White down to their very bone marrow, and in the act of fighting to the death in defense of their race they acted in a spirit that was in line with that of America’s founding fathers.