Thread for discussion of Italian Fascism, and other forms of fascism, Mosley, Codreanu, Falange, etc. Also for sharing fascist literature and information.
A Fascist general for Fascists and those interested
Be respectful and please try to keep conversations relatively "intellectual"
Good fascists/similar or influential people to get an introduction
Oswald Mosely Jose Antonio Primo de Rivera Benito Mussolini Adolf Hitler Stepan Bandera Corneliu Zelea Codreanu Salazar Ramiro Ledesma Ramos Ettore Ovazza Gaetano Mosca Friedrich Nietzsche Charles Maurras Enrico Corradini Filippo Tommaso Marinetti Johann Plenge Alceste De Ambris Gabriele d'Annunzio George Lincoln Rockwell Juan Perón Giovanni Gentile Julius Evola
Types of Fascism
Italian Falangism National-Syndicalism British Union National-Socialism Strasserism Meme futurism Clerical Fascism Brazilian Integralism Peronism
"[Fascism] was an explosion against intolerable conditions, against remediable wrongs which the old world failed to remedy. It was a movement to secure national renaissance by people who felt themselves threatened with decline into decadence and death and were determined to live, and live greatly."~Oswald Mosely
>philosophic conception Fascism is thought and action. It is action with an inherent doctrine which, arising out of a given system of historic forces, is inserted in it and works on it from within. It has therefore a form co-related to the contingencies of time and place; but it has at the same time an ideal content which elevates it into a formula of truth in the higher region of the history of thought.
Dylan Howard
>spiritual conception To Fascism the world is not this material world which appears on the surface, in which man is an individual separated from all other men, standing by himself and subject to a natural law which instinctively impels him to lead a life of momentary and egoistic pleasure. In Fascism man is an individual who is the nation and the country. He is this by a moral law which embraces and binds together individuals and generations in an established tradition and mission, a moral law which suppresses the instinct to lead a life confined to a brief cycle of pleasure in order, instead, to replace it within the orbit of duty in a superior conception of life, free from the limits of time and space a life in which the individual by self-abnegation and by the sacrifice of his particular interests, even by death, realizes the entirely spiritual existence in which his value as a man consists.
Elijah Foster
>ethical conception This positive conception of life is evidently an ethical conception. And it comprises the whole reality as well as the human activity which domineers it. No action is to be removed from the moral sense; nothing is to be in the world that is divested of the importance which belongs to it in respect of moral aims. Life, therefore, as the Fascist conceives it, is serious, austere, religious; entirely balanced in a world sustained by the moral and responsible forces of the spirit. The Fascist disdains the "easy" life.
Jaxson Anderson
Bump
Blake Phillips
>religious conception Fascism is a religious conception in which man is considered to be in the powerful grip of a superior law, with an objective will which transcends the particular individual and elevates him into a fully conscious member of a spiritual society. Anyone who has stopped short at the mere consideration of opportunism in the religious policy of the Fascist Regime, has failed to understand that Fascism, besides being a system of government, is also a system of thought.
Has anyone read any good books lately? I picked up Imperium by Francis Parker Yockey but I'm only 100 pages in
Tyler Jones
...
Julian Cruz
What book is this?
Juan Edwards
Any of you edgelords into Julius Evola?
Been reading Revolt against the Modern World recently. Who here /aristocrat of the soul/?
Jose Bailey
I've been reading Revolt as well. Plan to read more of it on a car trip tomorrow
Xavier Mitchell
I believe it's For My Legionnaires
Michael Perez
I've been thinking about reading Evola's books but apparently you need to read a shit ton of other philosophical books to understand it. Is that true?
Alright thanks
Joseph Clark
I've read some of Nietzsche (Genealolgy of Morals and Thus Spake Zarathustra) and I'm vaguely familiar with Plato's ideas about society (The Republic is basically ur-fascism).
Those two philosophers are his main influences. Anything he references that you're not familiar with you can google and read about on the Stanford encyclopaedia of philosophy.
James Sullivan
Alright sounds good
Jose Bailey
ride the tiger is great was one of the few books that i couldn't get enough of. read the other two first though. his other work is pretty interesting too, just pick a topic relevant to your interests.
the home of our heroic ancestors, now occupied by russians and ruined by communism. this is what motivates me to bitterly press on even though it's beyond wishful thinking for finns to ever get the land back
Samuel Allen
What about unification with your other brothers/sisters?
they are so russified that they are for the most part indistinguishable from finns around the baltic sea
Ryder Green
a fascist is a demagouge
Christian Wood
Is it not knowledge of history a necessity for stable future? Those who do not know it, are deemed to repeat it, are they not? Just look at our world today. Understanding the cultures around the world, and your own most importantly, its pros and cons, is an only way for progress. We must learn from history and turn to the future. Nurturing our nation as a part of ourselves. youtube.com/watch?v=lka6wG7JTgk
Matthew Jackson
What would a fascist pagan state look like?
Adrian Rodriguez
Not only that but it grounds you in time, in a very Burkean sense. But it's not just knowing history, but seeing glory in it. Or, as Jonathan Bowden put it: >If we can’t overcome the weapons which are used against us, we will disappear. These are the facts. And therefore we have to do so in our own minds. >Every other group that’s ever existed in human history has not had the albatross around it, that it only remembers as a form of guilt and expiation, and as a Moloch before sacrifices must be made, their own moments of grief and of slaughter and of ferocity. They configured the world in another way. >When the Greeks sacked a city in internal warfare, everyone would be enslaved. But they did not remember, when their bards sang of their victories, that they had denied human rights of other Greek city states. >No people can survive if it incorporates as a mental substructure an anti-heroic myth about itself.
Hudson Gray
Isn't the Ford translation the best one available for Mein Kampf?
Angel Brooks
Probably something like Hitler's Germany
Brody Richardson
It's not. This is clearly a book written about the Legionary movement. In fact, for my legionaires was written before the short period in wich they were in power. And the last two sentences seem jewy as fuck and unauthentic.
Levi Moore
What do modern Romanians think of Codreanu?
Colton Taylor
Thats horia sima
Jackson Sanders
Well thats embarrassing
Brody Phillips
Depends, it's not something people talk about casually as you might imagine. I would say he has a lot of sympathy among some segments of the young generation, but it's my impression that older people don't know that much about the Legionaries, since they were raised with commie propaganda.