Displaying dangerous fascistic tendencies… Photo credit: DailySIgnal

by Ann Mclean

Want more evidence that the University of Virginia has become an impermeable thought bubble where people can say the craziest things without fear of contradiction? Consider this: Two University of Virginia professors —Manuela Achilles and Kyrill Kunakhovich — taught a history course this spring that portrays American conservatives as fascists. They weren’t being hyperbolic. They really meant it.

In their analysis, the wellspring of fascism is not worship of the all-powerful, totalitarian state — which conservatives totally reject — but the traditional American virtues of family and patriotism.

I first learned of this class from a young friend of mine. Here is her description: 

Recently, I enrolled in a fascism class thinking it would be a great way to weed through the constant accusations that politicians make about who is fascist and who is not. The class started out great. We studied Hitler and Mussolini and other fascisms in Europe, then moved to Asia to look at Japanism, but the more the course progressed, the more I was confused about what fascism actually is. My professors chose to leave fascism undefined and allow each student to come to their own conclusion. That seems pretty reasonable, right? I thought so, too.

That is, until we started a unit on American fascism. All of a sudden only conservatives were fascist, only Christians could be racist, only Trump supporters could be violent. The professor argued that traditionalists, those with a rural past, constitutionalists, and those who “fetishized patriarchal masculinity” were all hallmarks of fascism. Essentially, anyone with the slightest bit of conservative thought is now akin to Adolf Hitler.

The scary thing about it was not just that we were being taught lies, but rather that at first it made perfect sense. I could see how “American fascism” aligned with Nazi Germany and Mussolini’s Italy. After going back through the material we had previously studied that semester and doing outside research, I realized just how much information had been left out. Nowhere does the course mention that Nazi means “national socialist.” Nowhere do we dive into how exactly Mussolini amassed as much power as he did (through a SOCIALIST agenda).

We patriotic Americans were raised to think that our fathers and grandfathers fought World War II to defeat fascism. How can we be fascists ourselves? Turns out, the definition is both murky and changeable but basically comes down to “Mom and Dad,” middle America, and anyone considered “conservative.”

The professor informed us only of aspects of European fascism that seem applicable to the American political atmosphere. We are under the impression that we are coming to these conclusions ourselves, but when all of the information is cherry picked for us, there is no true reason occurring, it is indoctrination. Is Trump a fascist, or only a demagogue? A demagogue or just dangerous?

Nowhere in the course did we study the dangerous progression of the leftist socialist agenda and how often that turns into the harshest form of fascism. I was lucky. Given my background and the natural hesitation in accepting everything that comes out of professors’ mouths, the disinformation was clear to me. Others might not be so lucky. I easily could have walked away truly believing that Trump was fascist, and I am sure many other students in that class did.

Reading included John Stanley’s recently published book, “How Fascism Works; the Politics of Us and Them.“In all fascist mythic pasts, an extreme version of the patriarchal family reins supreme,” Stanley writes. “Further back in time, the mythic past was a time of glory of the nation, with wars of conquest led by patriotic generals, its armies filled with its countrymen, able-bodied, loyal warriors whose wives were home raising the next generation. In the present these myths become the basis of the nation’s identity under fascist politics.”

Along the same lines, a guest speaker showed a graphic to students depicting joyful young gays and lesbians joining forces standing against mean old American Fascism.

Another work from the class, Yale lawyer James Q. Whitman’s Hitler’s American Model: The United States and the Making of Nazi Race Law pits the reader squarely against middle America, and especially against supporters of President Trump or those with conservative sensibilities. In an interview with Salon staff writer Chauncey Devega in 2017, Whitman likened the victory of Trump’s supporters to Nazi Germany’s socialism.

Needless to say, a book that was not on the reading list was Jonah Goldberg’s masterpiece, “Liberal Fascism: The Secret History of the American Left, from Mussolini to the Politics of Change,” which traces the doctrinal and emotional roots of 21st-century progressivism to early 20th-century fascism.

Instruction at the University of Virginia is less and less about education and more and more about indoctrination, which to me, sounds kind of… what’s the word I’m looking for? Oh… fascist.


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Comments

24 responses to “The Fascists Next Door”

  1. LarrytheG Avatar
    LarrytheG

    To show the difference between the tenor, tone and content of BR today and ten years ago in June, go look:

    https://www.baconsrebellion.com/2010/06/

    topics like:

    How Not to Treat a Bleeding Patient
    EMR’s Worst Nightmare
    Obama’s looming “Profile in Courage”?
    Et tu, Krugman?
    Where Are the Oil Skimmers?
    Corey Stewart’s Bad Idea
    The Hard Reality of Richmond Passenger Trains

    Anyone see any differences? (other than the angst over the Conservative angst over the country’s first black POTUS?

  2. The epithets “fascism” and “fascist” have often been used without any regard to the historical and philosophical roots of fascism in Mussolini’s Italy and Hitler’s Germany, or the variants of fascism that were espoused by some groups in other European countries. One of the rhetorical ploys of Soviet Communists was to call anyone who did not agree fully with the Soviet position on fascism — regardless of how critical or condemnatory they were about Italian or German fascism — as being “objectively” fascist. (Ironically, the Soviet Union’s public opposition to fascism vanished instantly with the signing of the Nazi-Soviet Pact of 1939 — until Germany invaded in June 1941.)

    It is depressing how some people are quick to label ideas and people that they disagree with, or disapprove of, as “fascism” or “fascists” without any effort to articulating how those ideas or people have any factual or logical connection with the fascism of Europe in the 1920’s-1940s.

  3. LarrytheG Avatar
    LarrytheG

    For Pete-sake. You go to College and you get exposed to a wide variety of stuff and yes, it’s up to you to think critically about ANYTHING you see or hear or get “taught”. I can’t tell you have many folks I’ve met that either dropped a course or never signed up but they had heard stuff about the professor, etc.. namely whether they graded tough or not much more so than their ideology.

    But isn’t it funny what many of us were NOT”taught” in K-12 about not only other country’s history but OUR history.

    Does anyone think the “Trail of Tears” was fascism? How about McCarthyism? How about Japanese internment camps? How about Jim Crow?

    I’d say it’s Conservatives that don’t want to know history – or only the kind of history they prefer, and their complaints sometimes seem to border on the idea that they were brainwashed by nasty, evil college professors.

    Does no one remember College campuses in the 1960’s ?

    1. Dick Hall-Sizemore Avatar
      Dick Hall-Sizemore

      I do. The perspective that Ed Crapol brought to the teaching of the history of American foreign policy would have raised the hackles of many on BR.

    2. Nancy Naive Avatar
      Nancy Naive

      1970 was worse
      Especially May
      Specifically the 4th

  4. Dick Hall-Sizemore Avatar
    Dick Hall-Sizemore

    “Fascist” is one of those general terms that have come to mean whatever the user of it means. It is usually applied to persons or movements with which one disagrees.

    I would like to know how Ms. Mclean came to her conclusion that, to the UVa professors, that “the wellspring of fascism is … the traditional American virtues of family and patriotism.” Roger Griffin, one of the foremost experts on fascism, in an interview, set out the following as the basic elements of fascism: “These include a war on perceived national weakness, disunity and “decadence”, uniformed paramilitarism, the belief in a single party and charismatic leader, an emphasis on national homogeneity that demands the end of political and cultural pluralism, the persecution of “alien” ideologies and beliefs, and the pursuit of a nebulous “national rebirth”(“palingenesis”).” https://www.politika.io/en/notice/fascism-historical-phenomenon-and-political-concept

    Given that academic background, I am skeptical of the accuracy of Ms. Mclean’s summary

    As to whether Trump is/was a fascist, a number of historians and political scientists specializing in this area said that, no matter what one thinks of Trump, he does not fit into the fascist category.

    https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/21521958/what-is-fascism-signs-donald-trump

    Finally, it is heartening to see that Ms. Mclean’s friend is developing critical thinking skills at UVa.

    1. Nancy Naive Avatar
      Nancy Naive

      The first step to fascism is a widely held belief that it cannot happen here. After that, the rest is easy.

    2. Wahoo'74 Avatar
      Wahoo’74

      I know Ann McLean and as well as some of the students who were in this class. What Ann says is true. These professors truly believe America is a systemically racist country trending toward a German/Italian fascist equivalency. Trump is perceived to be a Hitler/Mussolini clone.

      This is not just preposterous. It is a lie and a totally incorrect portrayal of both the historical roots of fascism as well as the current political philosophy of America.

  5. Publius Avatar

    All in the imagination…
    https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/National-Strategy-for-Countering-Domestic-Terrorism.pdf
    Have fun using the CTRL+F “find” function
    Words not in there? Antifa…jihad
    Words in there? White preceding race and connected with superiority…
    And can someone please enlighten me of the Victim Grievance Olympics term – LGBTQI+ – I am not hip enough to understand the I+ on the way to more genders than Heinz’s flavors…

      1. Publius Avatar

        Wow…
        And I’m supposed to think these people aren’t crazy?
        So, I is for Intersex and + is the wild card?
        Why was it OK for SlowJoe to leave out “Ally?” I mean, isn’t the omission of that virtue signal a serious failing?
        I mean, people who used to be able to think would say “expressio unius et exclusio alterius.” But that was a looooooong time ago…

  6. Stephen Haner Avatar
    Stephen Haner

    https://www.baconsrebellion.com/app/uploads/2021/06/Fasces.jpg

    I’ve always considered “fascism” as more a set of repressive political tactics, intended to maintain state control, which are largely independent of ideology. Hence Hitler, Stalin and Mussolini could all behave like fascists, with very different political goals. Left or right. University presidents can behave like fascists. Fascism is the opposite of liberty, liberal democracy or a libertarian approach. But who am I to argue with professors at the great University of Virginia?! Freaking idiots is what they are….

    1. William O'Keefe Avatar
      William O’Keefe

      Mr. Haner, my definition is the same as yours. And to think that this is coming from the university founded by Thomas Jefferson. Someone should urge students to read Frederich Hayek’s The Road to Serfdom.

      1. Stephen Haner Avatar
        Stephen Haner

        None of this means we don’t have to defend ourselves against ourselves at times. General Flynn was espousing pure fascism after the election, advocating a military coup. Why he is not in prison or at least stripped of rank and pay is beyond me. I guess he’s too useful to the Left running his mouth.

        1. Nancy Naive Avatar
          Nancy Naive

          Uh, isn’t he not in prison by virtue of a Presidential Pardon? Damn you Joe Biden!

    2. Nancy Naive Avatar
      Nancy Naive

      Somewhere in the cobwebbed corners of my rum addled brain was a history course circa 1970 that listed 10 attributes of fascism.

      Of course, stretch to fit will cover just about anything, but while American conservatives in general are anything but fascists, the tendencies of the largest conservative party are worthy of watching.

  7. great book — we read in my history class about this subject:

    The Nazi Seizure of Power: The Experience of a Single German Town, 1922-1945 by William Sheridan Allen

  8. LarrytheG Avatar
    LarrytheG

    methinks Ms. Mclean is blowing smoke up the you know what but it’s almost gotten to be pro-forma with Conservatives these days.

    1. Nancy Naive Avatar
      Nancy Naive

      Take Obamacare… it’s a Democrat plot to keep people alive to vote.

      1. LarrytheG Avatar
        LarrytheG

        That’s an interesting way of seeing it and so it totally explains the GOPs attitudes towards it.

        1. James Wyatt Whitehead Avatar
          James Wyatt Whitehead

          Hee Haw! You guys have to up your game. At least be as funny as Waldorf and Statler.
          https://imgur.com/MB4CTEB

          1. LarrytheG Avatar
            LarrytheG

            Hey. How many people on Obamacare vote GOP? 😉

  9. tmtfairfax Avatar
    tmtfairfax

    WTF? How does one reconcile children too young to have the requisite mens rea to warrant life without parole for committing heinous murders but can at the same age or earlier decide to have body altering surgery to match their body parts with their gender identification, which science says may well change as they become adults?

    How does one reconcile that a person can elect to assist in suicide or abort a near-term baby but should not be able to decide what to eat for protein or whether to take the bus or one’s own car?

    How does one reconcile having the freedom to smoke marijuana but not tobacco?

    1. LarrytheG Avatar
      LarrytheG

      not sure your point TMT…

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