I am a bit confused, all I have ever heard is how 'pure capitalism' leads to fascism, I am sure ive been tought this by a lot of socialists but please tell me how libertarians or anarchy-capitalists oppose this view and argue it.
What is fascism but another form of socialism? Mussolini identified himself as a socialist, and NSDAP (the Nazi party) was an abbrieviation of Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei - the National German Socialist Worker's Party.
Abstract liberty, like other mere abstractions, is not to be found.
- Edmund Burke
Schmitto2121: I am a bit confused, all I have ever heard is how 'pure capitalism' leads to fascism, I am sure ive been tought this by a lot of socialists but please tell me how libertarians or anarchy-capitalists oppose this view and argue it.
laminustacitus: Mussolini identified himself as a socialist,
Mussolini identified himself as a socialist,
Those making up the mainstream political spectrum have a funny idea about doctrines. Or more like they have no clue. They actually believe there was such a thing as extreme/far right, and they do this mistake in two kinds of situations:
Still, most ways of depicting a political spectrum convey some erroneous information, even when using multiple axes. For example, try fitting anarcho-capitalism and authoritarian statist liberalism on the same political compass (the axes are vertical libertarian-authoritarian and horizontal left-right). You'll think the former goes to bottom right corner, while the latter fits into the upper right corner. But it's easy to see the right-ist component, although identical, is not preserved in any real situation. The error stems from the fact that they're taking personal and economic freedom as orthogonal axes, when in fact they're not, and trying to make a square graph out of it.
I wonder, had the axis won the war, if we would today hear how capitalism leads to socialism?
The fallacies of intellectual communism, a compilation - On the nature of power