A DEFINITION OF FASCISM
Dateline: 30th January 2002
“Fascist” is a term which has been used as an adolescent political
swear word but Fascism is also a specific political ideology, one
which was our principle adversary in the Second World War. The term
describes a political system which bypasses democracy, parliaments,
the rule of law and indeed nations themselves in its quest for absolute
power. To force through its agenda it uses corporatism (i.e. bodies
like unions, companies, churches, “women’s groups” etc) which are
chosen for their political support of the Government but which are
not elected by the people in general. Blair’s Regional Constitutional
Conventions are a recent example.
Fascism is also characterised by collectives of capital and labour
and State authorised “groups” which decide on policy that is then
presented as a fait accompli to parliaments. Fascism uses legal loopholes
to bypass parliaments – like emergency powers, statutory instruments
and Crown Prerogative (good examples being the Maastricht, Amsterdam
and Nice Treaties). Douglas Hurd said, “Parliament cannot overturn
the Maastricht Treaty”!
Fascism also does not engage in rational debate but makes personal
attacks on political opponents instead of responding to specific points.
Those who doubt that the destruction of democratic nations by the
European Union has anything to do with fascism must come to terms
with the following facts:
The Euro means the abolition of the Pound, the abolition of the Bank
of England, the abolition of HM Treasury and the abolition of Gordon
Brown’s job as Chancellor of the Exchequer. The Euro, like any other
currency, automatically takes over all liabilities (like pensions)
and assets (like North Sea oil and gas and fishing stocks) within
its area. That is why we talk not of Scottish oil but British oil
and not of Californian oil but American oil.
The founder of the Eurofederalist European Movement (Joseph Retinger)
was expelled from allied countries during the first world war and
hated nations so much he refused to carry his own national passport;
that the co-founder of the Bilderberg group (according the CIA operative
Richard Aldrich the principle power behind the creation of the European
Union) was a German Princeling (Bernhard, Prinz zur Lippe Biesterfeld)
who was an SS Intelligence Officer attached to the principle Nazi
industrial conglomerate I G Farben.
Anti-Semitism and fascism are not necessarily linked (although they
were in war time France and Germany) so doubters might like to hear
the words of Professor Lutz Niethammer, historical adviser to Chancellor
Schroeder in the year 2000: Many Jews survive today thanks to the
circumstances that they were forced Labourers and not directly killed
by the SS. Germans are tired of philosemitic over-compensation in
the media and sterile grief rituals of politicians.
Needless to say these facts are just a very small percentage of the
truths which authors like John Laughland in The Tainted Source and
Rodney Atkinson in the books Europe’s Full Circle and Fascist Europe
Rising have clearly demonstrated.