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It has been suggested that this article be merged into Fascism and ideology. (Discuss) |
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Introduction
The presence or absence of fascism in the United States has been a matter of long-dispute since at least the nineteen-forties.
In the classic sense, fascism is generally understood as a system belief unifying the state with xenophobic nationalism or racial superiority. In the years following the rise of fascist governments in such countries as Germany and Italy, two fateful events informed the ongoing debate concerning fascism in America.
George Orwell once remarked that "fascism" no longer seemed to mean much of anything, other than "objectionable," but academics continue to insist on a political science application of the term.
Origins of Fascism in the United States
Fascism in America first came to prominent attention with the publication of the cautionary novel It Can't Happen Here by Sinclair Lewis in 1935.
In 1933, retired General Smedley Butler testified to the McCormack-Dickstein Committee that he had been approached by a group of wealthy business interests, led by the Du Pont and J. P. Morgan industrial empires, to orchestrate a fascist coup against Roosevelt. The alleged coup attempt has come to be known as the Business Plot.
References
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Additional Links of Interest
- Fascism and the rhetoric of unification (a Misplaced Pages link)
- Fascists in Christian Clothing (this is a novel)
- Bill Crews "I was a Republican from before the fascists took over."
External links
- "A Kind of Fascism Is Replacing Our Democracy" from Newsday July 18, 2003 by Sheldon S. Wolin, professor of political science at Princeton University.