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Message
If you’re going to call me fascist anyway
Posted on 1/16/26 at 11:06 am
Posted on 1/16/26 at 11:06 am
If You’re Going To Call Me Fascist Anyway
“ At some point, repetition becomes instruction. When you’re told often enough that holding a handful of conservative views makes you a Nazi or a fascist, you start to wonder whether anyone still remembers what those words mean. I certainly don’t hear them used with historical precision. I hear them used as shortcuts—verbal airhorns deployed to end a conversation before it begins.
So fine. I give up.
I am now, apparently, whatever you’ve decided I am.
Not because I believe in authoritarianism, racial supremacy, or the state crushing dissent—those are real, ugly doctrines with real victims—but because the modern political vocabulary has become so degraded that disagreement itself is treated as extremism. When every boundary is crossed rhetorically, labels lose their diagnostic value and become costumes thrown at opponents.
Let’s look at what actually earns me these titles.
I believe borders should exist and be enforced. That used to be called “national sovereignty,” not fascism. I believe a country has the right—and obligation—to know who is entering it, under what conditions, and in what numbers. This is not radical; it is how functional states operate, including most progressive European ones.
I believe crime should be prosecuted and that law enforcement, while imperfect and in need of oversight, is necessary. That doesn’t mean blind loyalty to police misconduct. It means acknowledging that order is a prerequisite for liberty, not its enemy. A society that cannot enforce its laws selectively enforces them—and that is far closer to authoritarianism than insisting they be applied evenly.
I believe biological sex is real and relevant in certain contexts, particularly medicine and sports. This is not a moral crusade against anyone’s dignity; it is a factual claim with practical implications. Pretending that observable reality is bigotry does not advance compassion—it corrodes trust in institutions that rely on evidence.
I believe free speech includes the right to say things that offend powerful cultural orthodoxies. Once speech is judged not by its truth or falsity but by whether it causes “harm” as defined by the loudest activists, censorship follows naturally. History is unambiguous on this point: speech controls never stay limited to the “bad people.”
I believe economic systems should reward work, innovation, and responsibility while providing a safety net that does not metastasize into permanent dependency. That balance is difficult, but rejecting it outright in favor of ideological purity has consequences—usually for the people least able to absorb them.
For holding these positions, I am told—confidently, casually—that I am a fascist.
So here’s the punchline: if every disagreement is fascism, then fascism becomes meaningless. And if the label is unavoidable, it loses its power to shame.
In that narrow, ironic sense only, I now “embrace” it—not as an ideology, but as evidence of rhetorical exhaustion. I wear the label the way one wears a warning sticker placed by someone who ran out of arguments.
Call me whatever you need to call me. I’ll continue to argue for limited government, equal application of the law, free expression, and reality-based policy. If those positions now qualify as Nazism in the modern political imagination, the problem is not with the positions.
It’s with the imagination.
And yes—since the labels are apparently mandatory—I’ll wear them proudly, not as admissions of guilt, but as proof that the words no longer mean what they once did.”
“ At some point, repetition becomes instruction. When you’re told often enough that holding a handful of conservative views makes you a Nazi or a fascist, you start to wonder whether anyone still remembers what those words mean. I certainly don’t hear them used with historical precision. I hear them used as shortcuts—verbal airhorns deployed to end a conversation before it begins.
So fine. I give up.
I am now, apparently, whatever you’ve decided I am.
Not because I believe in authoritarianism, racial supremacy, or the state crushing dissent—those are real, ugly doctrines with real victims—but because the modern political vocabulary has become so degraded that disagreement itself is treated as extremism. When every boundary is crossed rhetorically, labels lose their diagnostic value and become costumes thrown at opponents.
Let’s look at what actually earns me these titles.
I believe borders should exist and be enforced. That used to be called “national sovereignty,” not fascism. I believe a country has the right—and obligation—to know who is entering it, under what conditions, and in what numbers. This is not radical; it is how functional states operate, including most progressive European ones.
I believe crime should be prosecuted and that law enforcement, while imperfect and in need of oversight, is necessary. That doesn’t mean blind loyalty to police misconduct. It means acknowledging that order is a prerequisite for liberty, not its enemy. A society that cannot enforce its laws selectively enforces them—and that is far closer to authoritarianism than insisting they be applied evenly.
I believe biological sex is real and relevant in certain contexts, particularly medicine and sports. This is not a moral crusade against anyone’s dignity; it is a factual claim with practical implications. Pretending that observable reality is bigotry does not advance compassion—it corrodes trust in institutions that rely on evidence.
I believe free speech includes the right to say things that offend powerful cultural orthodoxies. Once speech is judged not by its truth or falsity but by whether it causes “harm” as defined by the loudest activists, censorship follows naturally. History is unambiguous on this point: speech controls never stay limited to the “bad people.”
I believe economic systems should reward work, innovation, and responsibility while providing a safety net that does not metastasize into permanent dependency. That balance is difficult, but rejecting it outright in favor of ideological purity has consequences—usually for the people least able to absorb them.
For holding these positions, I am told—confidently, casually—that I am a fascist.
So here’s the punchline: if every disagreement is fascism, then fascism becomes meaningless. And if the label is unavoidable, it loses its power to shame.
In that narrow, ironic sense only, I now “embrace” it—not as an ideology, but as evidence of rhetorical exhaustion. I wear the label the way one wears a warning sticker placed by someone who ran out of arguments.
Call me whatever you need to call me. I’ll continue to argue for limited government, equal application of the law, free expression, and reality-based policy. If those positions now qualify as Nazism in the modern political imagination, the problem is not with the positions.
It’s with the imagination.
And yes—since the labels are apparently mandatory—I’ll wear them proudly, not as admissions of guilt, but as proof that the words no longer mean what they once did.”
Posted on 1/16/26 at 11:32 am to Geekboy
Gonna need to lose some we9ght to fit into my Nazi Uniform. Probably do 3 sets of 20 Rail Car Shuffles.
Posted on 1/16/26 at 12:46 pm to Geekboy
quote:
I believe borders should exist and be enforced. That used to be called “national sovereignty,” not fascism. I believe a country has the right—and obligation—to know who is entering it, under what conditions, and in what numbers. This is not radical; it is how functional states operate, including most progressive European ones.
The Clintons, the Obamas, the Bidens, the Bushes, the Kennedys and almost every Liberal Congress member have ALL believed these same things during this century, and are on record about it.
So that makes them Nazis too, does it not?
And by default, does that not also make everyone who voted for them "Nazis" as well? By the standards being shown to me through legacy media outlets today, this seems like a plausible conclusion.
Posted on 1/16/26 at 12:52 pm to Geekboy
The five stages of fascism, as outlined by Robert Paxton, include:
1) Intellectual exploration, where disillusionment with democracy begins;
2) Rooting, where the movement gains a foothold amid political deadlock;
3) Acquisition of power, where conservatives invite fascists to share power;
4) Exercise of power, where the fascist movement controls the state; and
5) Radicalization or entropy, where the regime either intensifies its actions or settles into routine authoritarianism.
This framework highlights the complex and evolving nature of fascist movements.
The Five Stages of Fascism
1) Intellectual exploration, where disillusionment with democracy begins;
2) Rooting, where the movement gains a foothold amid political deadlock;
3) Acquisition of power, where conservatives invite fascists to share power;
4) Exercise of power, where the fascist movement controls the state; and
5) Radicalization or entropy, where the regime either intensifies its actions or settles into routine authoritarianism.
This framework highlights the complex and evolving nature of fascist movements.
The Five Stages of Fascism
Posted on 1/16/26 at 12:55 pm to Harry Boutte
I’d say you far left wackos are somewhere between 3 and 4.
Posted on 1/16/26 at 12:55 pm to Geekboy
quote:I like this guy! Have an upvote!
Posted by Geekboy
Posted on 1/16/26 at 12:56 pm to Harry Boutte
quote:So, where are we in these stages?
The five stages of fascism, as outlined by Robert Paxton, include:
1) Intellectual exploration, where disillusionment with democracy begins;
2) Rooting, where the movement gains a foothold amid political deadlock;
3) Acquisition of power, where conservatives invite fascists to share power;
4) Exercise of power, where the fascist movement controls the state; and
5) Radicalization or entropy, where the regime either intensifies its actions or settles into routine authoritarianism.
This should be good.
Posted on 1/16/26 at 12:59 pm to tketaco
quote:
Gonna need to lose some we9ght to fit into my Nazi Uniform
I just want one of those helmets.
Posted on 1/16/26 at 1:06 pm to Geekboy
Excellent post
Ironically, you'd think the Dems would love Hitler considering he led to the deaths of millions of white, Christian men
Ironically, you'd think the Dems would love Hitler considering he led to the deaths of millions of white, Christian men
Posted on 1/16/26 at 2:15 pm to Bigdawgb
quote:And lots and lots of Jews.
Ironically, you'd think the Dems would love Hitler considering he led to the deaths of millions of white, Christian men
Excellent post OP! That is 100% exactly my position as well.
Posted on 1/16/26 at 2:19 pm to Geekboy
Going to be honest with you…if I had a choice between either socialism/communism or fascism I’m taking fascism every single time.
Posted on 1/16/26 at 2:19 pm to Geekboy
IDGAF anymore
Like racism screeching.
It's diluted to the point it's meaningless.
Like racism screeching.
It's diluted to the point it's meaningless.
Posted on 1/16/26 at 2:21 pm to Harry Boutte
quote:
where conservatives invite fascists to share power
What was so conservative about Nazis?
Posted on 1/16/26 at 2:23 pm to Harry Boutte
quote:
3) Acquisition of power, where conservatives invite fascists to share power;
The only way this makes sense in the US currently is if “conservatives” are RINOs who are collaborating with the left.
Modern fascist states have arisen from the left, not the right.
Posted on 1/16/26 at 2:35 pm to grizzlylongcut
quote:
What was so conservative about Nazis?
You're missing the point entirely, fascists aren't conservatives - Bismark was a conservative, he wasn't a Nazi. But he shared power with the Nazi's to keep power away from the Communists who were growing in popularity.
Fascism, according to Paxton, isn't a political ideology per se, it's more of a grass roots populist movement of people who have become dissatisfied with their representative government.
Similarly, MAGA isn't conservative. It's a populist movement.
Posted on 1/16/26 at 3:06 pm to Harry Boutte
So you and the rest of the proggies are the communists? Interesting.
Posted on 1/16/26 at 3:19 pm to Geekboy
That is extremely well written.
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