Revolutionary fascism by Erik Norling
I bought this book off Amazon because it was actually cheaper to buy there than in the original language at my local “dissident” bookshop. I suppose the Spanish edition is a little bit more refined but I did enjoy reading it in English, so far I can extract many points and arguments which I would like to develop into an essay. For one, the leftist attitudes of both early and late fascism, second the europeanism of the fascist propaganda machine and finally figures like Bombacci or Pavolini. The original socialist values of the national fascist party makes it look more fascist than the socialist party of the communist party itself. Being pro worker and wanting women to be more involved in political life and abandon old patriarchal values, without embracing feminism. Fascinating to say the least, it's curious to think about where would fascism position itself in the xxi century as so many of its intellectuals saw themselves on the left or at least far from the right. Fascism in many countries did end up becoming the capitalist last resort but in some countries it did not. In Italy, during the Italian social republic, Mussolini went back to his original socialist values, beginning the process of socialization and social progress with the exaltation of a common socialist front against both communism and capitalism. The ISR did indeed in 1943 finally declare war on its two enemies, capitalism and communism, even going as far as preferring a communist occupation than a capitalist one. This reminds me of how fascism has constantly had debates on which of the two is worse, but the obvious one for me is capitalism. Communism has a utopia the return to a primitive and communal world, something impossible Under Capitalism as it constantly ask for the constant progress of man.
Today's problems aren't due to cultural Marxism but due to capitalism. Contemporary Marxists are the sons of the capitalist cultural revolution after the call of Berlin, the new left is anti communist but postcapitalist. A postmodern bastard of the intellectual debates of anticapitalism, leading to absolute no change and the creation of new problems. The cases of LGTB issues and trans rights will be superceded eventually by the AI revolution and transhumanism. Fascism is much more of an anti-capitalist ideology than the new left but (only fascism in its purest modernist form) I still prefer the leftover the right. The right tries to preserve the non existent and the pointless, this has to be broken down, and create something new from the rubble. Maybe Franco Freda was right maybe Mussolini was right in begging the question wether the land empires should have joined to fight the sea ones. Was a communist-national revolutionary alliance possible? Certainly not under AH. One day we will see capitalism defeated under a new visionary left, but only time will tell. This book is a bible to understand what went wrong but also to see what could have occurred