lemurien
Critical Thinker
- Joined
- May 18, 2011
- Messages
- 402
I have noticed that historical facts keep changing as time passes by.
What I learned when I was young is not true any longer.
No matter which subject, whether it is physics, chemistry, biology or history, I am in a constant state of confusion and googling day in day out about things I thought I knew. Of course, it is very rewarding but I do feel quite stupid at times.
Now I just finished reading Isabel Allende's 'Of Love And Shadows' which is a well-written novel from the days of General Augusto Pinochet in Chile. I do remember the coup, as I was in Inti Illimani's concert the day after.
(It was a Chilean group playing traditional and revolutionary music)
Now, after reading the book, I started googling about Chile, the Chigago Boys, the embargo and the economical miracle...also about the desaperecidos, the torture, mass murders and the international organization Condor that the military juntas of the different countries had set up to assassinate their political enemies wherever they might be.
Of the modern leaders, who would you call a fascist and why?
At the time it was clear the General Pinochet was a fascist.
He was very nationalistic, he saw Foreign Enemies everywhere (Cuba did play some games in Chile, true), he reigned with iron hand, jailed, tortured and killed all opposition and more.
He he gave foreign capital free entry and held copper nationalized.
"Fascism is hostile to the concepts of laissez-faire capitalism, free trade, economic individualism, materialism, and hostile to bourgeois culture".
(wiki)
I would like to know now, why is he not considered a fascist?
Is it only because he had close ties with the US and Nixon did not want to be in collaboration with somebody who is called a fascist?
Of the leaders of today, who would you call a fascist and why?
What I learned when I was young is not true any longer.
No matter which subject, whether it is physics, chemistry, biology or history, I am in a constant state of confusion and googling day in day out about things I thought I knew. Of course, it is very rewarding but I do feel quite stupid at times.
Now I just finished reading Isabel Allende's 'Of Love And Shadows' which is a well-written novel from the days of General Augusto Pinochet in Chile. I do remember the coup, as I was in Inti Illimani's concert the day after.
(It was a Chilean group playing traditional and revolutionary music)
Now, after reading the book, I started googling about Chile, the Chigago Boys, the embargo and the economical miracle...also about the desaperecidos, the torture, mass murders and the international organization Condor that the military juntas of the different countries had set up to assassinate their political enemies wherever they might be.
Of the modern leaders, who would you call a fascist and why?
At the time it was clear the General Pinochet was a fascist.
He was very nationalistic, he saw Foreign Enemies everywhere (Cuba did play some games in Chile, true), he reigned with iron hand, jailed, tortured and killed all opposition and more.
He he gave foreign capital free entry and held copper nationalized.
"Fascism is hostile to the concepts of laissez-faire capitalism, free trade, economic individualism, materialism, and hostile to bourgeois culture".
(wiki)
I would like to know now, why is he not considered a fascist?
Is it only because he had close ties with the US and Nixon did not want to be in collaboration with somebody who is called a fascist?
Of the leaders of today, who would you call a fascist and why?
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