Richard W wrote: ↑Mon Feb 09, 2026 11:12 am
Torco wrote: ↑Mon Feb 09, 2026 11:05 am
"the holocaust" in english feels to me like it mostly means jews exterminated as part of the final solution. the nazis killed a lot more people than just jews, and i'm not sure the distinction matters ethically very much, so if it were me I'd go with "killed by the fascists".
And then you'd be considered a liar because you confounded Fascists and Nazis.
nazis are fascists. nazi is a category of fascist, innit ?
i don't buy that either
nazi or
fascist should only be reserved for the 1930s and 40s. even without knowing history, most of the times i hear "no he's not a fascist cause he's not italian and this isn't the 1930s" it comes from, well, fascists, so that's what *they* want us to think, but also knowing history it's easy to see that doing so legimitizes a bunch of fascists, and robs us of a useful term to analize and understand reality. the ustase are fascists, franquistas are fascists, the estado novo are fascists, petain was a fascist, the silver league was fascist, carlos keller was a fascist, garda de fier was fascist, the kkk is fascist, ezra pound was a fascist... i could go on. it's good and proper to understand these things as manifestations of a broader phenomenon, as opposed to isolated aberrations which are all sui generis and definitely have no relationship of any kind to anything that's going on in the here and now.
of course one mustn't be too broad either: fascist doesn't mean bad: fujimori was bad, but he wasn't a fascist [though he had some fascistoid tendencies]. neither was, i don't know, leopold the second or the slavers of the ivory coast. fascism is, as many things are, a spectrum, but the spectrum is more broad than 1927 italy to 1944 italy or whatever.