Torco wrote: ↑Wed Dec 22, 2021 8:13 pm
man, I wonder if pinochet's anti-politician dealio was informed by degaulle's ideas. i take it degaulle was like super famous amongst enthusiasts of military matters, no?
No idea! I do know de Gaulle was popular in South America; there was even a particular connection with Chile. (He was a personal friend of Eduardo Frei, I believe)
In some ways de Gaulle was very different from Pinochet: he opposed American imperalism pretty strongly (that's why he was popular in Latin America, I believe), generally in favor of interventionist policies and a planned economy, and I think more of a democrat at heart. (I know Pinochet put a fair bit of odd authoritarian provisions in the Chilean constitution, which isn't something that really happened here.)
Of course there are similarities too. Both men admired Franco, for instance.
You need 500 elected officials
wait wait... what? la patrie de voltaire, the OG anti-absolute monarchy dudderinos, you have this rule?
Yep. Actually, de Gaulle didn't feel it was necessary. But everyone in his entourage was afraid the people would elect Lord Buckethead or something.
anyway, have you gotten *close calls* to electing random fascists? like, I don't mean how sometimes the entirety of the right-wing of an otherwise perfectly liberal democracy sometimes get scared and support fascists, like it happens everywhere all the time, but I mean a non-ruling-class sponsored just random fash? (which, honestly, are the dangerous ones I think).
Jean-Marie Le Pen and his Front National got very popular, starting in the 80s. He was 'random' in the sense that he never got serious support from the establishment (a few nudges here and there, though, as the major parties used him for political backstabbing.) His electorate was generally non-ruling class. He made it to the second round of the presidential election in 2002.
His daughter Marine Le Pen and the Rassemblement National (same difference!) made it to the second round in 2017 -- a more serious threat this one; her score was a lot better.
Again, her electorate is largely working or middle-class and she isn't supported by the establishment much.
The main fascist may still be Eric Zemmour, who has some more upper class support.
My own take on this is that as long as the business classes prefer more traditional conservative types to fascists, we're not in any real danger.