this post was submitted on 14 Nov 2024
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[–] Maxxie@lemmy.blahaj.zone 16 points 19 hours ago* (last edited 19 hours ago) (1 children)

Breaking the rules isn't fascism though. Fascism is fascism.

What do you think is a more ethical choice:

a) uphold the law, knowing it will let fascist come to power and kill thousands

a) break the law and stop him

[–] enbyecho@lemmy.world -5 points 19 hours ago (5 children)

Breaking the rules isn’t fascism though. Fascism is fascism.

It is precisely fascism. It's ignoring the rule of law to achieve authoritarian aims. Why is it ok when you agree with the outcome and not ok when you don't? But way more importantly, once you do it you cannot go back. If Biden did this and Trump ended up winning - make no mistake Biden has no authority to remove candidates from ballots - then Trump would feel completely justified in jailing his opponents.

What do you think is a more ethical choice

A. Because the premise of your choice is flawed. You do not know that breaking the law would stop him. You do not know -with certainty- that not breaking the law would result in that outcome. But we do know that being authoritarian to achieve aims we believe in is no better than people we disagree with doing the exact same. What would happen if Biden was successful in stopping Trump but then, because we wouldn't ever keep unfettered presidential power... right? RIGHT? We're the "good" guys... what would happen if MAGA Republicans won in 2028? I doubt we'd ever have another election again.

[–] sudoer777@lemmy.ml 1 points 10 hours ago (1 children)

What makes a society good is being inclusive of everyone regardless of how they were born and working through cooperation to achieve goals and look out for each other. A society where people are intentionally neglected for another group's economic gain is not a desirable society unless you're a fascist. However, ideologies are not people and ideologies that promote an unequal society do not need to be tolerated, and people who pose a danger due to their actions to the people around them in a society that would otherwise be more fair do not need to be tolerated either.

Neither authoritarianism nor ignoring the rule of law are inherently bad. In reality, law isn't words written on a piece of paper - it's people with political motives that hold authority over law enforcement and the criminal justice system. The words themselves hold no authority, and they depend on the people to actually follow them, so the people can collectively choose to ignore them or change their meaning and now suddenly the law is different even though the words didn't change one bit. The political motives the people who decide the law have generally favor a society that supports corruption and inequality, so there is nothing inherently wrong with breaking the law, especially if it makes everyone's lives better.

Fascism is a specific type of authoritarianism that basically does the opposite to a society of what it should look like. Utilizing authority to make society better for basically everyone is not fascism. Utilizing authority to dehumanize a subset of people for the economic gain of a "superior race" is fascism.

[–] enbyecho@lemmy.world 2 points 1 hour ago

I appreciate your thoughtful comment.

Neither authoritarianism nor ignoring the rule of law are inherently bad.

Look, I understand the point you are trying to make. Roughly that being authoritarian to achieve "good" ends is ok. The wrinkle that you overlook is that there are many wildly varying viewpoints about what is "good". Being "inclusive of everyone" for example, is something that most Christo-fascists would abhor, their bible notwithstanding. Neglecting people for economic gain is practically a religion in itself for some people.

What all that boils down to is this: if one group ignores the rule of law because they are "right" then the other group feels fully justified in doing the same. And because we have a democracy and that democracy doesn't enshrine progressive ideas into law, we can't ensure groups with ideas we find abhorrent don't use our precedent to impose those ideas on us.

Fascism is a specific type of authoritarianism that basically does the opposite to a society of what it should look like.

Not according to fascists. Do you see the problem? You just said that fascist authoritarianism is ok - from their perspective.

Utilizing authority to make society better for basically everyone is not fascism

Hitler firmly believed he was making "society better for basically everyone". The Christian Nationalists and White Supremacists firmly believe their getting into power via a Trump administration will make "society better for basically everyone".

I know many of us would love to believe that there is an objective truth and that our beliefs about a good, just and equitable society are universal and objectively correct at a human level. I believe in the "arc of the moral universe" that is so but there is no way that I can use the mechanisms of oppression that I detest to enforce that belief on others and have that enforcement be successful.

Have you ever tried to negotiate or educate someone when you are angry? Like say your neighbor keeps playing loud music and you really want them to stop. If you come out yelling at them and are visibly angry you -might- get them to stop, but you have made an enemy. If you approach them in an open-minded way that acknowledges their rights and autonomy you have a much better chance of a constructive dialog that gets you what you want.

It's hard to think like this right now, I fully understand. We are all angry and frustrated as hell. Maybe it helps to be reminded that we still have a lot of power, especially at the local level... and that we are playing the long game.

[–] Maxxie@lemmy.blahaj.zone 2 points 12 hours ago* (last edited 8 hours ago) (1 children)

What would happen if Biden was successful in stopping Trump but then, because we wouldn’t ever keep unfettered presidential power… right? RIGHT? We’re the “good” guys… what would happen if MAGA Republicans won in 2028? I doubt we’d ever have another election again.

From the standpoint of democracy that wouldn't be ideal, but why is republicans having 2(4) years of unchecked power better? They don't give a shit and gonna do a lot more damage to it.

Why is it ok when you agree with the outcome and not ok when you don’t?

Because the side coming to power wants to gleefully deport, repress and kill people, and the other one much less so. The good guys are "good" not because they respect the rules, but because they believe in humane values, in ending their fists when the others' faces begins and all that good stuff. The fascists are bad not because they break the law, but because they believe and want to do fascism.

If the rules are unjust then breaking them is an ethical imperative. And Trump not being in jail is frankly a crime against lady liberty.

[–] enbyecho@lemmy.world 1 points 1 hour ago

If the rules are unjust then breaking them is an ethical imperative.

This thinking is precisely why Jan 6 happened and will happen again if we validate that thinking by doing it ourselves.

The fascists are bad not because they break the law, but because they believe and want to do fascism.

This is true. But if you want fascists to do fascism more and with more righteous enthusiasm, then adopt their tactics. Grievance is part of the ethos there. Many MAGAts truly believe that the Biden administration was "going after" them and that we liberals are an existential threat that justified any means at their disposal. This is the problem with violence and authoritarian approaches in general - the more you do it the more the other side feels the must do it.

And Trump not being in jail is frankly a crime against lady liberty.

Yes... and it's an insult, unjust and highlights the double standard for the wealthy and politically powerful. But strictly speaking it's not a crime.

The good guys are “good” not because they respect the rules, but because they believe in humane values

You know what is a humane value? Respecting other people even when you vehemently disagree with them. Acknowledging that they are human beings and have a right to their thoughts and ideas even when you feel they are wrong. Because if you do not you are tacitly agreeing to their thinking that YOU are wrong. You are giving that perspective credence and the harder you push back the more you are allowing them to justify suppression of YOUR ideas.

I happen to think MAGA zealots are absolutely misguided and ignorant. But I can see how they got that way - racism, bigotry and misogyny borne of christo-fascist white supremacy. And what that means ultimately is that the people themselves are not the enemy, the ideas are. You can shape ideas through education and by being open and accepting of people. You can't do it by rejecting people.

[–] TheHighRoad@lemmy.world 9 points 18 hours ago (1 children)

Uh, Trump feels completely justified in jailing his enemies already. Will it happen? I'm not excited to wait and find out.

[–] enbyecho@lemmy.world -1 points 18 hours ago* (last edited 17 hours ago) (2 children)

True. But the one thing we've got going for us is that it is demonstrably wrong and we didn't fall into the trap of proving it was justified.

Edit: well at least two people think it's ok to use authoritarian political power to counter authoritarian political power. Do you really think that ever works out? Note that this is very distinct from something like civil war or overthrowing the government. It's doing the exact thing you don't want your opponent to do.

[–] TheOtherThyme@lemmy.world 1 points 2 hours ago (1 children)

Yeah, ww2 was settled by a nice peaceful sit-in.

[–] enbyecho@lemmy.world 1 points 52 minutes ago

After Hitler came to power, invaded multiple countries and started murdering millions.

It's easy to look back and say, "well, if we had just taken Hitler out none of that would have happened" but at the time - before the war - that was less clear. Many in Germany enthusiastically supported him and it's helpful to be reminded of why: The Treaty of Versailles at the end of WWI was highly punitive. The German people felt rather justified for WWI and reacted with anger to the treaty - it's widely acknowledged as a significant contributing factor in WWII in that it opened the door to the kind of grievance Hitler was selling. By the time more people understood his aims and means it was too late and there was no alternative to war.

Now you might say well then, that just means we should have removed the Trump threat by any means necessary. I'm very sympathetic to that idea but I have a hard time accepting that for one simple reason: the lessons of WWI and II show that grievance is central to the authoritarian narrative. Direct confrontation that feeds that grievance only inflames it. A better course of action for the Democrats would have been to acknowledge the pain of wealth disparity all Americans feel and acknowledge our common goals. Instead we lent credence to the grievance and opened the door for Trump to capitalize on it.

[–] TheHighRoad@lemmy.world 5 points 17 hours ago (1 children)

Tis a risky game, doing what's right.

[–] enbyecho@lemmy.world 1 points 17 hours ago (1 children)

"what’s right" is, sadly not an agreed-upon concept.

[–] TheHighRoad@lemmy.world 3 points 16 hours ago (1 children)

That may be true, but I happen to believe that truth does exist. All we can do is hold on to it.

[–] enbyecho@lemmy.world 1 points 31 minutes ago

The issue is that people confuse opinion with truth and in general are too lazy or uneducated to proactively make the distinction clear.

[–] Manifish_Destiny@lemmy.world 5 points 18 hours ago (1 children)

Are you really achieving authoritarian aims if the end goal is not authoritarian?

[–] enbyecho@lemmy.world -1 points 18 hours ago

Ah, the benevolent dictator fallacy. Because no person or party would ever abuse power or fail to give it up once the "aim" is achieved. There certainly would be no expansion in what the "aim" is. And definitely the people we agree with are always good.

[–] putainsdetoiles@lemmy.world 4 points 18 hours ago (1 children)

I doubt we’d ever have another election again.

With Trump in office, and Project 2025 in the pipeline, I doubt we're ever going to have another election anyway.

[–] enbyecho@lemmy.world -1 points 17 hours ago

I doubt we’re ever going to have another election anyway.

I sometimes feel that way. But I still have some faith in people, particularly Gen Z. I believe after the shit hits the fan and keeps hitting it for 4 years, that we'll turn this around. And because we didn't agree to make presidents kings we can actually do that.