Impossibility: It Couldn't
Happen
excerpted from the book
Friendly Fascism
The New Face of Power in
America
by Bertram Gross
South End Press, 1980, paper
p331
Karl Popper
""It can't happen here" is always wrong: a dictatorship
can happen anywhere."
p331
IMPOSSIBILITY: IT COULDN'T HAPPEN
The thought that some form of new fascism
might possibly-or even probably-emerge in America is more than
unpleasant. For many people in other countries, it is profoundly
disturbing; for Americans, it is a source of stabbing anguish.
For those who still see America as a source of inspiration or
leadership, it would mean the destruction of the last best hope
on earth. Even for those who regard America as the center of world
reaction, it suggests that things can become still worse than
they are.
An immediate-and all too human-reaction
among Americans, and friends of America, is to deny the possibility.
In other countries it might happen-but not here. In the Communist
world, dictatorships of the proletariat or the Party . . . Military
juntas in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Nigeria, and many other places
. . . Other dictatorial styles in India, Pakistan, Iran, Saudi
Arabia, and the Philippines . . . But nothing like this in the
prosperous, enlightened nations of Western civilization and the
Judeo-Christian tradition. Above all, not in the United States
of America, not in the land of the free and the home of the brave
. . .
But why not? Why is it impossible?
Many of the arguments purporting to demonstrate
impossibility actually demonstrate little more than an unwillingness
to "think the unthinkable." Some people try to protect
their sensibilities behind a tangle of terminological disputation.
The word "fascism," they say, is an emotion-laden term
of abuse, as though the brutal, inhuman realities behind other
terms-whether "manipulatory authoritarianism," "bureaucratic
collectivism," or "military junta"-do not also
evoke deep human emotions. Some people argue that the future threat
in America is socialist collectivism, not fascism, implying that
those who detect a fascist danger are spreading leftist propaganda
for the purpose of bringing on a different form of despotism.
Others merely react to exaggerated claims that fascism is already
here or is inevitable.
Nonetheless, there are at least three
serious arguments used by those who think that it could not happen
here.
One of the most subtle arguments is "American
capitalism does not need fascism."
On this point, let me quote from Corliss
Lamont, who grew up as a member of one of the families most closely
associated with the Morgans and other titans of American banking:
The capitalist class in the United States
does not need a fascist regime in order
to maintain its dominance. The radical and revolutionary movements
are weak and disunited. A large majority of the trade unions are
conservative, and are actually part of the establishment . . .
I do not see in the offing any constellation of forces that could
put fascism across here.
To buttress his case, Lamont points out
that the threat to American civil liberties was much greater during
the periods of the notorious Palmer raids after World War I and
of McCarthyism after World War II. He also cites various judicial
victories in recent civil liberties cases. Unfortunately, he does
not deal directly with the structure of the "capitalist class"
and the Establishment, nor with any of the domestic and international
challenges to American capitalism. Moreover, his thesis on the
weakness of "radical and revolutionary movements" and
the conservatism of trade unions is a double-edged argument. True,
these factors are no serious challenge to capitalist dominance.
By the same token, they could not be regarded as serious obstacles
to creeping fascism. On this matter, Lamont leaves himself an
escape clause to the effect that he does not see the necessary
constellation of forces "in the offing."
A similar escape clause has been carved
out by Theodore Draper. In a scholarly critique of an earlier
article of mine on the subject, he added as an afterthought that
he did not intend to give "assurances that we will not follow
the German pattern of history into some form of fascism."
And then he added that although the Republic is not "immediately
in danger, if worse comes to worse, we may yet get some form of
fascism.
A more widespread argument is "American
democracy is too strong."
It is true, of course, that old-fashioned
fascism never took root in a country with a solid tradition and
history of constitutional democracy. The kind of democracy that
grew up in both England and the United States was too much of
a barrier to the Oswald Mosleys, the Huey Longs, and the Father
Coughlins of a past generation. Even in France, the rise of the
French fascists under Petain occurred only after military conquest
by the Nazis.
But this kind of argument boils down to
nothing less than the identification of obstacles. It provides
no evidence to suggest that these obstacles are immovable objects
that cannot be overcome or circumvented in the future.
In the early 1970s this argument took
a more exhilarating-albeit occasionally flatulent-form. The democratic
forces are becoming stronger.
In The Greening of America, Charles Reich
predicted a "revolution of the new generation." He saw
in the counterculture of youth a movement that would break through
the metal and plastic forms of the Corporate State (which he held
was already here) and bring forth a new flowering of the human
spirit. This optimistic spirit was repeated in global terms by
Jean Francois Revel a year later. In Without Marx and Jesus, Revel
pointed out that dissent has always thrived in America and that
the new dissenters are building not merely a counterculture but
a counter-society that rejects nationalism, inequality, racial
and sexual discrimination, and all forms of authoritarianism.
As the first and best hope of the world, America will soon produce
"a homo novus, a new man very different from other men."
I have never laughed at these salvationist
predictions. They are based on an honest perception of many of
the things that are not merely good, but wonderful, in my country.
In fact, as I demonstrate in "The Democratic Logic in Action"
(chapter 20), neither Reich nor Revel, nor other celebrants of
America's potentialities have done sufficient justice to the variety
of these hopeful currents. But they have tended to exaggerate
their strength, perhaps on the theory that a strongly presented
prophecy might be self-fulfilling.
I think it imperative to articulate more
fully hopeful visions and to ground them on the more hopeful parts
of the present. But in doing so, it would be highly misleading
to ignore the fact that the new democratic currents represent
a threat to all those elements in the Establishment that look
forward to a more integrated power structure. This means conflicts
whose outcomes cannot be predicted. Revel himself writes that
America is "composed of two antagonistic camps of equal size-the
dissenters and the conservatives." Writing before the rise
of the new Radical Right, he then hazarded the guess that "the
odds are in favor of the dissenters." Nonetheless, he accepted
the possibility of the authoritarian suppression, sidetracking,
or co-opting of the dissenters. I think he would agree with me
today that if this should happen there would be many subspecies
of the new man-and new woman-faceless oligarchs, humanoid technocrats,
and comatose addicts of loveless sex, drugs, madness, and cults.
A third argument is that "While possible,
a new form of fascism is too unlikely to be taken seriously."
I see this view as a tribute that blindness
pays to vision. It is merely a sophisticated way of conceding
possibility while justifying inaction. The outside chance, after
all, rarely deserves to be a focus of continuing attention. In
terms of its implications, therefore, "unlikely" may
be the equivalent of either "impossible" or "so
what?"
In daily life, of course, people and groups
do take precautionary action to protect themselves or others against
some unlikely events. This is the basis of the vast insurance
industry in the capitalist world, which provides protection for
some people against some of the monetary losses resulting from
ill health, accidents, theft, fires, earthquakes, or floods. In
all these cases of unlikely "bads," not insurance but
prevention is the best protection. In the case of friendly fascism,
it is the only protection.
Yet prevention is always difficult and
requires entry into many fields. The prevention of disease and
the prolongation of life go far beyond mere medical services;
they involve nutrition, exercise, housing, peace of mind, and
the control of pollution. The prevention of theft and corruption
goes far beyond anything that can be done by police, courts, and
jailers; it involves employment opportunities, working conditions,
the reduction of discrimination and alienation, and a cleaning
of higher-level corruption. The record is also discouraging in
the case of all the unlikely major calamities of the modern age:
power blackouts, the disposal of radioactive wastes from nuclear
power plants, the control of plutonium from fast-breeder reactors,
the spread of nuclear weapons, and the escalation in ever-deadlier
forms of nuclear, chemical, and bacteriological overkill. Here
preventive action spreads into other fields, going far beyond
anything that can be done by "fail-safe" mechanisms.
It involves nothing less than alternative forms of energy, human
as well as solar, and the destruction of the deadliest weapons,
if not the elimination of war itself as a mode of resolving conflicts.
There are two natural reactions in the
face of the difficulties of prevention. One is to push the possibility
into the background by mathematically based arguments that the
statistical probability is very low. The other is to exaggerate
both the horror and the probability of the calamities to be avoided,
justifying such exaggeration on the grounds that it alone can
move people to action.
I cannot accept either. As in the following
chapters, I prefer to deal with preventive action directly. I
do so because in my considered judgment, the coming of some new
form of fascism in the United States- and other First World countries-is
not only more likely than the extreme catastrophe, but it would
also contribute to conditions under which most of the others would
become less unlikely. At times, I find myself saying that friendly
fascism is a two-to-one probability well before the end of the
century. Then I stop and remind myself that in diagnosing broad
historical trends no quantitative calculus is really possible.
A more balanced statement is that friendly-or even unfriendly-fascism
is a truly significant, not an insignificant possibility. Perhaps
it is even highly probable.
INEVITABILITY: IT WILL HAPPEN
When Herbert Marcuse writes about "incipient
fascism," when Kenneth Lamott used ``para-fascism" to
describe California as the "distant warning system for the
rest of the United States," when Michael Parenti talks about
"creeping fascism," the main purpose is to identify
present tendencies and future dangers. Similar use might be made
of "proto-fascism" or-better yet-"pre-fascism."
These are unwhispered words of warning, often engulfed by the
vast silences on such subjects by the mass and elite media.
But the ambiguity of these words is often
a weakness, one not to be overcome by stridency. They are wide
open to anyone's interpretation that what creeps down the road
will necessarily get to the road's end, that the latent must become
full-blown. The "womb of history" metaphor used so vigorously
by Marx tends to suggest that a little fascism is like a little
pregnancy. With a strange innocence concerning the possibility
of miscarriage or abortion, it can then be assumed that the pre-
and the para- must eventually become the real thing itself.
But even without the use of such words
I have found that any strong argument on the possibility of neofascism
in America leads many people to conclude that it is inevitable.
For some, both the logical case and the empirical evidence in
present-day tendencies appear overwhelming. The fact that friendly
fascism may come in a variety of forms and circumstances-rather
than in some single guise and scenario-strengthens the sense of
high probability. For others, perhaps, the judgment of inevitability
heightens whatever masochistic pleasure people may get from premonitions
of doom, or provides justification for personal escapism from
any form of political activism or commitment. For still others,
I suspect, the sense of inevitability is intensified by disenchantment
with liberalism, socialism, and communism. Many of the very people
who in previous periods were attacked as agents of "creeping
socialism" or "creeping communism,, now feel that if
either were to arrive in America-unlikely though this possibility
may be-the result might not be too much different from the fruition
of "creeping fascism." Indeed the possible convergence
of neofascist state-supported capitalism and high-technology state
socialism tends to give the impression that there are few alternatives
to some form of repressive collectivism as the profile of man's
fate by the end of this century.
The power of modern determinism lies in
its "if-then" formulation: "If one does A, then
B will result." In truly scientific terms the "will
result" is generally a probability statement. But in the
real world of political or managerial control, there is always
a strong tendency to let the probabilistic tone fade into the
background and to exploit the propagandistic potentialities of
a more deterministic mood. In the work of many self-styled Marxists,
this has led to an interesting contradiction. On the one hand,
the collapse of capitalism under the battering ram of a proletarian
revolution is often seen as inevitable. On the other hand, the
leaders of the working class must not merely ride the waves of
an inevitable future. Rather, they must work strenuously to bring
the inevitable into being. Expressing the essence of a long stream
of philosophic thought from Kant through and past Hegel, Engels
put this powerfully in his cryptic thesis that "freedom is
the recognition of necessity." While anti-Marxists are always
eager to attack the alleged determinism of Karl Marx, they are
rarely unloath to voice their own form of determinism. Thus Friedrich
Hayek vigorously argues that (1) it was the socialist trends in
Germany that led to German fascism, (2) a little bit of socialism
leads inevitably to large-scale collectivism, and (3) socialism
inevitably leads to fascism. In other words: "If s, then
f."
Finally, in modern science there is a
large strain of hope and faith in the eventual discovery and elucidation
of deterministic laws of social control. B. F. Skinner has expressed
this hope and faith more frankly than most of his colleagues in
psychology and other disciplines. His critics have argued cogently
that his views have a totalitarian bent-and I have already suggested
how Skinnerian reinforcements could be used to help economize
on terror and develop what Stephen Spender once called "fascism
without tears." Another critical comment is in order, however.
The very idea of deterministic control tends to spread inner feelings
concerning the inevitability of some repressive form of collectivism-
whether Skinner's type or some other. In turn, the sense of inevitability
tends to undermine any serious efforts to develop alternatives
or fight. The prediction that "It must happen"-particularly
if the subjective feeling is more powerful than the rationalistic
qualifications and "ifs" that most self-respecting intellectuals
will automatically tack on to it- can contribute to a sense of
hopelessness and the apathetic acceptance of the unfolding logic.
It thus holds forth the potentiality of possibly-not inevitably-becoming
a self-confirming prophecy.
p337
IRREVERSIBILITY: ETERNAL SERVITUDE OR HOLOCAUST
To shake people out of apathy toward some
future danger, the self-destroying prophecy is often attempted.
Its essence is the confident prediction of doom, either confined
or unconfined. Thus the coming of neofascism to the United States
may be seen as the maturation of an invincible oligarchy, or even
as prelude to the global holocaust of all-out nuclear warfare.
I am peculiarly sensitive to this temptation.
When a few of my students argued a decade ago that fascism would
shake Americans from torpor and prepare the way for a more humanist
society, I countered one irrationality with another by arguing
that the "improbability of any effective internal resistance"
to neofascism would doom all hopes of a humanist future. I drew
an exaggerated parallel with the past by pointing out that after
all serious internal resistance had been liquidated by the German,
Japanese, and Italian fascists, "the only effective anti-fascism
was defeat by external powers." Since the "only war
that could defeat a neofascist America would be a nuclear war,
a holocaust from which no anti-fascist victors would emerge,"
I concluded with the prophecy: "Once neofascism arrives,
the only choice would be fascist or dead." 6
My phrasing at that time was an echo of
Franklin D. Roosevelt's wartime rhetoric: "We, and all others
who believe as deeply as we do, would rather die on our feet than
live on our knees."-itself borrowed from the exhortation
of the communist leader, Dolores Ibarruri ("La Pasionaria")
in rallying the Loyalist forces against the Franco uprising in
Spain. It was an effort to suggest "better dead than fascist."
The aim in each case, of course, was to stress the urgency of
vigorous and dedicated opposition to tyranny-indeed, to give up
one's life, if necessary, to prevent the victory of tyranny.
Today, while still agreeing with Roosevelt
that there arc things worth dying for, I would rephrase the ancient
rhetoric this way: "Better alive and fighting tyranny in
any form than dead and unable to fight." If neofascism should
come to America, people may have to learn how to fight on their
knees. The guiding rhetoric should be Churchill's statement that
"We shall fight in the fields and in the streets; we shall
fight in the hills; we shall never surrender." ~ To paraphrase:
"We shall face
p349
William H. Hastie
"Democracy is a process, not a static condition. It is becoming
rather than being. It can easily be lost, but is never fully won.
Its essence is eternal struggle."
p351
"Sure, we'll have fascism, but it will come disguised as
Americanism." This famous statement has been attributed in
many forms to Senator Huey P. Long, the Louisiana populist with
an affinity for the demagogues of classic European fascism. If
he were alive today, I am positive he would add the words "and
democracy."
p356
Mary Parker Follett
"We are not wholly patriotic when we are working with all
our heart for America merely; we are truly patriotic only when
we are working also that America may take her place worthily and
helpfully in the world of nations . . . Interdependence is the
keynote of the relations of nations as it is the keynote of the
relations of individuals within nations."
p359
James Fenimore Cooper
"The vulgar charge that the tendency of democracies is to
leveling, meaning to drag all down to the level of the lowest,
is singularly untrue; its real tendency being to elevate the depressed
to a condition not unworthy of their manhood."
p359
Louis D. Brandeis
"We can have democracy in this country or we can have great
wealth in a few hands, but we can't have both."
p382
Mahatma Ghandhi
"For me patriotism is the same as humanity. I am patriotic
because I am human and humane. It is not exclusive. I will not
hurt England or Germany to serve India . . . My patriotism is
inclusive and admits of no enmity or ill-will."
p383
George Washington, Farewell Address
"Guard against the impostures of pretended patriotism."
p384
In his Militarism, USA, a sober critique based on years of experience
in the U.S. Marine Corps, Colonel James A. Donovan:
identifies the dangerous patriot: "the one who drifts into
chauvinism and exhibits blind enthusiasm for military actions.
He is a defender of militarism and its ideals of war and glory.
Chauvinism is a proud and bellicose form of patriotism . . . which
identifies numerous enemies who can only be dealt with through
military power and which equates the national honor with military
victory."
p384
In The Reason for Democracy, published after his death in 1976,
Kalman Silvert of New York University provided another pungent
description of false patriots:
"People who wrap themselves in the flag and proclaim the
sanctity of the nation are usually racists, contemptuous of the
poor and dedicated to keeping the community of 'ins' small and
pure of blood, spirit and mind."
p386
In Germany today the true patriots are those who, among other
things, are trying to come to grips with the essence of past Nazi
horrors. In the Soviet Union the true patriots are those who try
to understand the nature and roots of Stalinism and the Stalinist
legacy, rather than simply uttering some words about "the
cult of personality" and running away from the subject. In
America the true patriots are those who face the fact that Americans
have always been both right and wrong and, instead of trying to
squelch criticism, calmly take the position "My country right
and wrong." They are those who defend the good, the true,
and the beautiful in American life. They are willing to take risks
in attacking what is wrong...
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