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Rick Massimo's avatar

Question 5: Nazis took over Germany in the 1930s. Do you think that happened because they won in the marketplace of ideas? Because it was the right call for Germany at the time?

Question 5a: Nazis stopped running Germany in 1945. Do you think that happened because the German people got together and talked things over in an open good-faith discussion and decided it was no longer the way to go?

You couldn’t make better advertisements for the importance of a liberal arts education than just pointing at the really, really simple things about the actual world that they’re too stupid to understand and too full of themselves to learn.

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Ian Douglas Rushlau's avatar

At what point does this become an exercise of removing ourselves from any forum in which fascists find us?

Is Substack like a publishing house? The manufacturer of printing presses? A subscription based courier service?

I'm not sure what the right analogy is, let alone the right response, but I view all electronic media as tools, and those tools can be used to promote fascism.

The platforms that facilitate the widest distribution will attract fascists. I'd like to say we can find a platform that will be sustainable, easy to use, widely accessible, and be free from fascist infiltration. I don't know that anyone has quite squared that circle yet.

What concerns me is the reflexive appeal of the notion that if we choose to remove ourselves from Substack, as writers and readers (providers and consumers of content), we can say we are **sending a message** to those who offer material assistance to fascists that WE won't be a party to it, and in so doing hope to make various owners of electronic media less likely to allow fascists to (metaphorically) rent space. Maybe I might feel somehow less complicit in giving fascists oxygen. Maybe less sullied.

But I'm still stuck with the nagging feeling that all the fascists have to do is show up, be their despicable selves, and anyone who opposes fascism, anyone disgusted by the presence of fascists, will decamp to the next supposed haven, only to be chased off again and again, each time the fascists appear.

It doesn't sit well with me, the idea that if we find a platform that works, fascists can cause us to scatter, to become less visible, less accessible to one another, and ultimately, to prompt us to dispense with effective tools of mass communication because fascists also find a way to make use of them, to subvert them.

Fascists use roads and sidewalks. Should I not use roads and sidewalks? Or, should I try to find the most effective ways to make appearing in public, participating in our polity, so aversive to fascists, so utterly unwelcoming, that they find no purchase anywhere in our proximity?

The fascists have been an odious feature of American society for more than a century, and the constituent elements from which fascism germinated have festered for much longer. We are not the first generation faced with this threat, and this puzzle- how do we eradicate fascism? But we need to view this as work that will likely take many more decades, in many settings, without respite.

I don't see how this is accomplished by surrendering one space after another to the fascists.

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