• @Zombiepirate@lemmy.world
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    1325 months ago

    It’s not that they got hurt.

    It’s that fascism is an engine of hatred that burns minorities for power.

    Think about bullies: they aren’t attacking people who hurt them; they’re attacking people to make themselves seem dominant.

    • @bstix
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      5 months ago

      You have a good point, but I’d like to add that the group mentality is probably different from what a single bully would do or feel.

      I think that this comes from these people being scared of not fitting in and from not having anything in common with the other people who don’t fit it, so instead of uniting for a common goal, they can only find unity in being against something that they have in common not being. That’s why they attack minorities of all kinds.

      It also explains the hypocrisy. The individual isn’t afraid of abortions, homosexuals or mexicans. Sometimes they need to accept those on an individual level, but they still go along with the anti-politics because it’s not about themselves personally.

      Facism isn’t just based on simple hatred. It’s mostly based on fear of not fitting in, because the individual is well aware of their own not fitting in.

    • @zaphod@lemmy.ca
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      5 months ago

      Fascism is also an ideology of fear. It requires an enemy that’s both weak and existentially threatening in order to frighten and divide people.

      For the modern right that enemy is now the trans community. And make no mistake, it’s cynical and deliberate. Alt right figures sought and found the enemy they needed to galvanize voters, and now they’re stoking that fear as best they can.