How to Break Fascism Where You Live (Legally, Peacefully, Relentlessly)

By Cliff Potts, CSO, and Editor-in-Chief of WPS News

Baybay City, Leyte, Philippines — May 7, 2026

Fascism rarely announces itself. It doesn’t need uniforms or slogans to function. In practice, it operates through permits, payrolls, zoning boards, selective enforcement, and informal understandings about who gets access and who does not. Even when pressure is dictated from Washington, D.C., enforcement is local. That reality creates the most important opportunity for resistance.

This essay opens a monthly series focused on lawful, peaceful methods for disrupting authoritarian control at the community level. Not through confrontation or spectacle, but through structure, persistence, and documentation. Fascism depends on speed, confusion, and compliance. It fails when forced to operate slowly, transparently, and under observation.

Mapping the Power You’re Not Supposed to Notice

Most people are taught to look at elections when they want to understand power. That is a mistake. Elections matter, but they are not where day-to-day control lives.

Real authority in most communities sits in places that attract little attention:

  • Planning commissions and zoning boards
  • Licensing authorities and permitting offices
  • Major local employers and their financiers
  • Media owners, advertisers, and informal gatekeepers
  • Prosecutors’ offices and enforcement priority setters

The first step in breaking authoritarian hold is to map these relationships. This is not about accusations or exposure. It is about clarity. Power that is visible becomes cautious. Power that is named becomes accountable.

Paper Trails Are a Weakness, Not a Strength

Authoritarian systems prefer discretion. They thrive on phone calls, urgency, and “understandings” that never appear in writing. Lawful transparency disrupts this preference.

Public records requests, open-meeting laws, and disclosure requirements exist precisely to slow abuse. Used consistently, they force decisions into daylight and create durable records that outlast news cycles and social media storms.

Request documents calmly. Share them without editorial flourish. Let the record speak. Bureaucracies can ignore outrage, but they cannot ignore paperwork without leaving evidence.

For readers seeking additional background on transparency and civic accountability tools, a consolidated reference point is available at https://endfascism.xyz.

Economic Control Is the Quiet Backbone of Compliance

Fear is effective, but dependency is better. Authoritarian influence is sustained by making people believe they cannot afford to resist.

Local economies often rely on a small number of employers, lenders, and contractors. When wages, benefits, and opportunities are kept opaque, workers are isolated and compliant by default.

Breaking this hold does not require strikes or dramatic gestures. It begins with shared information:

  • Wage transparency among peers
  • Open discussion of working conditions
  • Normalizing job mobility and skill portability

When people understand their options, leverage shifts. Compliance stops being automatic.

Parallel Systems Reduce Leverage Without Conflict

Power weakens when alternatives exist. Communities that rely entirely on captured systems are easy to control; communities with parallel services are not.

Effective parallel structures include:

  • Tool libraries and shared repair networks
  • Childcare and eldercare cooperatives
  • Food distribution outside monopolized channels
  • Informal transportation and logistics support

These efforts are not symbolic. They directly reduce the ability of any single institution to apply pressure. Fascism does not collapse when confronted; it collapses when bypassed.

Process Is Not Politeness—It Is Defense

Authoritarian governance depends on shortcuts. It moves quickly by ignoring procedure, discouraging questions, and framing oversight as obstruction.

The response is lawful friction:

  • Asking procedural questions at meetings
  • Requesting written justifications for decisions
  • Insisting on inspections, audits, and compliance checks where standards exist

This is not resistance theater. It is governance functioning as intended. Process forces power to slow down, document itself, and justify its actions.

Memory Is the Long Game

Fascism relies on exhaustion and forgetting. It assumes people will move on, lose track, or accept revised histories.

Communities win by archiving:

  • Decisions and reversals
  • Policy changes
  • Meeting minutes and correspondence
  • Timelines that show patterns over time

Preserved records become leverage later, when conditions change and accountability becomes possible again.

What This Series Is Designed to Do

This series will not call for violence, chaos, or collapse. It will not promise quick victories. Its purpose is narrower and more realistic: to show how authoritarian control becomes fragile when communities insist on transparency, build alternatives, share information, and remember.

Fascism is not defeated by shouting. It is defeated when it can no longer operate smoothly. That work begins locally, quietly, and within the law.

References (APA)

Bermeo, N. (2016). On democratic backsliding. Journal of Democracy, 27(1), 5–19.
Levitsky, S., & Ziblatt, D. (2018). How democracies die. Crown Publishing Group.
National Freedom of Information Coalition. (n.d.). Public records and open government principles.
Tilly, C. (2004). Social movements, 1768–2004. Paradigm Publishers.
V-Dem Institute. (n.d.). Varieties of democracy dataset and reports.

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