Over the last 3+ decades, I've watched the Republican party bring fascism to the brink of victory again, a mere 60 years after its defeat in WWII.

Aided, hand-in-hand, by the post-communist, mafia-state apparatuses of Russia & China - countries the GOP spent the last 100 years using as bogeymen against US voters who wanted better services from their own national government - & by the multi-national corporations that funded the GOP & were rewarded with dismantling of anti-monopoly & FCC laws.

Obviously fascism has still been around, operating in the US and around the world.

I think of "defeat" of fascism more in terms of the way our bodies defeat staph infections or other bacterial overgrowths. Our skin lives with these harmful bacteria always, but a healthy system uses healthier bacteria to keep them in check, at a low enough level that it doesn't kill the whole body.

As Biden's response to Gaza & the GOP's racist border provocation shows, we don't have enough good bacteria.

I'm stunned at the lack of society-wide pushback this has received, within my lifetime. Nazis were loathed by everyone I knew except my uncle, who my mom told me used to be her favorite brother until she realized he was a secret Nazi sympathizer.

*But here's the point, guys: In the world I grew up in, he had to keep it a secret in order to maintain a social existence.*

I'm 100% certain that the pivot point was Murdoch's creation of FOX as a GOP propaganda outlet in the 1990s.

I don't think things could have moved this fast without FOX.

Side note: Don't go on FOX. Legitimizing it as a debate stage hurts the fight against fascists.

You have to find other ways to reach that audience. If you believe they are reachable.

In another sense, though, fascism is another face/evolution of the Frankenstein's monster of white supremacy & profits-driven colonialism by corporations, which begin in the early 16th century.

It's a killer staph infection that we all create by refusing to fight the everyday battles that we can, against racism & corporate domination of people.

@chargrille As you know, the roots go back long before Fox (centuries). But I think of one turning point as 1964, when Dems & GOP helped pass the Civil Rights Act. The parties had a chance to cooperate to really put fascism's racist roots on the outside. But the GOP nominated Goldwater, who'd voted against. Reagan gave a nominating speech. So the GOP signaled it was the new home for racists leaving the Dixiecrats. From there it's straight thru Reagan to Fox then Trump.

@jud
Yes, 1964 was key for sure. But in my opinion, the turning point within the GOP (& the "party realignment" of the Southern Strategy) was made at least a decade before the 1964 nomination. They had already invested in a strategy that focused on recruiting white "Negrophobe" voters in the 1950s. I believe the Dixiecrat rebellion within the party in response to Truman's civil rights commission in 1947 was the start.

2020 thread on this here. https://twitter.com/chargrille/status/1321743483472814081

@[email protected] (@chargrille) on X

@xan_desanctis Nixon’s GOP strategist, in 1970: "From now on, the Republicans are never going to get more than 10-20% of the Negro vote...The more Negroes who register as Democrats...the sooner the Negrophobe whites will quit the Democrats & become Republicans. That’s where the votes are."

X (formerly Twitter)
@chargrille Appreciate learning about the roots of what I saw in '64.
@chargrille @jud Thanks for screencapping that. As I’ve nuked my Twitter account, I can no longer see more than the first tweet in a thread.
@jud @chargrille GOP started out as a progressive party representing primarily the industrialized Northeast, while Dems were primarily agricultural Southern. Then came the rapid induction of Western states, which had their own character. The 1960s saw the ending of the original GOP and the takeover by Western reactionaries, with the *voters* rejecting the progressive elements of the party. GOP still had progressive elements that helped pass civil rights, they were rejected by the voters.
@chargrille Couldn't agree more. I don't think people fully realize how absolutely toxic Fox is, and how responsible they are for the current state of things.
@chargrille Same thing in France with CNews sadly…