“Nazism seemed to many just an extreme version of what [most Germans] had always believed in or taken for granted. It was nationalistic, respectful of the armed forces, socially conservative, disdainful of laziness, hostile to eccentric or incomprehensive ideas that came from cities, disapproving of homosexuals and other unconventional human types, and avid to achieve ‘greatness’ for Germany. They welcomed parts of the Nazi political and social smorgasbord and told themselves that the rest was less important or was not meant seriously.”

- Bernard Norling and Walter Rinderle, The Nazi Impact on a German Village

@AnarchoNinaAnalyzes

Not only just that. It is precedent. Nowadays, nobody can pretend we can't possibly know if they're serious or whatever. We know they are.

If fascists say they want fascist stuff, they absolutely freaking mean it and are going to do all of it. And there is no excuse any longer, because we know fully well how it ended.

Ignore the fascists and prepare to dig out mass graves again, because that's where it ends.

@GNUmatic @AnarchoNinaAnalyzes Yup. You think they didn’t go through postmodern theory?

They did too, but for the purpose of attack, not defence!

#altright

@gimulnautti @AnarchoNinaAnalyzes

Exactly. What serves as a warning to us are text books with instructions to them. /o\