Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This essay argues that central to understanding the rise of a fascist politics in the United States is the necessity to address the power of language and the intersection of the social media and the public spectacle as central elements in the rise of a formative culture that produces the ideologies and agents necessary for an American-style ...
Fascism, according to Bray, is rooted in the desire "to return to an imaginary past where natural hierarchies were respected, hierarchies around nationalism or gender or race, and it aims to use ...
According to an October 2024 poll held by ABC News and Ipsos, 49% of American registered voters considered Trump to be a fascist, [b] defined in the poll as "a political extremist who seeks to act as a dictator, disregards individual rights and threatens or uses force against their opponents", while 23% considered Kamala Harris to be a fascist. [1]
Prequel: An American Fight Against Fascism is a 2023 book by Rachel Maddow about fascist sympathizers in 1930s America. The book, which was inspired by her research for her podcast Ultra, includes the Silver Legion of America, the American White Guard, the Christian Front, and the propaganda operation of George Viereck.
In the 1940s when American GIs risked their lives on the front lines of the war against fascism they didn’t think there weren’t good people on both sides. ... Over 400,000 Americans died in WW ...
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
The American League Against War and Fascism was an organization formed in 1933 by the Communist Party USA and pacifists united by their concern as Nazism and Fascism rose in Europe. In 1937 the name of the group was changed to the American League for Peace and Democracy. Rev. Dr. Harry F. Ward headed the organization.
FIGHT Against War and Fascism was an anti-fascist monthly broadsheet published in the United States by the American League Against War and Fascism from November 1933 until July 1939. [1] [2] It was headquartered in New York City. [3] It was sponsored by socialists and communists. It apparently had Albert Einstein on its editorial committee ...