Dak
mentat
This is horrifying thinking, and it's exactly the libertarian mentality that exposes its dangerous kernel. The fact that, in the end, fascism presents itself as superior to Bolshevism; that's the most ridiculous notion. I'm not trying to save Bolshevism from anything, it was a catastrophic humanitarian disaster. But to rationalize fascism as providing the necessary check to Bolshevism is a logic I can't even begin to sympathize with.
Yes, humanitarian concerns are such a dangerous kernel of libertarianism
Your horror is slightly perplexing. I can only reason three potential sources:
1. You are not remaining in context: Communism or Fascism. We are stuck making a relative judgment limited between these two systems and only these two systems.
2. Judging between these system using some irrelevant metric or ignorance of the differences in the two important metrics:
A. Body Counts: Whether limited to the 1927> world, or the 1987> world, Fascism looks angelic in body count comparisons, both directly and indirectly. "Indirectly" brings us to the second metric:
B. Standard of Living (for those escaping the body counts): Again, Fascism wins this contest with Communism easily. A large portion of the total body count attributable to Communism comes from starvation/lack of basic necessities/"work camp" conditions. Compared only to Communism, Fascism offered a substantially better standard of living - to the many more people left living.
3. Your horror is purely politically ideological (as opposed to a general humanistic ideology) and humanitarian comparisons are irrelevant in light of the need for REVOLUTION! IE: You have an antihumanistic, anti-humanitarian "horror": Not as many would die (relatively speaking) if Fascism were supported over Communism - which is absolutely or most likely necessary and automatically good as it comes with that which is good (again, relative to Fascism).
The fact that I assume you can stay within context, and your practically sterilized treatment of Communist history via "humanitarian disaster" leads me to think you are falling under 3.
You don't see any material because your definition and understanding of freedom and liberation is narrow and conditioned. For argument's sake, it's obviously there; but according to your approach, the material I would cite doesn't qualify as liberal enough.
What isn't narrow and conditioned once you delve into it? "Liberal enough" or "Liberal at all?" Libertarianism isn't "liberal enough" on an objective scale so it depends on your scale.
