Actually this And by taking the extreme nationalism as a subset of facism to justify Gen Bakshi Being Facist, wouldn't he also classify as a Nazi, afterall extreme nationalism was also a feature of Nazism. (Also lets not forget revolutionary patriotism was a key feature of Stalin)
Source:
https://defence.pk/threads/army-gen...t-madras-student.443827/page-10#ixzz4HAbZGSd1not formulation of national policy, this is just a speech.
Nor was it a drawing and re-drawing of maps in a sandbox exercise. If you wish to plead an imaginary situation for yourself, try not to be such a precisian when that same device is returned to you with compliments.
If national policies were formulated by speeches, then we have quite a few speeches from JNU, dont we? If a lecture at a university > constitutes as formulation of a national policy, what would be a professor teaching in a renowned university day in and day out preaching India as a imperial occupiers be construed as?
What does interest me is that a General saying what he said ticked you off to label him as a fascist, and there was literally zero response from you when I specifically inquired from you about the JNU professor. I asked for you your opinion on both the fringe left and fringe right. and as always I might be wrong, but I do see a disproportionate response.
Are we discussing JNU, and, if so, what about JNU? I was under the mistaken impression that we were discussing IIT(M) and Major General Bakshi.
Let me put your mind at rest. You are wrong. None of my responses were about anything but this particular incident. And as far as the JNU is concerned, I have put on record my complete disagreement with what some dotty members of the academic establishment have had to say there. I have not said it here because I did not realise that your intention was to draw me out on the subject of the JNU.
If you have a problem with that institution, by all means mount a public campaign against them. Promote a signature campaign through the net and obtain 10,000 signatures, or whatever your fancy tells you is a round enough figure to satisfy your notions of how academic institutions should and should not be run. I was not aware until I read your paragraph above what your clandestine intention was. It leaves me furious at myself for being lured into a trap.
Well, this is consulting someone knowledgeable. Thus the entire exercise, I apologize If this has been a waste of time for you. I thought the intent was of discussion, even if my view point is misguided, the intent is to learn not to demean or insult you. If you construe this as such let me know and I will keep away from further discussions.
Am I not entitled to even a minimal level of prior homework on the part of my interlocutor, forget about prior knowledge? Are you by any chance testing me? I don't expect you to have a PhD in the subject, but some BASIC knowledge is the least I should expect.
Maybe i did not formulate my query properly, I asked how is this facism you replied extreme nationalism,
But then extreme nationalism is not just a trait of Facism, but other ideologies too, so asked again but this time gave my opinion, it pissed you off and you thin My thoughts resonate with GD Bakshi, just because I think he should have the freedom to express his opinion without being labelled as a fascist.
Now you are informing me that any act of creating turbulance in national policy is fascist political ideology, if really is that fluid, then every idea that is non conformal to national policy has the potential to create turbulence, even populist movements like the anna movement which I recall you were a critique of.
Bakshi says break Pakistan in 4 parts, he is facist, JNU student leader talks about Balkanization of India- they are exercising freedom of speech.
I find labeling of General Bakshi with a term closely associated by mussolini, offensive - Then the implication is that somehow I tacitly resonate his views. Doesn't that go against the grain of what you have been arguing for a while, that even though you are in disagreement with the views of the famed starlets of left wing politics in news these days, you defend their right to freedom of expression? Or defending a democratic right needs some convergence in rhetoric.
As far as the passage above is concerned, as long as I am informed blandly that
... by taking the extreme nationalism as a subset of facism to justify Gen Bakshi Being Facist, wouldn't he also classify as a Nazi, afterall extreme nationalism was also a feature of Nazism. (Also lets not forget revolutionary patriotism was a key feature of Stalin)
Source:
https://defence.pk/threads/army-gen...t-madras-student.443827/page-10#ixzz4HAbZGSd1
the rest of the sophistry on display is irrelevant. If you had a genuine desire to consult, and that is what I thought it was when I set out to put things down as carefully and precisely as I could, you would have looked at my responses even in a cursory way. Clearly, you did not. I am not aware what the purpose of engaging me in this discussion was. But it was not certainly elucidation; there would have been less hostility and more openness on display in that case.
You write:
"...I asked how is this facism you replied extreme nationalism,
But then extreme nationalism is not just a trait of Facism, but other ideologies too, so asked again but this time gave my opinion..."
The similarities between Fascism and Communism, specifically, the Communism in One State practised by Stalin has filled more textbooks than I care to even look at, timorously, from a great distance. To be informed that this is the case is really beyond tolerance. Those same textbooks also trace the growth of the fascist idea and ideology in careful detail. Perhaps some day you will have the leisure and the application to glance through at least one of them. That would spare those whom you engage in conversation on these topics. It would also help you if you consulted any good text on the tenets and foundations of Marxism and the kind of state it describes as a Communist state. There is such a deep and fundamental difference between the two that it is difficult to understand in an internet forum whether to make oneself ridiculous by launching into a futile attempt to detail the two, or it is preferable to be ridiculous to deal with each idea that is formed and thrown out on a piecemeal basis. Both unfortunately have the same point of termination.
Now you are informing me that any act of creating turbulance in national policy is fascist political ideology, if really is that fluid, then every idea that is non conformal to national policy has the potential to create turbulence, even populist movements like the anna movement which I recall you were a critique of.
No, I cannot say and I will not say that ANY act of creating turbulence in national policy displays fascist political ideology. Please do not distort what I say, in case you do not get the sense, refrain from false attribution. This is what I precisely said
ANY definition of Fascism, unlike a corresponding definition of Marxism, and of its dependent descriptions of the evolution of states, is an attempt to put turbulent, unpredicted events into a framework.
Source:
https://defence.pk/threads/army-gen...t-madras-student.443827/page-10#ixzz4HAfbJfgN
Is your comprehension of English so infantile that you cannot distinguish between an attempt by academicians to put "turbulent, unpredicted events" into a framework, and a claim that creating turbulence in national policy displays fascist political ideology? Where do those turbulent, unexpected events come into national policy? Did the March to Rome formulate policy? Was the Beer Hall Putsch national policy, or an element injecting turbulence into national policy?
And what gives you the impression that populism doesn't carry elements of fascism? Have you read about Juan Peron?
Please do take the trouble of distinguishing between a critic, which I am, and a critique, which I might compose.
Bakshi says break Pakistan in 4 parts, he is facist, JNU student leader talks about Balkanization of India- they are exercising freedom of speech.
Source:
https://defence.pk/threads/army-gen...t-madras-student.443827/page-10#ixzz4HAhOdrVf
And if this is bothering you, why not take it up with the perpetrators? Why do you cite it as if it might be my formulation? If I were to describe the political roots of those idiots at JNU, you would not even understand.
Contrary to popular opinion, I do not think that they are Marxist, Marxist-Leninist or Maoist. I think that their ideology is so confused, and so influenced by unseen and unknown influences that it beggars description. And that there are influences, very deep and academically potent influences, which they might not even have identified properly. Do you know much about Anarchism? Or will you copy and paste a line from some convenient on line textbook?