Ah, Dubya's term Islamofascism! I would think that Islamism is a bit different.Islamic fascism is alive and well. — Thorongil
Islamism is the term for a purely fascist enterprise, hence they are interchangeable, as I see it. — Thorongil
But fascism is reaction against communism and the problems, real or imagined, in the democratic system of the early 20th Century — ssu
ilitant Islam doesn't reject democracy as the problem, though -- Militant Islam as practiced by IS is based in an older world idea which predates the wide acceptance of democracy. Fascism, on the other hand, does. — Moliere
Militant Islam does not emphasize violence for its own sake. It practices jihad, but that has a purpose greater than the violence itself. — Moliere
Militant Islam is medieval Sunni society attempting to be reborn in the world today. That is a kind of throwback, but not to a mythologized past as much as to a past that had existed prior to centuries of Islamic interpretation and growth (in number, spiritually, and in time). So it is a kind of anachronism, but it's not the same sort of historical myth that Fascism builds. — Moliere
The biggest difference, I think, are the views on the state. Militant Islam wants to establish a Caliphate, but this is theological significance. The state, or empire, is a tool, rather than "an organic entity" which can and must be purified for its own sake. Fascism establishes the state as its religion, where imperial theologies establish states for the sake of God. — Moliere
This is to split hairs, it seems to me. They both reject democracy, ergo they have this in common. — Thorongil
Fascism too has a goal beyond merely glorying in violence, but I think the point is that much of the violence is gratuitous; it's often done with genuine pleasure and deliberateness, whether it's necessary to achieve said goal or not. — Thorongil
It seems pretty similar to me. The Nazis, for example, were trying to return to a Pagan Germanic world which existed before the advent of Christianity. — Thorongil
I see you making my own point for me here. Yes, the state and religion are one in the case of European fascism and Islamofascism. To speak of the state or its religion in fascism is to speak of the same thing, and it is indeed sought for its own sake. — Thorongil
Feudal France also rejected democracy. The parallel is in passing, though -- the reasoning why they reject democracy makes a difference, and is not merely splitting hairs. — Moliere
I would say that this is just human nature more than ideology. — Moliere
Except their version of history has no basis. It was pure mythology. I'd say there's a difference between anachronism and myth. — Moliere
But this is not the case with militant Islam. The state is a tool. No fascist worth there salt would look at the state as a mere tool to something greater. — Moliere
Ah, but the Islamist's view of history is equally mythological, and especially IS's view of history. — Thorongil
To this I must say a thousand times no. The state is the summum bonum and indeed the raison d'etre for the Islamist, militant or not. This is what IS is toiling to create right now. Not until they have created a state governing the whole world according to Shariah Law will Islamists be satisfied. — Thorongil
Care to explain more? I don't see how this is the case, though I could certainly be wrong. — Moliere
I'd say here is where we disagree the most, then. Governing the world isn't the goal. The apocalypse is. — Moliere
The various Islamic caliphates of the past were not anything near the utopias they imagine them to be. Islamists would also be surprised and appalled at certain facts about these regimes. Take Akbar the Great of the Mughal Empire, for example. He had Hindu wives and maintained cordial relations with the West. — Thorongil
The two amount to the same thing, since we can be fairly certain that an apocalypse won't happen as described in Islamic eschatology. — Thorongil
I don't see the motives behind fascism as the same as the motives behind militant Islam, nor do I see the ideological aspects as the same. — Moliere
Here also I have to disagree with you and agree with Moliere.I might also simply say that I have no vested interest in establishing with certainty the identity between Islamism and fascism. I merely wish to assert that the term "Islamofascism" is not some flippant, utterly inaccurate conjoining of two ideologies. They have enough similarities, as I see it, that using the term is permissible. The only way to object to its use would be to claim that fascism is an inherently 20th century European phenomenon, which I don't find that it is. — Thorongil
The various Islamic caliphates of the past were not anything near the utopias they imagine them to be. Islamists would also be surprised and appalled at certain facts about these regimes. Take Akbar the Great of the Mughal Empire, for example. He had Hindu wives and maintained cordial relations with the West. — Thorongil
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