Details, Explanation and Meaning About List of Fascists

List of Fascists Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description

This is a list of persons who self-identify as Fascists or a variant (e.g., National Socialists, Rexists, Falangists, etc.) and who have made major contributions to this ideology, either literarily, politically or militarily. It is organised by country or region.

Table of contents
1 Albania
2 Austria
3 Belgium
4 Bulgaria
5 Canada
6 Central and South America
7 Croatia
8 Czechoslovakia
9 Denmark
10 Finland
11 France
12 Germany
13 Greece
14 Hungary
15 Italy
16 Iberia
17 India
18 Ireland
19 Israel
20 Japan
21 Latvia
22 Lithuania
23 Luxembourg
24 New Zealand
25 Netherlands
26 Norway
27 Romania
28 Russia
29 Slovakia
30 South Africa
31 Sweden
32 Switzerland
33 United Kingdom
34 United States
35 Possible Successors
36 Possible Ancestors
37 See also

Albania

Austria

Belgium

Bulgaria

Canada

Central and South America

Croatia

Czechoslovakia

  • Karl Hermann Frank (1898-1946)
  • Radola Gajda (1892-1948)
  • Konrad Henlein (1898-1945)

Denmark

Finland

France

Germany

Greece

Hungary

Italy

Iberia

India

Ireland

Israel

Japan

Latvia

Lithuania

Luxembourg

New Zealand

Netherlands

Norway

Romania

Russia

Slovakia

South Africa

Sweden

Switzerland

United Kingdom

United States

Possible Successors

In addition, many other notable political figures have been labelled as Fascists, due to
anti-immigration, protectionist, nationalistic and sometimes racist political beliefs, but have not so called themselves and in many cases have objected strenuously to the association. Ever since 1945, self-identification as a Fascist (outside Iberia) has been the hallmark of fringe extremists, and not of politicians, many moderately successful, as those below. They could, in fact, be described, as Bill Bennett did Pat Buchanan, of "flirting with Fascism," within democratic societies. Martin A. Lee, in The Beast Reawakens (ISBN 0316519596), calls them "National Populists with a Neofascist edge."

Possible Ancestors

Several philosophers have been noted as proto-Fascists or inspirations for
Fascism by Fascists themselves and by others, although most never lived to see Fascism and of those who did, many repudiated it. Fascism can be viewed as the child not of any one of these thinkers, but as a synthesis of some of the thoughts of all of them, put together by the founders of Fascism in the 1920s and 30s.

See also


This is an Article on List of Fascists. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About List of Fascists


Google
 
Web www.E-paranoids.com

Search Anything