Bourbon Guy
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I'm not sure what that means, but certainly nothing intended other than to produce a smile.
Fletch said:I dunno, really. I myself was never much of a manly-man, except for the whole attraction-to-women thing, which has, perhaps predictably, not panned out too well. Yet I persist, somehow, driven by forces I do not fully understand.
Maguire said:For the absolute risk of being out on a limb ( and i HOPE this post isn't political, but rather just informative), this should be clarified- nazism isn't "far right" in the traditional sense. nazism has two branches- the hitlerite branch and the strasser branch. Neither would qualify as "right wing" Both would probably be "extreme centerism" if you will in that both will entertain socialistic notion of "equality" between economic groups. The various movements associated with the "far right" today, ie falangism, iron guardism, nazism, were in their time, revolutionary and the antithesis of the "right wing" which would be associated more with monarchism, legitimatism, divine right, etc. All the nationalistic organizations would have been anathematic to genuinely aristocratic, "far right" ideologies. Really by the 1930s the whole "far right" as far as monarchistic ideology ceased to exist. Our "far "right " today would have been essentially centrist by the european standards of the 1930s. What made it controversial wasn't its "centrism" but its vocal militaristic aims.
I recommend looking at mussolini's definitions of fascism, etc to really get a well balanced view of the idea. The idea of "far left" and "far right" are really outdated ideas and inaccurate to describe either marxism or any form of fascism.
Lokar said:Oh, the right/left scale is absolutely useless nowadays, but going by generally accepted standards, at least in the UK, fascism is far right. It generally ignores economic views and focuses almost purely on social views, and Nazism was extremely right wing socially. The Nazi wiki page is reliable as it is heavily monitored and cared for - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazism. "... in practice, Nazism is a far right form of politics.[9]"
The political compass ( http://www.politicalcompass.org/ ) is a great system for showing political views. Nazism is Authoritarian, but only a little right economically. Socialism is Libertarian and Left economically.
However, the main point is that Nazism is economically slightly right wing, despite the "socialism" in the name, and is very conservative politically - so the statement that the Nazi party were socialists or "liberal fascists" is a falsehood.
carebear said:As for Jack's choice about the bar, the important question is if revenue and profits rose or fell after he left.
Seriously though, in any given situation a human being has three, and only three, choices:
1) Escape the situation
2) Seek to change the situation
3) Endure the situation
The morality, nobility or rationality of the various choices will be situationally and personally dependent but it will always come down to one of the three.
Maguire said:On the general question- i am not sure we'd all fit neatly under one category or another. there are some folks who are "stuck in the 1940s" in every single way, some who simply like a certain aspect, be it hats, the clothes, or the pinup models or the cars, for some i'd say it has to do with mod and punk subcultures already in existance.. I see wearing suits and dressing neatly as just "fitting in", not creating an impression of anything outside of a typical young male. I am not doing it to stand out, infact part of why i do it is because it conjures up anonymity, it is nondescript, no colorful pictures or cute phrases all over a t shirt. Its timeless, neat, and appropriate for nearly everything.
But my reasons may not be someone elses reasons, infact i doubt they are for some. I couldn't say its a subculture or even a definable group here outside of enthusiasm for vintage things.
Ohyeah, and forgive me as i said- you'd be jumping on phrases or rambling onto uncharted territory in the thread if you'd had as many whiskeys as i did.
Maguire said:On the general question- i am not sure we'd all fit neatly under one category or another. there are some folks who are "stuck in the 1940s" in every single way, some who simply like a certain aspect, be it hats, the clothes, or the pinup models or the cars, for some i'd say it has to do with mod and punk subcultures already in existance..
Feraud said:Agreed. We all do not fit neatly into a category...The people being referred to in this thread are the guys and gals living the era.
I like "retrophile." I don't think I entirely qualify though.Retrophile makes the most sense to me: and it doesn't really require an explanation for most people, yet is general enough not to call up any past era in particular.
Anything derived from "nostalgia" ultimately has to involve a longing for one's own past. Implied in nostalgia is a very limited view of history - history is only meaningful as personal memory, and only relevant if it relates to one's own experience and consciousness.Bustercat said:how about some variation on the word Nostalgia? (nostalgiacist, nostalgist, etc.)
That's a real rhetorical straightjacket. I like to compare the morality of the past to the morality of now, and the amorality of the past to the amorality of now. That confounds nostalgiacs.Jack Scorpion said:Some people like to compare the morality of the past to the amorality of now