@ Nphyx
First I'm invoking Godwin's law on this:
I'm well aware of "Godwin's law", thanks, thus the several disclaimers. If you would like to present a more useful and universally recognizable example of nationalism and totalitarianism in behavior and put into practice in society and governance, please, point one out, and I will gladly use that one instead.
The view of the Neo-Conservative faction in our country that our military power should be exercised to pursue our interests on a global scale also strongly parallels the national socialists.
What a load of shit. First, the Nazi's don't believe in Nation building and Democracy.
I believe the idea that "American Interests" have much to do with nation building and democracy is laughable in light of both the results of our meddling in foreign affairs and by extension the underlying intent. You don't have to be a cynic to realize that the overt and covert use of American money and military in foreign affairs has been anything but in the interests of the populations it effects. I'm not even talking about our most recent and completely overt adventures overseas, either. I'm talking pretty much all our foreign actions since WWII. Among the most atrocious, our aid in installing totalitarian dictators bent on genocide from Suharto to Sadam to Casto. In a very modern and relevant context, look how much money and political power we're devoting toward encouraging foreign countries to institute and uphold protectionist laws that favor American-based multinationals, especially in the field intellectual property but pretty much in all walks of life - see for instance McLibel or the attacks on the Pirate Bay as documented in Steal This Film, Part 1. The resounding pattern has always been to get friendly with governments who support our big business and political interests and to help undermine those who don't, and wherever we can to help install people who will support our interests, regardless of their ethics or the way they plan to govern their country. The Neo-Cons just take this to the farthest extreme by saying "yes, we should be out there using our military might to smack around people who won't get in line with our agenda," whether they oppose our puppet dictators, farcical democracies, globalization, exploitation of their natural resources, or what have you. The difference between them and the clandestine factions of the government in the past several decades is that they do so unabashedly. In interviews of Neo-Con leaders I've seen in the last several months especially, they actually talk about Rome's military agendas as if it was a good model of politics. And indeed you do actually see in the economic world strong parallels with Roman Imperialism, in terms of imbalanced export & import, economic inequality between citizens and the working class (then slaves, today people working slave wages, especially in the third world), especially laborers in outlying territories. I'll stop here rather than go too far into a history lessen or derail the point of the thread and get too much into debating US foreign policy rather than the notion of the right to criticize the government, I hope that's more than enough to back up my statement.
Second, their policy of Lebensraum was designed for the fulfillment of their ultimate plan of establishing an Aryan super-race.
Actually Lebensraum, literally, "Living Space", was the movement to conquer foreign territory, especially in the Ukraine, for use by Germans. The "Dual Monarchy" of Germany and Austria at the turn of the century and on into the 20s was experiencing serious overcrowding and a lack of arable land, and the expansionist agenda of the Nazi party was meant to solve that problem. Lebensraum, at least in concept, had little to do with the racist ideals of the later aspects of the Nazi party. You may be thinking of "Lebensborn", the secret (even amongst Nazi officials at the time) breeding program headed up by Heinrich Himmler. This information is available on a rudimentary Wikipedia search. I do see many parallels between Lebensraum and Globalization, but certainly not in the overt and obvious way in which I was referencing the nationalistic ideals of Hitler's Nazis as compared to modern nationalistic leanings in America on both sides of the political divide.
Which also leads to the fact that the Nazis were in love with the use of eugenic policies which are abhorred by Neo-Cons such as Fukuyama.
I'm not at all interested in talking about eugenics, if you recall the point of my argument, as I stated, was to draw a parallel between modern nationalism and that of the early national socialists in Germany, not to call the political right racists, or any other nonsense, as I also clearly stated. If I failed to communicate that, I apologize. As much as there is a racist component in a lot of far-right rhetoric, especially concerning immigration, I don't think the Neo-Cons would have anything to do with it, and they if anything are model citizens in that regard.
those years it was a bi-polar world, and if you were to compare atrocious behavior by body counts, I'd say the Socialist world of the Soviets, Maoists, Khmer Rouge, DPRK, ect. win easily...
Here you seem to jump to the conclusion that people who are critical of the political right must be communists or socialists. I find communism and most forms of socialism horrifying, personally, to at least the same extent that fascism and corporatism are. The two are not diametrically opposed points of view, but rather brothers with the same basic agenda: take away the ability of the common citizen to live independently, make personal choices and be active in their government, and ensure their dependence on and support of people who "know better". Both of them spit in the face of any free society, who require governance only to the extent that it ensures the continual dissolution of power bases and the preservation of basic inviolable human rights. I believe in the country of George Washington, John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, et cetera, at least on the points that they all agreed on and laid out in our now sadly abused constitution. Looking back at the founding fathers and their ideologies, I think it is easy to see how far we've strayed from them, and how timeless they truly were.
I agree with you on principle that Democracy is about dissent and debate
I'm glad in any case of that