I would put it this way: "not all ways are equally correct." For example, I claim that dogs and trout exist as discrete things, organic wholes, in the world. Their existence is not a merely linguistic fact; it is not dependent on linguistic conventions. By contrast, non-continuous trout halves and fox halves combined into "fouts" can certainly be named as "objects," but they do not have the same ontological status as proper wholes, such as trout and foxes. Do you disagree with that? — Count Timothy von Icarus
They did use democratic means, such as elections and voting, at least until they achieved absolute power. — NOS4A2
Again, the point is to use it to service the state, and then perhaps be done with when it is no longer required. — NOS4A2
Unless they use all of the devices in service to the Fascist state. — NOS4A2
This indifference to method often exposes Fascism to the charge of incoherence on the part of superficial observers, who do not see that what counts with us is the end and that therefore even when we employ the same means we act with a radically different spiritual attitude and strive for entirely different results.
The Fascist concept then of the nation, of the scope of the state, and of the relations obtaining between society and its individual components, rejects entirely the doctrine which I said proceeded from the theories of natural law developed in the course of the XVI, XVII, and XVIII centuries and which form the basis of the liberal, democratic, and socialistic ideology.
A bit off the topic, but Swedes had similar policies. I think we Finns didn't, because we were looked down upon as Mongols by the Swedish racists of the 19th and early 20th Century. But that's history... a lot changed in Europe after the demise of the Third Reich, as you know.
What is hilarious in the present discourse only accepts the American juxtaposition of natives against white "colonial" thinking in how that doesn't fit to the Sámi. The Sámi look exactly like Finns, you wouldn't at all in any way differ them from Finns. The Sámi have their large share of blue eyed and blonds so it ridiculous for them to have to talk about Finns "whites". And the "clash" between the Finns and the Sámi happened I guess in Antiquity when there simply was no Finnish country (as Finnish tribes fought each other until the Middle Ages), so the idea of native people/colonizers is funny in the case of Lapland. And the Sami as actually so few here, far less than people in Greenland. — ssu
Sure, the guy who helped developed fascism is wrong about fascism. — NOS4A2
So fascism could be liberal one day and socialist the next. — NOS4A2
I knew it as a general economic principle, sure. I didn’t know Mussolini used the phrase once in a speech or in a poster. — NOS4A2
So thanks for that. — NOS4A2
I’m genuinely surprised that there aren’t more quotes, despite you saying there were several. — NOS4A2
Benito Mussolini's fascist regime distributed posters with the message "Butter or cannoni?" — Arcane Sandwich
Yeah, I was specifically looking for quotes about fascism, by fascists, not a general phrase used by a multitude of politicians across many ideologies. — NOS4A2
"Guns and Butter" describes the government allocation to defense spending versus social programs. A country's budget includes military programs for national security, or guns, and social programs such as Social Security or family assistance, the butter. Politicians have evolved the phrase "guns and butter" for use in all areas of fiscal budgeting where there is a substantial trade-off between defense and social spending.
The term "guns and butter" has been linked throughout history to the challenges of war and negotiations on defense spending. Its uses have varied from guns and butter, guns vs. butter, and guns or butter. Many trace the coining of the phrase to the beginning of World War I and the protesting resignation of Secretary of State William Bryan. — Investopedia
With the economy improving and doing well (low unemployment, strong investment, improved foreign trade) the question of ‘Guns or Butter’ began to haunt Germany in 1936. Schacht knew that if rearmament continued at this pace the balance of payments would go crippling downhill, and he advocated increasing consumer production to sell more abroad. Many, especially those poised to profit, agreed, but another powerful group wanted Germany ready for war. — ThoughtCo
‘Guns before butter’ meant that food shortages were already present from the mid-1930s onwards. As Nancy Reagin has shown, preparations for war ‘led to economic policies that often worked against civilian consumers’ interests’. The quality of butter and cheese declined, and there was an increase in the use of inferior vegetable fats to create new fat compounds. By the winter of 1936–1937, shopkeepers sold butter only to their regular customers. Eating patterns changed. — Patrizia Sambuco and Lisa Pine
I suppose it counts now, after the fact. — NOS4A2
El régimen fascista de Benito Mussolini distribuyó carteles con el mensaje «Burro o cannoni?» con el objetivo de explicar a los italianos por qué en tiempos de guerra escaseaba la mantequilla y de paso pedir comprensión y sacrificio para la mayor gloria de la patria. Por último, en 1976 Margaret Thatcher en un discurso dijo, «Los soviéticos antepusieron las armas por encima de la mantequilla, pero nosotros pusimos casi todo antes que las armas». — Sergio A. Berumen
(...) The expected answers were shouted back at him from well-disciplined ranks. "I know',” he shouted at Padua, "that each of you and all of you are ready for any eventuality." "Yes,” roared back the crowd "Butter or cannons—which have we chosen?” he asked at Belluno. “Cannons." came the response. The speech at Belluno, the second of the day. Was II Duce a sixth brief speech within a week in support of German minority claim in Czechoslovakia. He was expected to speak again tomorrow when he visits Vicenzia. (...) — The Sheridan Press (1938)
A quote of your grandmother quoting Mussolini does not suffice, no. — NOS4A2
I don’t think that’s true. One can search the discussion and see that Mussolini’s name hardly appears, especially with quotes. — NOS4A2
Her: "Mussolini asked a crowd of people: 'Pópolo, ¿Qué quiere? ¿Manteca, o Cañones?" (People, what do you want, butter or cannons?" — Arcane Sandwich
Right, by myself. — NOS4A2
No proof, so I dismiss it. — JuanZu
You barely mentioned it. I can't consider it as an argument. — JuanZu
It is very simple, — JuanZu
The Norwegianization of the Sámi (Norwegian: fornorsking av samer) was an official policy carried out by the Norwegian government directed at the Sámi people and later the Kven people of northern Norway, in which the goal was to assimilate non-Norwegian-speaking native populations into an ethnically and culturally uniform Norwegian population.
The assimilation process began in the 1700s, and was at that point motivated by a clear religious agenda. Over the course of the 1800s it became increasingly influenced by Social Darwinism and nationalism, in which the Sámi people and their culture were regarded as primitive and uncivilised. As such, it was argued that they needed to succumb to the Norwegian nation state. — Wikipedia
You will have to prove to me that all philosophy is expressed through syllogisms, premises and conclusions. — JuanZu
And I have refuted it. — JuanZu
You will have to give me other arguments about fictionalism. — JuanZu
But I sense that you don't want to give them. — JuanZu
Again, the only argument you made is not yours and has been refuted. — JuanZu
How? Showing that the Pythagorean theorem transcends human cognitive processes. How do I show that it transcends them? By showing that such a theorem has universal properties and is not an individual cognitive processes, taking the example of the multitude of minds that understand the meaning of the theorem. — JuanZu
Oh no! On the contrary. Read some Lenin and you can see the populist elements in bolshevism and in Marxism-Leninism. Imperial Russia wasn't obviously a democracy, but right from the start democracy wasn't something that the leftist revolutionaries had in mind. After all, the dictatorship of the Proletariat isn't in any way "democratic" with it's class enemies and violent revolution against the capitalists. — ssu
Best example of left-wing populism is Venezuela. Would that be a fascist state? — ssu
But hey! Maduro is happily taking back Venezuelan illegals from the US and Venezuelan oil isn't under the Trump tariffs (yet). — ssu
I would say that this is what an argument looks like in the philosophy you like. — JuanZu
But obviously philosophy has a very broad style of expression. — JuanZu
At least we can agree that you have to give arguments to prove a point which is what I have tried to do. — JuanZu
I'm sorry but I can't take that as an argument. — JuanZu
Saying it's false and nothing else doesn't make you right, — JuanZu
nor does it mean I'm wrong. — JuanZu
I invite you to give arguments against what I have said and argued. — JuanZu
And here's why populism leads to fascism: by emphasizing the divide between the rulers and the "ordinary people" and stating that key societal problems are because of the rulers, populism can easily descend into fascism as populism embraces strong leaders, wants to take the power away form the real or many times imagined "elite" and replace it with the movements followers, who will follow their leader. — ssu
Above all, fascism opposes democracy and democratic system where decisions have to be negotiated with other political factions. It sees democracy as the reason for corruption. Also this leads to a command economy, because the leader has to be in charge of everything. — ssu
I have already done so. — JuanZu
I think you're reading it wrong — JuanZu
I hope it's not on purpose. — JuanZu
I said that such a premise is proven by the fact that several people know and understand the meaning of the Pythagorean theorem. — JuanZu
Well, correct me if I am wrong, but it seems that Mario Bunge's position fits into the psychologism that both Frege and Husserl criticized (and I would say refuted). — JuanZu
I'm sorry but what you have said is formal juggling. — JuanZu
And in no way have you validly refuted or counterargued. — JuanZu
The argument is very simple : — JuanZu
The Pythagorean theorem does not exist individually, it exists in a way that transcends the individuality of individuals (proven by multiple people understanding the Pythagorean theorem at once). — JuanZu
Do you know the critique of psychologism made by Frege and Husserl? — JuanZu
Not only that of the inventor but of many others. Which means that its existence as truth cannot be reduced to the cognitive processes of individuales — JuanZu
The text you quote from Mario Bunge seems to ignore what I said in the last part of my comment. — JuanZu
That is, that the Pythagorean theorem remains true even if humanity disappears. It is a truth existing in an autonomous sense, which does not depend on the cognitive capacity of the human being. — JuanZu
Think of a triangle formed in nature, or a triangular shaped object, it is a right triangle (you can find them by Google) . Is not the Pythagorean theorem realized in nature and in this natural triangle? — JuanZu
the Pythagorean theorem exists in the sense that it belongs in Euclidean geometry. Surely it did not come into existence before someone in the Pythagorean school invented it. But it has been in conceptual existence, i.e. in geometry, ever since. Not that geometry has an autonomous existence, i.e. that it subsists independently of being thought about. It is just that we make the indispensable pretence that constructs exist provided they belong in some body of ideas—which is a roundabout fashion of saying that constructs exist as long as there are rational beings capable of thinking them up. Surely this mode of existence is neither ideal existence (or existence in the Realm of Ideas) nor real or physical existence. To invert Plato’s cave metaphor we may say that ideas are but the shadows of things—and shadows, as is well known, have no autonomous existence. — Mario Bunge