The World War II-era “Simple Sabotage Field Manual” is full of steps that office workers can take to resist leadership.

  • BETYU@moist.catsweat.com
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    24 days ago

    yes you are. you only have to look at my first reply. Spotted the Nazi does that ring a bell the first reply i got. that is what i mean when i said it has nothing to do with the definition its just used as insult to label someone something bad because you don’t like what they said. so no it has nothing to do with the dictionary definition. and it has no meaning anymore because this exact thing has been over done its a joke now. making it about the dictionary definition is very disingenuous because that’s not how it is mostly used.

    • agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.works
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      24 days ago

      You were called a Nazi because that’s a reasonable response to someone claiming that fascists aren’t really fascists. The word is being thrown around a lot lately because fascism itself is popping up a lot lately. That is how it is mostly used.

      There are people using the term as a generic “insult to label someone something bad”: actual fascists and their supporters for the purpose of, as you said, diluting the term to try to rob it of meaning and turn it into a joke. Their bad faith machinations do not prove that the rest of us aren’t using it accurately.

      That’s why I provided the definition: to demonstrate that, yes, when we say “fascism” we are in fact using the term correctly because the definition aligns with the philosophy and actions we are witnessing. You still have yet to provide an alternative definition which is inconsistent with the way we are presently using the term.

      I wasn’t the one that called you a Nazi, but you have to admit that claiming the behaviors and ideology consistent with fascism aren’t really fascism is precisely the sort of thing a closeted Nazi would do.