By Maurice Bardèche | 9 Comments |
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Bardèche’s Six Postulates of Fascist Socialism
Translator’s Note: When liberalism becomes “a foul tyranny masking an evil and anonymous dictature of money” (the basis of Jewish supremacy), everything is inverted and perverted, so that even our word “socialism” is tarnished, associated as it now is with Washington’s Judeo-Negro regime. I thought it appropriate, therefore, to post something that reminds readers of how we once defined this term. The following is a short excerpt from Maurice Bardèche’s Socialisme fasciste (Waterloo, 1991). — Michael O’Meara
“Socialisme fasciste” is the title of an essay by Drieu La Rochelle. Fascist socialism, though, has been largely symbolic, since it is more an idea than a record of actual achievement.
At certain points, all fascist movements had to come to terms with socialism. And all took inspiration from it: Hitler’s party was the National Socialist German Workers Party, Mussolini was a socialist school teacher, José-Antonio Primo de Rivera was a symbol of national-syndicalist socialism, Codreanu’s Iron Guard was a movement of students and peasants, Mosley in England had been a Labour Minister, Doriot in France was a former Communist and his PPF emerged from a Communist cell in Saint-Denis.
Historically, fascist movements were liberation movements opposing the confiscation of power by cosmopolitan capitalism and by the inherent dishonesty of democratic regimes, which systematically deprive the people of their right to participate [in government].
With the exception of Peron’s Argentina, circumstances have always been such as to prevent the realization of fascism’s socialist vocation.
Those fascist movements that succeeded in taking power were compelled, thus, to reconstitute an economy ruined by demagogues, to re-establish an order undermined by anarchy, to create ways of overcoming the chaos besetting their lands or to repel external threats. These urgent and indispensable tasks required a total national mobilization and dictated certain priorities.
Circumstances, in a word, everywhere prevented fascists from realizing the synthesis of socialism and nationalism, for their socialist project was necessarily subordinated to the imperative of ensuring the nation’s survival.
These circumstances were further exacerbated by another difficulty: Fascist movements were generally reluctant to destroy the structure of capitalist society.
Given that their enemy was plutocracy, foreign capital, and the usurpers of national sovereignty, the immediate objective of these movements was to put the national interest above capitalist interest and to establish a regalian state capable of protecting the nation, as kings had once done against the feudal powers.
This [fascist] policy of conserving ancient structures may have transformed the prevailing consciousness and shifted power, but it did not entail a revolutionary destruction of the old order.
Fascist nostalgia for the old regime has, indeed, been so profound that it routinely reappears [today] in neo-fascist movements that are national-revolutionary more in word than in deed.
This phenomenon is evident throughout Europe, in Italy and Germany, in Spain, in France . . .
Is it, then, a contradiction distinct to neo-fascism that it has been unable to combine the conservation of hierarchical structures upon which Western Civilization rests with measures specifically socialist? Or do neo-fascists simply — unconsciously — express the impossibility of grafting measures of social justice onto a civilization profoundly foreign to their ideal . . . ?
We need at this point to turn to [first] principles.
Every new vision of social relations rejecting Marxism rests on a certain number of postulates, which, I believe, are common to all radical oppositional movements.
1. The first of these condemns political and economic liberalism, which is the instrument of plutocratic domination. Only an authoritarian regime can ensure that the nation’s interest is respected.
2. The second postulate rejects class struggle. Class struggle is native to Marxism and [inevitably] leads to the sabotage of the nation’s economy and to a bureaucratic dictatorship, while true prosperity benefits everyone and can be obtained only through a loyal collaboration and a fair distribution.
3. The third protects the nation’s “capital” (understood as the union of capital and labor) and represents all who participate in the productive process . . . It is a function of the [fascist] state, thus to promote labor-capital collaboration and to do so in a way that does not put labor at the mercies of capital.
4. Given that the nation’s economy is a factor crucial to the nation’s independence, it, along with the Army and other national institutions, are to be protected from all forms of foreign interference.
5. Since modern nations have become political-economic enterprises whose power resides in those who control the economy as much as it does in those who make political decisions, the nation must play a leading role in the economic as well as the political systems. The instrument appropriate to such participation in the nation’s life have, however, yet to be invented. . . .
6. Above all, the nation’s interest must take priority over every particular interest. . . .
There is nothing specifically “socialist,” as this term is understood today, in these principles, since contemporary socialism is nothing other than a form of social war whose inevitable culmination is the rule of those bureaucratic entities claiming to represent the workers [i.e., national union federations].
Nevertheless, these principles accord with another conception of socialism — one that favors a fair distribution to all who participate in the productive process. This is not the underlying idea, but the consequence thereof, inspiring our postulates.
A fair distribution, however, will never result from sporadic, recurring struggles challenging the present degradations of money. Instead, it is obtainable only through the authority of a strong state able to impose conditions it considers equitable.


Genuine, i.e., fascist socialism will exist when all firms of, say, 50 or more employees A.) must issue stock, and B.) more than 50% of that stock must – stock market machinations notwithstanding – ALWAYS be owned by the people actually working at the firm. Getting from the hyper-speculative Jewish Finance Capitalism that we have now to this Nirvana-state will, of course, require a sanguinary struggle.
Thank you to Dr. O’Meara for bringing this to our attention. It’s important for a theoretical understanding of the political options for racial nationalism to realize that what most people consider “fascism” — usually “para-fascist,” reactionary, authoritarian regimes — has little to do with real fascist ideologies, which are derived as much from the “left” as from the “right” and which, properly, stand above right-left divisions in its own “third way” direction.
The “corporate state” — interesting in theory but never actually significantly manifested in practice — can serve as a foundation for a fascist economics that is neither capitalist nor Marxist, but socialist in a national sense. I do like the suggestion of “Compassionate Fascist” — that would be a step in the right direction.
“Circumstances, in a word, everywhere prevented fascists from realizing the synthesis of socialism and nationalism, for their socialist project was necessarily subordinated to the imperative of ensuring the nation’s survival.”
It is so refreshing reading knowledgeable commentary on fascism–even commentary that is sympathetic to fascism.
I do disagree with the above passage. The reason fascism tends toward capitalism in practice is due to the inherent nature of fascism. One of the things that separates left-wing fascism from run-of-the-mill right-wing authoritarianism is its high energy; fascism burns hot. And only capitalism is efficient enough to produce the resources necessary for this state–whether it be building autobahns, fighting WWII, or wars of conquest. Socialism simply cannot produce the requisite wealth.
Having said this, fascism succeeded where communism failed simply because communism only pretended to stick up for the interests of the proletariat; fascism tried to stand up for the interests of the society as a whole.
Very interesting commentary though.
CompassionateFascist
That would be ideal. But perhaps a key problem we have currently is the ability of the financial elite to essentially counterfeit capital to buy equity in productive enterprises. It’s one thing when an outsider invests capital into a firm, and quite another when – through a combination of fractional reserve and overt fraud – capital can be raised through an inflation tax on the public and used to control real productive enterprise.
I received this email today:
I think this is a very good idea. I am creating a Translations section under the Departments heading on the right side bar of the site. We have already done a good number of translations.
Please contact me if you wish to translate texts or to suggest texts to translate.
As an ex-leftie anti–communist and professor of ethical socialism, I am still rationally convinced that some form of national socialism or national capitalism makes sense.
However. I wince at the term “compassion” because of Nietzschean reasoning. Pity is the Plague of our times. Pity was a personal problematic for Nietzsche which explains his perseveration with it.
Pity, kept within reasonable Darwinian bounds, should mean limited concern/care for those afflicted with bad-luck. This especially should be more at the personal level than at the societal level. The personal level is obvious but how concern/care should manifest in society and politics should be addressed concretely. Clearly, White Nationalists owe nothing to other races. ( That does not mean that we can harm them for no reason. However, they are harming us in many ways. We all know that, and we have the right of self-defense.)
The question is what do we owe to one-another? Clearly, a tribal loyalty includes providing for our racial kin, aid… both emotional and material. This is social democracy of sorts. However, it cannot go too far , as it has in Europe which is facing huge cuts in its welfare state due to all the entitlements it has bestowed on “workers.”
I just read a story in the FT, I think, on Italy where a hairdresser is entitled to a pension at age 50 because she works with various chemicals…hair concoctions, etc. This social -democracy has turned into scam and racket. Not only is it unaffordable, it is corrupting of ordinary people.
Another story I recall from a few years ago. Europe had about 75 people actually working out of 100. The US had about 85 people actually working…this was the working age category of about 16 to 65.
Collectivism is bad. For every reason. Community is good. White Solidarity is good, but if we achieve it, it will only be realistically around in times of …er, race war and race struggle. Europe and the US were built by Individualism, Hard Work, Intelligence, and Perseverance. These are not socially determined. However, they can be corrupted by Pity, and socialist cant.
Finally, dignity is achieved by personal responsibility. You take responsibility for your decisions. No whining. “The Debil made me do it of the blacks” … “I am a Human Being” … the cry of the wretcheds. You are a human being? So what? You are merely life, protoplasm, until you do something of note. We, in our Pity, want to love everybody. We have become feminized. Women include and Men exclude. We need to start excluding. We need to start behaving like men, not women, fighters, not peace-makers. etc. Also we need to challenge ourselves and our fellow Whites…act like a White man, not a thug.
We need to have a eugenics program. You can bet China has one.
We need to stay sober. Everybody works who can work. You don’t work, you die. That is pretty simple, and Darwinian. Joe Webb
‘Genuine, i.e., fascist socialism will exist when all firms of, say, 50 or more employees A.) must issue stock, and B.) more than 50% of that stock must – stock market machinations notwithstanding – ALWAYS be owned by the people actually working at the firm.’
There’s no need for half-measures; one can simply select an ethnically homogeneous community and imitate the Mondragon model exactly. Note that Mondragon succeeded where many co-ops failed largely due to ethnic homogeneity.
‘Everybody works who can work. You don’t work, you die. That is pretty simple, and Darwinian. ‘
Such a system would also need to be protected from suicidally depressed persons who might decide to kill a few of their neighbors before committing suicide. Given the choice of endless drudgery at a hated job or suicide, many would choose a killing spree, followed by suicide.
Also, note that “survival of the fittest” is somewhat tautological – whatever animals survive are fit by definition.
Let me second John Drake’s point above:
“simply select an ethnically homogeneous community and imitate the Mondragon model”
White socialism. When everyone is of one community, everyone has their place. It’s only when outsiders are forced on you that you have an intractable free-rider problem.
Great article and comments:
Matthew dunnyveg:
“Having said this, fascism succeeded where communism failed simply because communism only pretended to stick up for the interests of the proletariat; fascism tried to stand up for the interests of the society as a whole.”
Communism was a false (Jewish) movement based on people’s perceptions that money and monied special interests alone should not rule–a “class war” was postulated to get the workers to behead themselves in the name of a “better life” which never materialized.
I liked Compassionate Fascist’s excellent idea and comments:
“Getting from the hyper-speculative Jewish Finance Capitalism that we have now to this Nirvana-state will, of course, require a sanguinary struggle.”
The National-socialists of Germany eliminated this, and even went so far as to barter with foreign governments rather than go through world banks, etc. — which was one of the reasons they became so prosperous so quickly and led the world out of the depression.
Joe webb says:
“This social -democracy has turned into scam and racket. Not only is it unaffordable, it is corrupting of ordinary people. …. ”
Everyone today seems to want to get something from government — corruption has become franchised into a giant government cycle. People are increrasingly getting personal payoffs for their votes, which is of course corruption. Jews have made money and greed rule.
and:
“You take responsibility for your decisions. No whining. “The Debil made me do it of the blacks” … “I am a Human Being” … the cry of the wretcheds. You are a human being? So what? You are merely life, protoplasm, until you do something of note. We, in our Pity, want to love everybody. We have become feminized.”
Yes! RACES themselves are made by the decisions of the people in them over time. There should be no pity. Our charity and pity should stay directed at our real children – not adults of other races that are still mentally children. Only women should tolerate dependency and give pity to the weak by necessity in their own young because of their maternal role. Directing it at other races or the terminally stupid is a dangerous perversion. Anyone with emotions can be subject to such mis-application of urges, not just men and not just sex urges either.
John Drake:
“Also, note that “survival of the fittest” is somewhat tautological – whatever animals survive are fit by definition.”
Not necessarily, John. If you look at survival in the longest-term sense then you will see that many short-term strategies that are INFERIOR in the long-run can destroy the more fit in the long run. I think this is the case with the Jewish strategy, or South Africa VS blacks etc.