Who were the best/most interesting fascist leaders and intellectuals? Which ones had the best ideas? Which specific ideas among them were the best or most interesting?
le Hitler amirite fellow 'PEDES? xDDDDDDDDDDD
Just read a lot of German philosophy and literature. The subtle spirit that eventually became fascism is distributed throughout the whole soul of German culture. You can read in Mann, who repudiated fascism, the same world-weariness and sense of decline that the fascists had. Spengler was being read by the entire philosophical generation of the 1920s, including very closely by the most important thinkers of this century, Wittgenstein, Heidegger, and Husserl. Husserl, a Jew whose life was destroyed by fascism, was a hardcore German nationalist whose two sons served in the war (one died) and whose daughter served as a nurse. He advocated for a national rebirth, a new golden age of the German world-soul (which he like others felt to be the second coming of Ancient Greece), based on Fichte's famous nationalist rallying cry to the German people.
If you want to understand fascism you need to understand the Germans as a bunch of depressed neo-Greeks who spent two centuries trying to get a glimpse of God, enter paradise, and escape the meaninglessness of bourgeois capitalist existence, and ended it all by killing millions of people and becoming just another province of globalist consumerism.
>>137476385
Everything This Man Here Stood For.
He Is Our Progenetor.
>>137477363
Fascism isn't fundamentally German though
>>137476385
>Who were the best/most interesting fascist leaders and intellectuals
franco
>Which ones had the best ideas?
lee kuan yew
>which specific ideas among them were the best or most interesting?
pragmatism and controlling the discussion/narrative is more important than having an institutional one-party system