Fascism Archives - Page 2 of 3 - The American Spectator | USA News and Politics
by | Sep 1, 2022

This column isn’t about that horrific speech Joe Biden gave Thursday night. Probably the less said about that low point in American history, the better — though at some point we as a nation are going to have to address…

by | Sep 1, 2022

By every metric, Joe Biden is a failed president, and that’s less than two years into his terrible tenure. Tonight, he will spend his time speaking to the nation doing what he does best: insulting everyone. He’ll accuse his enemies…

by | Aug 29, 2022

So there is the supposed one-time moderate Democrat — now morphed into a far-left progressive president — saying this at what was said to be, per the Washington Examiner, “a million-dollar fundraiser, according to a pool report.” President Joe Biden…

by | Apr 28, 2022

The headline at Fox was blunt: Mayorkas testifies DHS is creating ‘Disinformation Governance Board’ The news comes two days after Tesla CEO Elon Musk secured a $44 billion deal to buy Twitter The story began: Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas testified…

by | Apr 10, 2022

Daniel Flynn reported in the April 8 edition of Spectator A.M. on a recent debate between two distinguished professors on the topic “Return to the Founders to Save America.” Flynn quoted one of the debaters, Patrick Deneen of Notre Dame, in a…

by | Dec 16, 2021

Back there in the mists of time, April 22, 2014 to be precise, I wrote a column in this space that was titled: The New American Fascism In which I cited some twenty incidents of leftists shutting down or attempting…

by | Jul 15, 2021

In the 1970s, the Latin American Left played a key role in the destruction of liberal democracy, which it attacked as an instrument of bourgeois domination. In many cases the leftists were so “successful” they helped bring about right-wing military…

by | Aug 14, 2020

This is a season of distress. American observers cannot resist comparing it to the spring and summer of 1968 in Chicago and New York. Or you might want to recall the autumn of 1969 with its singular, legislatively attainable aim….

by | Jul 5, 2020

When I was in college, the person I respected most was Ken Kesey. Everything hinges on consciousness. An unexamined life is not living. Kesey’s work was one great, creative exercise in revolutionary consciousness-raising. So it seemed in 1971. I was…

by | Apr 11, 2020

On April 4, 1917, the U.S. Congress declared war on Germany. Two days before, President Woodrow Wilson addressed legislators, admitting that only they could plunge America into what amounted to a continental abattoir, daily consuming Europe’s best and brightest. It…

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