Atlas University Podcast
This text explores a reexamined definition of fascism, moving beyond historical Nazi imagery to identify it as a sacralization of collective force within modern empires. The author argues that nations like the United States, Israel, and the United Kingdom exhibit "fascistic elements" by maintaining high domestic comfort while exporting systemic violence and surveillance. Central to this critique is the military-state complex, where permanent war economies and security apparatuses become the governing nervous system of a republic. The sources suggest that these systems survive by creating a moral distance between the "included citizen," who enjoys safety and prosperity, and the "excluded human," whose suffering is rendered invisible or necessary. Ultimately, the text serves as a call to recover the republic by transforming passive spectators into self-governing citizens who reject the idolization of national power.
300 episodios
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