Kraichgauer wrote:
Industrialists in Germany sided with the Nazis, and not only threw their support behind Hitler but eagerly collaborated with him in regard to Nazi expansion, war crimes, destruction of Germany's union movement, and human rights violations such as the use of slave labor. And they...
Wait a minute... did you just defend the boogaloo and Michigan militia fascists???
I am determining who is "far right".
"Nazi political strategy focused on anti-big business, anti-bourgeois, and anti-capitalist rhetoric"
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazi_Party"Twenty-Five Points, called for the nationalization of corporations and trusts, revenue sharing, and the end of "interest slavery."
Capitalism, the Nazis charged, "enslaves human beings under the slogan of progress, technology, rationalization, standardization, etc."
https://www.washingtonpost.com/outlook/ ... story.htmlHow is Hitler a freedom loving, capitalist, anti-government far-right type?
He sounds like Bernie Sanders.
When the far right talks about "freedom" from government, what they're referring to is freedom from regulation of business for the rights and safety of the consumer, labor and the environment, and freedom from civil rights legislation that says the majority has to treat the minority as human beings. Creatures like the boogaloos and the Michigan militia want that definition of freedom which would hurt and oppress anyone outside of their group of white evangelical far right conservatives.