The American fascists are most easily recognized by their deliberate perversion of truth and fact. Their newspapers and propaganda carefully cultivate every fissure of disunity, every crack in the common front against fascism.
The European brand of fascism will probably present its most serious postwar threat to us via Latin America.
The worldwide, agelong struggle between fascism and democracy will not stop when the fighting ends in Germany and Japan.
Fascism is a worldwide disease. Its greatest threat to the United States will come after the war, either via Latin America or within the United States itself.
Diplomacy means all the wicked devices of the Old World, spheres of influence, balances of power, secret treaties, triple alliances, and, during the interim period, appeasement of Fascism.
Fascism is nothing but capitalist reaction.
Fascism is capitalism plus murder.
Fascism was a counter-revolution against a revolution that never took place.
Fascism is not defined by the number of its victims, but by the way it kills them.
The great leaders of the second world war alliance, Franklin Roosevelt and Winston Churchill, understood the twin sides of destruction and salvation. Their war aims were not only to defeat fascism, but to create a world of shared prosperity.
You begin to realize that hypocrisy is not a terrible thing when you see what overt fascism is compared to sort of covert, you know, communal politics which the Congress has never been shy of indulging in.
In my speeches, I always condemned communism, national-socialism and fascism.
Green politics at its worst amounts to a sort of Zen fascism; less extreme, it denounces growth and seeks to stop the world so that we can all get off.
Fascism should more appropriately be called Corporatism because it is a merger of state and corporate power.
Fascism, the more it considers and observes the future and the development of humanity, quite apart from political considerations of the moment, believes neither in the possibility nor the utility of perpetual peace.