Word: fascism
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...year's experience in the State Department, no combat flying, precise features, and a small mustache. He had asked to be transferred from the Air Transport Command because he believed in the war, and in fighting it "violently." He also believed that we could not rationally fight Fascism abroad and not fight against the first steps toward it at home-race prejudice, for example...
...heard that Negro troops were segregated in a nearby town (there had been some bad riots), he said, "Policies like that are Naziism." He believed that if he, and men like him, failed, the "strong men" (meaning the pilots) would take over: "and then you've got Fascism no matter how you disguise...
Strong Men. The only trouble with this was that the strong men were not very strong. Nor did they want to take over. Nor, if they had, would it have been Fascism. They did not think it was necessary for the commanding officer to be a Henry Wallace. They wanted to finish their 25 missions and go home. They were young, bewildered, touchy, quarrelsome, dangerous. They had a latent envy, mixed with suppressed contempt, for the men who (like the narrator of The Gesture) had been grounded, and might have flown again but did not. When they came back from...
...answer to the first question asked him that his entire attitude toward the Marshall Plan is based on his theory that an "international Jewish organization" controls our foreign policy. How can the Free Enterprise Society maintain that his economic views can be separated from the general friendliness to fascism that is so obviously intertwined with them in his mind? How can its officers ignore the sinster similarity between Hart's views, both economic and political, and those which brought Hitler to power in Germany? How can they fail to realize that, by bringing him here despite their knowledge...
...editorial in the CRIMSON, the Free Enterprise Society was charged with the alternative sins of fascism or naivete in allowing Merwin K. Hart to speak under its auspices. Such an accusation demands a clarification of that particular meeting and the Society's position...