Monday, May 4, 2026
    The GeoStrategic Consensus
    No Result
    View All Result
    • Login
    • HOME
    • AMERICAS
      • Argentina
      • Brazil
      • Canada
      • Chile
      • Colombia
      • Costa Rica
      • Cuba
      • Dominican Republic
      • Ecuador
      • El Salvador
      • Greenland
      • Guatemala
      • Honduras
      • Mexico
      • Nicaragua
      • Panama
      • Paraguay
      • Peru
      • United States
      • Uruguay
      • Venezuela
    • ASIA-PACIFIC
      • Australia
      • Brunei Darussalam
      • Cambodia
      • China
      • Federated States of Micronesia
      • Fiji
      • Indonesia
      • Japan
      • Kiribati
      • Laos
      • Malaysia
      • Marshall Islands
      • Mongolia
      • Myanmar
      • Nauru
      • New Zealand
      • North Korea
      • Palau
      • Papua New Guinea
      • Philippines
      • Samoa
      • Singapore
      • Solomon Islands
      • South Korea
      • Taiwan
      • Thailand
      • Timor-Leste
      • Tonga
      • Tuvalu
      • Vanuatu
      • Vietnam
    • CARICOM
      • CARICOM – Non-English
        • Haiti
        • Suriname
      • CARICOM Associates
        • Anguilla
        • Bermuda
        • British-Virgin-Islands
        • Cayman-Islands
        • Curacao
        • Turks-and-Caicos
      • CARICOM English
        • Antigua and Barbuda
        • Barbados
        • Belize
        • Dominica
        • Grenada
        • Guyana
        • Jamaica
        • Montserrat
        • Saint Kitts and Nevis
        • Saint Lucia
        • Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
        • The Bahamas
        • Trinidad and Tobago
    • EURASIA
      • Armenia
      • Azerbaijan
      • Balarus
      • Georgia
      • Kazakhstan
      • Kyrgyzstan
      • Moldova
      • Russia
      • Tajikistan
      • Turkmenistan
      • Ukraine
      • Uzbekistan
    • EUROPE
      • Albania
      • Andorra
      • Austria
      • Bosnia and Herzegovina
      • Bulgaria
      • Croatia
      • Cyprus
      • Czech Republic
      • Denmark
      • Estonia
      • Finland
      • France
      • Germany
      • Greece
      • Holy See
      • Hungary
      • Iceland
      • Ireland
      • Italy
      • Kosovo
      • Latvia
      • Liechtenstein
      • Lithuania
      • Luxembourg
      • Malta
      • Monaco
      • Montenegro
      • Netherlands
      • North Macedonia
      • Norway
      • Poland
      • Portugal
      • Romania
      • San Marino
      • Serbia
      • Slovakia
      • Slovenia
      • Spain
      • Sweden
      • Switzerland
      • United Kingdom
    • MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA
      • Algeria
      • Bahrain
      • Egypt
      • Iran
      • Iraq
      • Israel
      • Jordan
      • Kuwait
      • Lebanon
      • Lybia
      • Morocco
      • Oman
      • Palestinian Territories
      • Qatar
      • Saudi Arabia
      • Syria
      • Tunisia
      • Turkey
      • United Arab Emirates
      • Western Sahara
      • Yemen
    • SOUTH ASIA
      • Afghanistan
      • Bangladesh
      • Bhutan
      • India
      • Maldives
      • Nepal
      • Pakistan
      • Sri Lanka
    • SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
      • Angola
      • Benin
      • Botswana
      • Burkina Faso
      • Burundi
      • Cabo Verde
      • Cameroon
      • Central African Republic
      • Chad
      • Comoros
      • Cote d’Ivoire
      • Democratic Republic of the Congo
      • Djibouti
      • Equatorial Guinea
      • Eritrea
      • Eswatini
      • Ethiopia
      • Gabon
      • Gambia
      • Ghana
      • Guinea
      • Guinea Bissau
      • Kenya
      • Lesotho
      • Liberia
      • Madagascar
      • Malawi
      • Mali
      • Mauritania
      • Mauritius
      • Mozambique
      • Namibia
      • Niger
      • Nigeria
      • Republic of the Congo
      • Rwanda
      • Sao Tome and Principe
      • Senegal
      • Seychelles
      • Sierra Leone
      • Somalia
      • South Africa
      • South Sudan
      • Sudan
      • Tanzania
      • Togo
      • Uganda
      • Zambia
      • Zimbabwe
    • HOME
    • AMERICAS
      • Argentina
      • Brazil
      • Canada
      • Chile
      • Colombia
      • Costa Rica
      • Cuba
      • Dominican Republic
      • Ecuador
      • El Salvador
      • Greenland
      • Guatemala
      • Honduras
      • Mexico
      • Nicaragua
      • Panama
      • Paraguay
      • Peru
      • United States
      • Uruguay
      • Venezuela
    • ASIA-PACIFIC
      • Australia
      • Brunei Darussalam
      • Cambodia
      • China
      • Federated States of Micronesia
      • Fiji
      • Indonesia
      • Japan
      • Kiribati
      • Laos
      • Malaysia
      • Marshall Islands
      • Mongolia
      • Myanmar
      • Nauru
      • New Zealand
      • North Korea
      • Palau
      • Papua New Guinea
      • Philippines
      • Samoa
      • Singapore
      • Solomon Islands
      • South Korea
      • Taiwan
      • Thailand
      • Timor-Leste
      • Tonga
      • Tuvalu
      • Vanuatu
      • Vietnam
    • CARICOM
      • CARICOM – Non-English
        • Haiti
        • Suriname
      • CARICOM Associates
        • Anguilla
        • Bermuda
        • British-Virgin-Islands
        • Cayman-Islands
        • Curacao
        • Turks-and-Caicos
      • CARICOM English
        • Antigua and Barbuda
        • Barbados
        • Belize
        • Dominica
        • Grenada
        • Guyana
        • Jamaica
        • Montserrat
        • Saint Kitts and Nevis
        • Saint Lucia
        • Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
        • The Bahamas
        • Trinidad and Tobago
    • EURASIA
      • Armenia
      • Azerbaijan
      • Balarus
      • Georgia
      • Kazakhstan
      • Kyrgyzstan
      • Moldova
      • Russia
      • Tajikistan
      • Turkmenistan
      • Ukraine
      • Uzbekistan
    • EUROPE
      • Albania
      • Andorra
      • Austria
      • Bosnia and Herzegovina
      • Bulgaria
      • Croatia
      • Cyprus
      • Czech Republic
      • Denmark
      • Estonia
      • Finland
      • France
      • Germany
      • Greece
      • Holy See
      • Hungary
      • Iceland
      • Ireland
      • Italy
      • Kosovo
      • Latvia
      • Liechtenstein
      • Lithuania
      • Luxembourg
      • Malta
      • Monaco
      • Montenegro
      • Netherlands
      • North Macedonia
      • Norway
      • Poland
      • Portugal
      • Romania
      • San Marino
      • Serbia
      • Slovakia
      • Slovenia
      • Spain
      • Sweden
      • Switzerland
      • United Kingdom
    • MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA
      • Algeria
      • Bahrain
      • Egypt
      • Iran
      • Iraq
      • Israel
      • Jordan
      • Kuwait
      • Lebanon
      • Lybia
      • Morocco
      • Oman
      • Palestinian Territories
      • Qatar
      • Saudi Arabia
      • Syria
      • Tunisia
      • Turkey
      • United Arab Emirates
      • Western Sahara
      • Yemen
    • SOUTH ASIA
      • Afghanistan
      • Bangladesh
      • Bhutan
      • India
      • Maldives
      • Nepal
      • Pakistan
      • Sri Lanka
    • SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
      • Angola
      • Benin
      • Botswana
      • Burkina Faso
      • Burundi
      • Cabo Verde
      • Cameroon
      • Central African Republic
      • Chad
      • Comoros
      • Cote d’Ivoire
      • Democratic Republic of the Congo
      • Djibouti
      • Equatorial Guinea
      • Eritrea
      • Eswatini
      • Ethiopia
      • Gabon
      • Gambia
      • Ghana
      • Guinea
      • Guinea Bissau
      • Kenya
      • Lesotho
      • Liberia
      • Madagascar
      • Malawi
      • Mali
      • Mauritania
      • Mauritius
      • Mozambique
      • Namibia
      • Niger
      • Nigeria
      • Republic of the Congo
      • Rwanda
      • Sao Tome and Principe
      • Senegal
      • Seychelles
      • Sierra Leone
      • Somalia
      • South Africa
      • South Sudan
      • Sudan
      • Tanzania
      • Togo
      • Uganda
      • Zambia
      • Zimbabwe
    No Result
    View All Result
    Agentially
    No Result
    View All Result
    Home AMERICAS Brazil

    Safatle stretches the concept of fascism until it loses precision – 04/25/2026 – Illustrious

    The Analyst by The Analyst
    April 28, 2026
    in Brazil
    Safatle stretches the concept of fascism until it loses precision – 04/25/2026 – Illustrious


    (SUMMARY) “The Internal Threat”, most recent book by Vladimir Safatlehas a pertinent target, the crisis of liberal democracies around the world, but it examines it from a less than rigorous angle, applying the concept of fascism to the most diverse phenomena, which ends up depleting the thesis’ ability to explain. In this way, analysis gives way to rhetoric, and the past only serves to confirm the author’s convictions.

    READ ALSO

    Milei adopts policy against irregular migrants and generates fear – 05/02/2026 – World

    Israel extends arrest of activists detained in flotilla – 05/03/2026 – World

    The last decade has seen the popularization of a powerful idea: we live under the rise of a “global fascism”, associated with leaders like donald trump (USA), Viktor Orbán (Hungary), Narendra Modi (India) and Jair Bolsonaro (Brazil), which would be visible in wars, violence and political crises in the center and on the periphery of capitalism.

    This is the central thesis of the book “The Internal Threat”in which Vladimir Safatle criticizes the tendency to limit the application of the concept of fascism to 20th century regimes in Europe or to interpret it as a historical regression, the result of irrationality or social resentment.

    For the author, this reading fulfills an ideological function: preserving liberal democracies from more radical criticism, by treating fascism as an archaism or external deviation from modernity.

    According to Safatle, liberal democracies are already, in fact, forms of “restricted fascism”, regimes that combine limited zones of rights and political participation with broad areas of exclusion, violence and social indifference. In moments of crisis, this arrangement would give way to “generalized fascism”, in which these dynamics become more visible and widespread.

    The stretching of the concept of fascism

    Throughout the book, fascism gains a series of qualifications: “restricted”, “generalized”, “global”, “structural”, “ordinary” and “insurrectionary”. Safatle builds his argument by bringing together different events, such as European fascism in the 1930s, Brazilian integralismanti-vaccine protests, attacks on the Argentine Central Bank, conflicts in the Middle East and the situation in Gaza.

    For him, all these episodes illustrate processes of desensitization and naturalization of violence characteristic of fascism. However, when a concept names such different phenomena, it loses precision.

    THE Italian political scientist Giovanni Sartori called this problem “conceptual stretching”. When a term is applied to increasingly heterogeneous cases, its usefulness is lost. Something similar seems to happen here.

    By using the concept of fascism in such an elastic way, Safatle ends up obscuring the very change he intends to explain: the crisis of liberal democracies. After all, if these democracies are already forms of fascism, it is difficult to understand what happens when aspiring autocrats start attacking courts, restricting civil liberties, manipulating elections or violating the separation of Powers.

    Some analogies presented in the book are so extreme that they compare CEOs’ speeches to concentration camp administrators’ speeches, or cafeteria owners to fascist agitators in interwar Europe.

    If the concept of fascism allows us to group executives, fast-food micro-entrepreneurs and agents of the totalitarian apparatus of the 1930s into the same category, it is worth asking: what does it actually explain?

    Conceptual ambiguity

    For Safatle, the caution of other analysts in use the term “fascism” is a sign of reluctance in facing the problems of liberal democracies. But conceptual differences cannot be resolved this way. What he describes as fear may simply be rigor.

    After all, careful construction of concepts is not optional, but an obligation. Without a clear definition, they become diluted in common sense and are applied without criteria. In “The Internal Threat”, “fascism” operates on several levels: as a structure of liberal societies, a regime of violence, an affective economy based on desensitization, among other uses.

    Now, when a term changes its meaning throughout the same argument, the classic problem of the fallacy of ambiguity arises. The premises and conclusions seem linked, but the logical connection between them has already been lost. The result is a text that may sound complex, but is actually confusing.

    A global diagnosis?

    It is also worth asking: why call these phenomena fascism? Is the analysis presented really global?

    This concept arises from a particular historical experience, interwar Europe, and this helps to explain why Safatle limits its application to consolidated liberal democracies. Authoritarian regimes like China or Russia They are not mentioned, nor are devastating conflicts in other regions of the world, such as the cases of Sudan and eastern Congo.

    The work ignores entire populations that have never lived under stable liberal democracies or do not even have states capable of guaranteeing territorial control. The result is a concept that functions less as a comparative category and more as a criterion for selecting cases that favor the author’s thesis.

    By excluding consolidated dictatorships or countries devastated by civil wars from the analysis, it becomes easier to maintain that liberal democracy is a form of fascism. Without this contrast, it is lost sight of the fact that democratic institutions, despite their limitations, create minimum conditions of competition and political contestation from which it is possible to claim the expansion of civil and social rights.

    After all, the contemporary crisis of liberal democracies that the book deals with consists precisely in the erosion of these conditions.

    History as an archive of examples

    A striking feature of the book is its political uses of the past. European fascism in the 1930sLatin American dictatorships, contemporary protests, geopolitical conflicts and the transformations of global capitalism are outlined as manifestations of the same historical process.

    This procedure is directly linked to the stretching of the concept of fascism. When the term starts to designate very different phenomena, it is possible to bring them together in the same argument.

    The result is close to what historiography has called “therapeutic history”: instead of reconstructing chronologies and causalities of historical processes, episodes from different contexts are selected that have a superficial similarity with a previous thesis.

    The past thus ceases to be a field of discovery and becomes an archive of illustrations. It works less as an explanation of the world and more as an instrument of moral mobilization.

    Events separated in time and space appear as expressions of the same fascist structure, even though the connections are opaque. Therapeutic stories produce moral cohesion within a group, organize collective identities, and draw boundaries between “us” and “them.”

    The past, however, remains largely misunderstood, as it only serves to confirm convictions and political mobilization of readers.

    Empirical problems

    The book also presents problems with empirical support. Safatle suggests that we live in an era of constant radicalization of social struggles, which would lead States to promote wars and conflicts to preserve their unity. The available evidence, however, points in the opposite direction.

    In long-term historical terms, the lethality of interstate wars decreased significantly throughout the 20th century, and major social revolutions became rare. Mass protests, in fact, have become more frequent, but they rarely overthrow regimes or generate transformations comparable to classic revolutions.

    The diagnosis of a world in constant insurrection, therefore, finds little support in the data. The idea, presented by Safatle, of countries on the verge of disintegration that resort to war to survive ignores the enormous asymmetry between the coercive capacity of modern states and that of civilian populations.

    Concepts as subjects

    These empirical problems connect to a theoretical difficulty. At various times, the book describes fascism, neoliberalism or power as entities capable of acting and pursuing their own objectives. Fascism “aims to rebuild social ties”, neoliberalism “imposes forms of subjectivation”, power “produces subjectivities”.

    This type of formulation creates an impression of explanation, but does not identify concrete social agents, institutions or mechanisms. Abstract concepts begin to play the role of subjects of the story.

    Something similar happens with the organicist metaphors used by the author. Society is described as a “social body” capable of becoming ill, losing sensitivity or developing autoimmune pathologies. This comparison to a body has a long tradition in political theory and classical sociology, but was heavily criticized throughout the 20th century.

    Societies are not integrated organisms, but rather arenas of conflict between different groups, institutions and interests. When analysis resorts to biological metaphors, these conflicts tend to disappear, replaced by a vague language of collective pathologies.

    Criticisms of decolonial studies

    This approach explains why Safatle’s recent criticism of decolonial thought are pertinent, but incomplete. The author focused above all on the normative content of this field, on its political utopias. However, the weakest point of this intellectual project is less in its aspirations than in its methods.

    As in “The Internal Threat”, many decolonial approaches start from a strong thesis — the structural persistence of coloniality in all dimensions of modernity — and then choose varied historical episodes to illustrate it.

    In both cases, concepts such as “coloniality” or “fascism” are stretched until they lose any precision. The result is similar: history stops being a field of investigation and serves as a repertoire of examples that confirm the theories and biases of the authors.

    The crisis of democracies

    None of this means that the contemporary crisis of liberal democracies is any less serious. On the contrary. The advancement of personalist leaders, institutional erosion and political polarization are real and worrying challenges. But this is precisely why the diagnosis requires conceptual and historical rigor.

    When concepts like fascism become so elastic and history serves only as an illustration of previous theses, analysis gives way to rhetoric. And rhetoric can mobilize emotions, but it does little to understand the challenges of the present.



    Source link

    Related Posts

    Milei adopts policy against irregular migrants and generates fear – 05/02/2026 – World
    Brazil

    Milei adopts policy against irregular migrants and generates fear – 05/02/2026 – World

    May 4, 2026
    Israel extends arrest of activists detained in flotilla – 05/03/2026 – World
    Brazil

    Israel extends arrest of activists detained in flotilla – 05/03/2026 – World

    May 4, 2026
    Cardio with weight training is the ideal recipe for a longer life – 05/03/2026 – Balance
    Brazil

    Cardio with weight training is the ideal recipe for a longer life – 05/03/2026 – Balance

    May 4, 2026
    Ally praises ‘cleaning’ of interim governor of RJ – 05/03/2026 – Politics
    Brazil

    Ally praises ‘cleaning’ of interim governor of RJ – 05/03/2026 – Politics

    May 3, 2026
    After Trump’s fanfare, US$1 million gold card fails – 05/02/2026 – World
    Brazil

    After Trump’s fanfare, US$1 million gold card fails – 05/02/2026 – World

    May 3, 2026
    Rejection of Messiah marks increase in power of the Legislature – 05/03/2026 – Politics
    Brazil

    Rejection of Messiah marks increase in power of the Legislature – 05/03/2026 – Politics

    May 3, 2026
    Next Post
    St Mary’s make history at Penn Relays with heat victory

    St Mary’s make history at Penn Relays with heat victory

    POPULAR NEWS

    Justin Bieber fans flood Coachella festival for headlining show – Entertainment

    Justin Bieber fans flood Coachella festival for headlining show – Entertainment

    April 20, 2026

    Over 600 flee homes as Army, NPA clash in Negros Occidental

    April 21, 2026

    Ex-DPWH exec recalls P800-M ‘delivery’ to Zaldy Co 

    April 20, 2026

    Former PM Paluckas suspends party membership, to waive immunity over criminal probe

    April 24, 2026
    Pres. Ali challenges CARICOM to transform into health research powerhouse

    Pres. Ali challenges CARICOM to transform into health research powerhouse

    April 23, 2026

    EDITOR'S PICK

    Delays in installing tables did not influence absenteeism: The JNE’s reasons for ruling out complementary elections

    Delays in installing tables did not influence absenteeism: The JNE’s reasons for ruling out complementary elections

    April 29, 2026
    President Simina Marks Launch of Pacific Angel Medical Exercise in Chuuk – FSM Government

    President Simina Marks Launch of Pacific Angel Medical Exercise in Chuuk – FSM Government

    April 30, 2026
    The exchange rate declines in the run-up to the elections, while the market anticipates greater volatility, what projections are there?

    The exchange rate declines in the run-up to the elections, while the market anticipates greater volatility, what projections are there?

    April 7, 2026
    Pringle Accuses ABLP of ‘Mimicking’ UPP Manifesto

    Pringle Accuses ABLP of ‘Mimicking’ UPP Manifesto

    April 28, 2026

    Recent Posts

    • Justice reviews Manuel Adorni’s expenses and will hear another witness in the case
    • Iran | United Arab Emirates says it is responding to “missile threat” for the first time since the truce | United States | Donald Trump | Strait of Hormuz
    • Wild parrots copy their friends when deciding whether to try new foods, study finds
    • Weekly Comic | On World Press Freedom Day

      © 2026 Agentially - Navigating shifting sovereignties and global risk .

      Welcome Back!

      Login to your account below

      Forgotten Password?

      Retrieve your password

      Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

      Log In
      No Result
      View All Result

        © 2026 Agentially - Navigating shifting sovereignties and global risk .

        This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.