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In the grim aftermath of World War II and the Stalinist purges, the term "totalitarianism" has become a bad word. But for progressives before the war, Jonah Goldberg points out, it was a good word. "Totalitarianism" was a term used by Mussolini in a positive, descriptive sense. It meant giving total allegiance to the state; it meant a state that took care of people's physical, emotional, and aspirational needs. Totalitarianism implied an exhilarating unity of thought and action. 19 Totalitarianism, in this sense, was the shared aspiration of fascists, Nazis, and progressives. Schivelbusch writes, "The New Deal Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany all profited from the illusion of the nation as an egalitarian community whose members looked out for one another's welfare under the watchful eyes of a strong leader."20 Progressives across Europe and America in the 1930s relished the idea of the totalitarian society in which they could impose this unity, in other words, to supervise and control people's lives. Does totalitarianism in this sense seem unfamiliar? It shouldn't be. Recall President Obama's propagandistic "Julia" videos. Essentially the Obama administration promised this hypothetical young woman cradle-to-grave protection. Absurdly, the package of benefits offered by the government under Obama would be worth more than the wages of a typical forty-hour work week. "Under President Obama" Julia would get education subsidies, minimum wage, food stamps, and free health care. "Under President Obama" Julia even decides to bear a child. To me, it's a bit unnerving. But this is progressive utopia: citizens are all brought into complete subordination and submission to an all-powerful state.

( Dinesh D'Souza )
[ Hillary's America: The Secret ]
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