>authoritarian
They want to collapse the system and bring up something with more rules and laws and regulations than currently used.
>ultranationalism
I'll take this, nationalism is about group preference and antifa absolutely do have group preferences.
>characterized by dictatorial power
Says who?
Hitler had some power, as did Goebels and Himmler and Goering. Likewise, the prime minister has some power, as does the treasurer, foreign minister and so on.
>forcible suppression of opposition and control of industry and commerce
Like unions?
>The first fascist movements emerged in Italy during World War I before it spread to other European countries.
Examples aren't definitions.
>Opposed to liberalism, Marxism and anarchism
Oppositions aren't definitions either, this is why reactionaries are dumb; they don't actually believe anything they just disagree with a lot of things. Same shit with post modernism, it doesn't actually mean anything it's just beyond modernism. It critiques modernism.
>fascism is usually placed on the FAR-RIGHT within the traditional left–right spectrum.
Bullshit.
Kill yourself.
Far right authoritarianism isn't fascism, it's tribal subjugation and tributary states.
Of course not.
But fascists control industries and the media is a form of industry, ergo fascism necessarily means censorship. Likewise, fascism actually implies the use of syndicates, unions and (here I go!) community, which very strictly means controlling culture for the use of social engineering. Part of this means setting up youth clubs, like the Hitler youth, or controlling education, like strict state education and control over the industry called "child care." This includes promoting child care, either subvertly through working women or overtly through making all teachers and child care workers have licenses and go through government indoctrination.
Congratulations, you now realise everything antifa want actually and honestly is fascism.
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