Nazi-fascismo, Socialismo e Integralismo
Enviado: 17 Fev 2006, 22:40












Porcos nacionalistas-socialistas...
Religião é Veneno. Fórum de discussão de assuntos relevantes para o ateísmo, agnosticismo, humanismo e ceticismo. Defesa da razão e do Método Científico.
https://antigo.religiaoeveneno.com.br/
https://antigo.religiaoeveneno.com.br/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=2462
Mr.Hammond escreveu:E é ! E é!
carlo escreveu:Mr.Hammond escreveu:E é ! E é!
Hammond! Este liquid é vc, ou ele ´tá te imitando com estas fotos postagens?
Ateu Tímido escreveu:Fatos e provas?
Ou apenas conversa fiada e foto-bostagem???
Ateu Tímido escreveu:Fatos e provas?
Ou apenas conversa fiada e foto-bostagem???
DarkWings escreveu:Eu tenho impressão que a extrema-direta e extrema-esquerda são na verdade as duas pontas de um círculo que se tocam. Há muito pouca diferença quando se trata de estados totalitários.
Há tempo: os EUA há muito deixaram de serem um modelo de liberdade. O governo Bush beira o nazi-facismo.
DarkWings escreveu:Eu tenho impressão que a extrema-direta e extrema-esquerda são na verdade as duas pontas de um círculo que se tocam. Há muito pouca diferença quando se trata de estados totalitários.
Há tempo: os EUA há muito deixaram de serem um modelo de liberdade. O governo Bush beira o nazi-facismo.
Wikipedia escreveu:National-Bolshevik Party
The National Bolshevik Party (Russian: Национал-большевистская партия) is a nationalist political party, currently banned in Russia dedicated to the ideology of National Bolshevism. Although the Party was banned by a lower court in June 2005, the Russian Supreme Court overturned the ban in August, just two months later.
The party has been led by Eduard Limonov since its founding in 1992 as National Bolshevik Front. Aleksandr Dugin was amongst the earliest members and was instrumental in convincing Limonov to enter the political arena. At present, the party membership is around 15,000, with regional departments throughout Russia and a headquarters in Moscow. The party is known for attracting young people on the margin of society, from delinquents to vanguard intellectuals and artists.
The party believes in the creation of a grand empire that will include the whole of Europe and Russia to be governed under Russian dominance. The party is vehemently anti-American and sees the creation of this 'Eurasia' as an essential counterbalance to American global domination. However, when Dugin left the NBP to create his own party "Eurasia" the NBP diminished the importance of its geo-political agenda in favor of a national one, concentrating on the defense of Russian minorities in the former USSR republics and the opposition to the political regime in Russia. As for Dugin, Limonov denounced his conservatism and submissiveness to the regime.
On the national arena, the party is highly critical of the government of Vladimir Putin and considers state institutions such as the bureaucracy, the police and the courts to be corrupt and authoritarian. In return the Russian authorities often employ repressive methods against the NBP, although they have not officially proclaimed it to be an extremist organization.
Since the NBP was refused registration as an official party, its preferred political activity has consisted of direct action stunts carried out mostly against prominent political figures in order to protest political and social issues and to gain popularity among the Russian population. One of its most recent and famous direct actions consisted of taking over the Ministry of Health in Moscow on August 2nd 2004 in order to protest the cancellation of social benefits in Russia.
The NBP's official organ is the journal Limonka (Лимонка). The name - literally little lemon- is a play of words on Limonov and is idiomatic Russian for grenade. It was forced to change its name after the authorities banned it for "promoting extremism and hatred". The main editor of Limonka for many years was Alexei Tsetkov (Алексей Цветков). [1]
In November, 2005, the Russian Supreme Court upheld a ban on the National-Bolshevik Party on the technical ground that it violated the law on political parties by calling itself a "party" without being registered as such.[2] The party had already suffered several government crack-downs, including a raid on their offices on 17 June (following which three party members slashed their wrists in protests) and the setting up of Nashi (Ours), a government-sponsored anti-Fascist movement that has since carried out attacks on the NBP. The decision has still to be ratified by the Supreme Court of Justice, although it has left the NBP in a virtually untouchable position as even the Communist Party of the Russian Federation is now actively seeking to exclude them from events (having previously tolerated NBP supporters at rallies).
A series of much smaller groups known as the National Bolshevik Party can be found in Latvia, Moldova, Sweden and Ukraine, although their influence is much smaller than their Russian counterpart. There are also small NBPs, made up mostly of Russian emigres, in the United States, Canada, Israel, and various European countries.