No. 7: System comparison: Fascism vs Electric Technocracy
- Mike Miller
- 5 days ago
- 2 min read
“Fascism – The Ideology of Death” A critical analysis in comparison to Electronic Technocracy
I. Definition: What is Fascism?
Fascism is a totalitarian, ultranationalist, and authoritarian form of government based on the worship of a leader, the alignment of all societal institutions, and violence against dissenters. It emerged in the early 20th century as a reaction to democratic, socialist, and liberal movements.
It is not merely a form of government but a political ideology with a state-forming effect – often linked to militarism, racism, and anti-pluralism.
II. Characteristics and Systemic Weaknesses
A. Cult of Leadership and Disempowerment of the People Power lies with a “strong leader” to whom absolute loyalty is owed. Critical thinking is suppressed; the individual is irrelevant – the collective (usually “nation” or “race”) is everything. This leads to an absolutization of power without oversight.
B. Enforced Conformity and Censorship Media, education, judiciary, and culture are centrally controlled. Freedom of expression, science, press, and art are suppressed or instrumentalized. Opposition is persecuted as “enemies of the people.”
C. Culture of Violence and Glorification of War The state glorifies violence as a political tool. Minorities are stigmatized and disenfranchised – up to and including extermination. Wars are promoted not as a last resort but as necessity and virtue.
III. Historical Crimes and Catastrophes
National Socialism in Germany (1933–1945)
Holocaust: Systematic murder of over 6 million Jews and millions of other “undesirable” groups (Roma, homosexuals, disabled people, political opponents).
Second World War: 60–70 million deaths worldwide; destruction of entire countries.
Totalitarianism: Complete abolition of democracy, mass surveillance, child soldiers, forced labor.
Fascist Italy under Benito Mussolini
Wars of aggression in Africa (e.g., Ethiopia 1935 with poison gas).
Terror against socialists, trade unionists, intellectuals.
Creation of a state openly opposed to freedom, equality, and human rights.
Spain under Franco (1939–1975)
Civil war with over 500,000 deaths.
Decades of repression, censorship, torture camps, executions of political opponents.
Backwardness due to isolation, fear, and enforced ideology.
IV. Fascism vs. Electronic Technocracy
Fascism | Electronic Technocracy |
Violence as a state instrument | Dialogue and algorithmic de-escalation |
Cult of leadership | Decentralization of decision-making power |
Exclusion of minorities | Integration and transparency |
Nationalism | Global cooperation |
Censorship | Open information infrastructure |
Electronic Technocracy is the consistent countermodel: It replaces authoritarian violence with evidence-based coordination, concentrated power with networked decision-making models, and scapegoating with systemic inclusion.
V. Conclusion: Fascism – Organized Dehumanization
Fascism is not merely a political misstep but a system that rules through terror, blood, and fear. It devastates not only societies but the moral core of humanity.
Electronic Technocracy is more than a new form of governance: It is a rejection of any political mechanism based on fear, violence, and lies – and an attempt not only to learn from history, but to make a decisive turn away from it.
Wikipedia Links
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PoliticalWiki: Electric Technocracy

Elektrische Technokratie Podcast & Song
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