Author Topic: Trump a Fascist?  (Read 2400 times)

90sRetroFan

  • Administrator
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 11225
  • WESTERN CIVILIZATION MUST DIE!
    • View Profile
Re: Trump a Fascist?
« Reply #30 on: September 12, 2022, 01:35:02 am »
https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/restoring-america/community-family/san-diego-teacher-defines-fascist-to-class-as-whites-heterosexuals-and-christians

Quote
EXCLUSIVE — A teacher from Madison High School in San Diego claimed fascists are synonymous with the "modern-day Republican Party" and "white, Christian, heterosexuals," according to a student at the school.
...
The student took a picture during the class that shows how the teacher defined "fascist." On the classroom's white dry-erase board, the teacher wrote the word "fascist," underlined it, and listed the words: Trump, heterosexual, white, Christian, and hatred of foreigners, immigrants, and minorities, among others.

In reality:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fasces#Origin_and_symbolism

Quote
The symbolism of the fasces suggests strength through unity (see Unity makes strength); a single rod is easily broken, while the bundle is very difficult to break.

Clinton's 2016 campaign slogan was the fascist slogan:



The more minorities included, the more rods forming the bundle, meaning the stronger the fasces! The more immigrants, the more extra rods joining the bundle, meaning the stronger the fasces! (Immigrants are also emigrants, which means the bundles of other countries end up with fewer rods at the same time as your bundle ends up with more rods, hence fascism should prize immigrants doubly!) And "heterosexual"? Does this 'teacher' know anything at all?!

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homosexuality_in_ancient_Rome

Quote
Homosexuality in ancient Rome often differs markedly from the contemporary West. Latin lacks words that would precisely translate "homosexual" and "heterosexual".[1]
...
Love or desire between males is a very frequent theme in Roman literature. In the estimation of a modern scholar, Amy Richlin, out of the poems preserved to this day, those addressed by men to boys are as common as those addressed to women.[20]
...
Homoerotic themes occur throughout the works of poets writing during the reign of Augustus, including elegies by Tibullus[36] and Propertius,[37] several Eclogues of Vergil, especially the second, and some poems by Horace. In the Aeneid, Vergil – who, according to a biography written by Suetonius, had a marked sexual preference for boys[38][39] – draws on the Greek tradition of pederasty in a military setting by portraying the love between Nisus and Euryalus,[40] whose military valor marks them as solidly Roman men (viri).[41] Vergil describes their love as pius, linking it to the supreme virtue of pietas as possessed by the hero Aeneas himself, and endorsing it as "honorable, dignified and connected to central Roman values".[42]
...
When whole objects rather than mere fragments are unearthed, homoerotic scenes are usually found to share space with pictures of opposite-sex couples, which can be interpreted to mean that heterosexuality and homosexuality (or male homosexuality, in any case) are of equal value.[52][54]
...
The treatment given to the subject in such vessels is idealized and romantic, similar to that dispensed to heterosexuality. The artist's emphasis, regardless of the sex of the couple being depicted, lies in the mutual affection between the partners and the beauty of their bodies.[56]