this post was submitted on 12 Jul 2023
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Europe

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[โ€“] 332 73 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (3 children)

In any other situation I would ask what the hell you guys are doing over there, but as it stands we have pretty much exactly the same situation here in Sweden.

Pretty scary development honestly. Europe really does not need a populist far-right resurgence right now.

[โ€“] MetaPhrastes 10 points 1 year ago

Same here in Italy. We are ahead of the rest of Europe this time, due to having voted earlier last year. A word of warning: no matter how radical and extremist their claims are, once they take the seats in parliament they don't change anything. Here they came to the paradox of abrogating some laws of the previous government and reintroduce the very same measure with a different name. Only rhetorics will change (and not entirely for the good, unfortunately).

[โ€“] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Europe really does not need a populist far-right resurgence right now.

What could possibly go wrong?

Democracy is not a state but an ever-ongoing process that involves everyone.

When the demands on society become too great, whether economic or transformative, it becomes difficult. Then the overburdened begin to follow the simpler/simplified narratives.

One could now argue that one could learn from history, but in an individualistic (or segregated) society, it is at least to some extent in the nature of the overburdened to not manage this. If these people are not helped in time, things will get turbulent. (And, in a bitter irony, often vote against their own long-term interests).

Thus, the greater the stress to which a society is exposed, the greater needs to be the solidarity of the "strong" with the "weak". Neoliberalism, however, pushes in the opposite direction.