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Ontology:Q88

From Philosophical Research
Revision as of 01:40, 4 August 2025 by Reversedragon (talk | contribs) (Usage notes / page alias / HuePalette)
  1. named nationalism 1-1-1

Characteristics in draft

item type
S0 1-1-1
pronounced [P] label [string] (L)
pronounced [P] alias (en) [string]
named fascism
uniquely Spanish nationalism
uniquely Japanese nationalism
uniquely Italian nationalism
uniquely United-States nationalism
named right-wing nationalism (reactionary nationalism; political factions)
nationalism invoking concepts of restoring feudal order (duke, aristocracy; political factions)
fascism (countable faction of nationalists assembled for specific national concept pertaining to specific nation-state or empire; countable ideologies)
(... fuller list of aliases)
QID references [Item] 1-1-1
Q14,88 Nazi Germany
Item philosophy tag
pronounced PT
Item color coding [classname]
field_nations
   #ddb887
   #ae8847
pronounced [P] Entity hex color [color]
   #ddb887
CSS property [identifier]
background
pronounced [P] Entity hex color [color]
   #ae8847
CSS property [identifier]
border-color
subset of
--
instance of
general form of several specific philosophies
prototype notes
.field_nations: nationalism / imperialist nationalisms / feudal orders

Wavebuilder combinations

pronounced [P] pronounced Wavebuilder: forms result [Item]
--
along with [Item]
--
forming from [Item]
--
--
--

Usage notes

Color swatch

The PT philosophy tag and khaki color swatch refer mainly to Tory parties, but are intentionally reused for named fascisms to discourage both A) anyone legitimizing fascist propositions as "just some ideology that exists" and B) anyone trying to disclaim that Tory parties have nothing to do with fascism because they're technically Tories and technically not fascism yet, or they're technically not fascism because their faction is not the ally but the enemy of the European fascisms of World War II. (Within the United States, these kinds of arguments are dreadfully common.) Categorizing both types of ideologies as merely "nationalisms" invites people to seriously look into what factors cause Toryism to transform or realize into a form of European-style fascism and makes each of these ploys easier to see through.

While nationalism could have been abbreviated "TP" to neatly fit the phrases "Tory parties" and "Tea Party", the mostly-meaningless abbreviation "PT" was chosen as a matter of running counter to the flood of news outlets that would like to convince everyone in other countries that the history of United States Liberal-republican factions is the only lens through which to interpret their own country, and that "Trump" and "TPUSA" are somehow directly important to their future instead of being a symptom of something greater or having a more indirect effect. The abbreviation "PT" also has the benefit of sounding like a particular slightly-obscure horror story, offering a way to cast nationalism negatively without immediately turning away Tories from learning anything within the first few seconds of looking at a page. Not to be confused with "Partido dos Trabalhadores", which is at least nominally a Labor party.