muarry bonkchin Profile picture
Jun 10, 2023 23 tweets 8 min read Read on X
If you’ve been keeping up with Ukraine, you might be familiar with this guy, Russian author and philosopher Aleksandr Dugin. Called 'Putin's Brain', many have called him a fascist, tho he and is followers repeatedly deny this.

So what’s his deal? Is Dugin a fascist? 🧵 Image
Some history first; In 1980, Dugin was part of the Yuzhinsky Circle, a group of irreverent hipsters who were into satanism, witchcraft and, funnily enough, esoteric Nazism. Dugin especially loved the Nazi part. Reportedly, everyone from his early years ends up bringing it up. Image
Dugin also joined up with the Pamyat Society/National Patriotic Front "Memory" in 1988, a group described as a far-right, nationalist, antisemitic & pro-Tsarist. Members of Pamyat later split off to form Russian National Unity party.

Both groups used swastikas, oddly enough. Members of the National Pat...
In 1993, Dugin convinced his friend Eduard Limonov to cofound the National Bolshevik Party, where he edited the group’s newspaper. Like the name suggests, the nazbol ideology is a mix of economic socialism with heavy Russian nationalism. Notice the flag. Image
This sudden tilt to communism was probably helped by his friendship with Gennady Zyuganov, cofounder and current General Secretary of the CPRF. Dugin is believed to have had some influence on the CPRF’s programme and nationalist tendency, tho this has never been confirmed.
Dugin would end up leaving the NBP in ’97, claiming the party was moving too far left, still working towards his idea of a conservative revolution. Ironically enough, the remaining members would label Dugin and the members who followed him as a fascist. Their words, not mine.
Fmr. Russia MP Ilya Ponomarev said the NBP were never a serious movement but “a postmodernist aesthetic project of intellectual provocateurs” which used “a bizarre mixture of totalitarian and fascist symbols, geopolitical dogma, leftist ideas, and national-patriotic demagoguery.” Image
After this, Dugin went on to write a few books. One of these, “The Foundations of Geopolitics”, a guidebook on how Russia could oust America as top dog, is a favourite of the Russian military, with many calling it a blueprint for Russia’s current foreign policy plan. Image
Above all else, Dugin is a philosopher, and a big fan of thinkers like Evola and Heidegger. Here he is on BBC Newsnight in 2016 presenting his ‘special Russian truth’ theory, a postmodern interpretation of truth being relative, or more specifically, absolute truth doesn’t exist.
Dugin’s fans love to point out how he’s gone on record to denounce fascism and rejects the label. Here he is saying this in an interview with white supremacist antisemite Jean-François Gariépy. Case closed, right?

Thing is, he has no problem with Fascism when Russia does it.
In his 1997 essay “Fascism - Borderless and Red”, Dugin claims Germany’s fascism was totally different to any potential Russian variation of fascism, which would be fine, as it’s “a combination of natural national conservatism with a passionate desire for true changes.” Image
As in 2009’s “The 4th Political Theory”, Dugin rejects stock ethnic nationalism for his theory of 'ethnos', attributing specific cultural values to specific regional groups. It’s using this system that he sets up Russia as the good guy against American modernity. Image
Dugin and his lot believe liberalism and modernity are inherently ‘Atlanticist’ ideas that are eroding the Russian way of life. His solution? Unite all of Eurasia under a conservative, nationalistic and illiberal regime with Russia at its head. That'll solve everything. Image
In a move typical of most fascist thinkers, Dugin’s definition of ‘modernity’ is vague, including feminism, LGBT rights, environmentalism, atheism and biology. All of these, he says, are being imposed on Russia by the west, as exemplified in the West’s support of Ukraine.
On Ukraine, Dugin holds a contradictory view; while claiming he wants Ukraine and Russia to form a new state altogether, finally uniting a common people, he’s simultaneously claiming they need to be “killed, killed, killed” since 2014, when Russia first invaded Crimea. Image
Dugin believes personal liberty is it should be universal only between cultures (or Ethnos), and since some of those cultures are illiberal, they should be allowed to enforce their absolutist, collectivist, or otherwise illiberal traditions within their borders.
This is where his fans, which include Russian nationalists, ‘patriotic socialists’ and the like, get their definitions of fascism; they insist far-right, authoritarian nationalism isn’t fascist, but gay liberal environmentalists from the west are. They think they've cracked it.
Dugin’s beliefs tick every box for what defines a fascist, from Umberto Eco to Lawrence Britt. His ultranationalism isn’t ethnic, but palingenetic, wanting to “recapture the glorious past from a liberal and cosmopolitan present.” Image
More importantly, Dugin’s beliefs require the all of Eurasia to be a cultural monolith with no room for deviation. This ignores reality (a skill of his) and is just cultural essentialism as an excuse to expand Russia's power and indulge in endless American whataboutism.
inb4 "you don't understand his ideas"

You don’t need to read Hegel and Deluze to be able to tell if a ultranationalist conservative who wants Russia to stretch from Dublin to Vladivostok is a fascist or not. No amount of pretentious postmodernism can change objective reality. Image
Some resources if you wanna do your own reading;
stephenhicks.org/wp-content/upl…
archive.org/details/TheFou…
areomagazine.com/2022/04/05/ale…
• "Black Wind, White Snow: The Rise of Russia's New Nationalism" by Charles Clover
neweasterneurope.eu/2022/11/09/wha…
commonwealmagazine.org/just-call-it-f…
Also; I am by no means attempting to justify American imperialism, or supporting American-style, pro-capitalist liberalism. Disliking Dugin's wonky beliefs doesn't mean I support the US putting its fingers in other countries affairs. If you think that, you have soup for brains.
I could've spent more time in this thread going into detail about what the specifics of fascism and less bringing up Dugin's old obsession with nazis, I don't deny that. But this is a Twitter thread. We're not in a Greek agora doing sophistry.

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More from @UncolaMD

May 1, 2024
As per request, here's a small 🧵 of Hinkle's links to Lyndon Larouche and the Schiller Institute.
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The "picture of him at an event with a couple LaRouche people like 3 years ago", as Eddie puts it, was Hinkle's speaking gig at the Schiller Institute's Oct. 2022 conference on 'Green Fascism'. He was a headline speaker and wanted to let everyone know. Image
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How Lyndon LaRouche, the Heritage Foundation and the Nazis all contributed to ‘Cultural Marxism’ (and what the Frankfurt School is actually about)

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So, back in the 1920s there was a group of academics called the Institute for Social Research at the Goethe University Frankfurt, founded by Prof. Carl Grünberg as the first Marxist research center in Germany. Unfortunately for them, this was during the Weimar Republic… Image
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Mar 21, 2024
Quick🧵 on Dugin’s weird obsession with Esoteric Nazism and Hyberborea, since y'all asked Image
(Recommend catching up with the main thread if you wanna know how he got into the esoteric to begin with)
Thanks to the Iuzhinskii Circle’s reading material, Dugin familiarised himself with several thinkers synonymous with the neopagan mysticism of the Third Reich, specifically to do with scientific racism and weird extraterrestrial stuff. It’s hard to explain without getting sussed.
Read 21 tweets
Mar 16, 2024
If you’re read up on the Ukraine war, you might be familiar with this guy, Russian author and philosopher Aleksandr Dugin. I wrote about him a while ago trying to figure out if he was a fascist (short answer: yes).

But did you know he’s also a neonazi cultist?

Not joking. 1/🧵 Image
Important disclaimer: given the current climate around social panics, I’m fully aware accusing a public figure of occultism or nazism sounds exasperating.

So when I say that Dugin was inspired by an esoteric satanic cult to join neonazi movements, I don’t exaggerate.
Before his start in politics, Dugin was a member of the Iuzhinskii Circle group (alternatively spelled ‘Yuzhinsky’), also briefly known as “the Black Order of the SS”, since his early 20s. Dugin has fondly referred to them as “the true masters of the Moscow esoteric elite." Image
Read 28 tweets
Jul 2, 2023
The USSR under Lenin was the world leader in gay rights and gender corrective surgery for more than a decade. Before Stalin rolled back certain laws in the 30's, queer liberation was understood as “part of the revolution."

1/🧵
Myth: "Russia never intentionally decriminalised homosexuality, they just revoked tsarist laws!"

Reality: Homosexuality was legalised in the RSFSR Penal Code of 1922, then AGAIN in 1926. Worth noting, however, this only applied to RSFSR and the Ukrainian SSR.
This is Nikolai Semashko, the first People's Commissar of Public Health for the USSR. He's responsible for the introduction of world's first universal healthcare system, refereed to as the Semashko model.

He was also one of the earliest supporters for Soviet queer emancipation.
Read 23 tweets

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