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(en) Canada, Collectif Emma Goldman - Antifa, more than ever! (ca, de, fr, it, pt, tr)[machine translation]

Date Wed, 29 Oct 2025 08:25:18 +0200


The contemporary political scene is characterized by an overwhelming heaviness. Internationally, the situation is alarming: we are witnessing a daily drift toward authoritarianism and fascistism, particularly south of the border.
In Quebec, this anxiety is manifested in an escalation of identity politics fueled by parties like the PQ and the CAQ. Their strategy is to blame all of society's ills-the housing crisis, the education crisis, the health crisis-on "the other," that is, immigrants or newcomers.

This tactic serves to mask their incompetence and the deleterious effects of their own policies, which historically and currently consist of:

-Giving gifts to big business;
-Cutting taxes for the wealthy;

-Drastically weakening public services, a trend that is part of a government continuity dating back well beyond Legault's seven years (Couillard, Charest, Landry, Bouchard, etc.).

The Foundations of the Anti-Fascist Struggle
According to La Horde, "Anti-fascism has become a struggle to be defended" (p. 8). This necessity was accentuated when the "orange clown" declared anti-fascists (antifas) a domestic terrorist organization.

Despite the allegations of the Quebec far right-one of whose influential figures claimed on Quebec radio that the antifas were nothing more than a Stalinist invention-history tells us otherwise. La Horde reminds us that anti-fascism existed even before the birth of Benito Mussolini's fascist party. Before bearing this name, activists were already organizing against the far right, then known as "the reaction." (p. 9)

The Multiple Dimensions of the Movement
Antifascism is a multifaceted movement and cannot be reduced to a single category. It is simultaneously:

-A "self-defense movement"
-A "revolutionary political current"
-A "counterculture" (p. 11)

Its roots are deeply embedded in the history of left-wing organizations. During the interwar period, antifascism was structured and developed primarily "within the political organizations of the workers' movement (communist, socialist, and anarchist)" (p. 14). It is therefore a well-established political and social tradition, born of the fight against authoritarianism.

Defensive Racism
The modern far right is built on five fundamental ideological pillars: racism, sexism (including homophobia and transphobia), nationalism, traditionalism, and authoritarianism.

A major tactical shift is observed: the shift from offensive racism to defensive racism. The latter aims to deny the systemic foundations of racism and reverse role perceptions.

This defensive racism is articulated around several mechanisms. It is expressed through the injunction to "put an end to repentance," a rejection of all historical guilt, and a denial of structural racism. In Canada, this is illustrated by the comments of Maxime Bernier (leader of the PPC), who called the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation a "hoax" and denounced "false white guilt and the scam based on it." Added to this is the active exploitation of anti-Muslim sentiment (Islamophobia) to stir up fear and division. Finally, the movement propagates fallacious theories, such as the "Great Replacement," which claims that so-called "historical" populations are victims of a demographic threat, thus transforming minorities and immigrant populations into presumed aggressors. This tactic clearly aims to reverse power relations.

The Mask of Ideological Vacuity
The current far right is distinguished by its lack of a comprehensive program. La Horde emphasizes that these movements "[...]are not affiliated with any specific current" (p. 9). To mask this ideological vacuity, they resort to semantic camouflage, concealing their objectives behind deliberately vague and normalizing labels such as "identitarian," "conservative," or simply "right-wing." This allows them to attract a wider audience while avoiding committing to clear or radical political positions.

Antifascism: Response to Violence
The question of violence is central to the debate on antifascism.
On the one hand, Mathieu Bock-Côté criticizes antifascism as a violent ultra-left militia that uses the label to discredit its opponents and justify its own violence.

On the other hand, antifascist organizations like Horde argue that while the violence of antifascism is often "pointed out," it is by forgetting that it is "first and foremost a response to the violence that constitutes far-right movements" (p. 14).

Anti-fascism is therefore fundamentally positioned as a reaction to the inherent and historical violence of the movements it combats.

In short, the urgency of anti-fascism is more pressing than ever, fueled by a convergence of threats ranging from international authoritarianism to the escalation of Quebec identity. Faced with the political exploitation of internal crises and the use of defensive racism by the nationalist right and the far right, the need for action is clear.

Being anti-fascist means, above all, being against racism and authoritarianism. It is an essential political and social struggle to defend the principles of equality and emancipation in the face of any attempt at division or the inversion of power relations.

It's a struggle reminiscent of Terence's famous Latin maxim, "Homo sum, humani nihil a me alienum puto" (I am human, and nothing human is alien to me), which has been modernized to become: "No human is alien on this earth." This ideal places the emancipation of all human beings at the heart of the anti-fascist struggle.

Source: La Horde, Dix questions sur l'antifascisme, libertalia, 2023, 202 p.
by Collectif Emma Goldman

http://ucl-saguenay.blogspot.com/2025/10/antifa-plus-que-jamais.html
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