Being ANTI-FA is at the heart of US Patriotism.

Army Talk, March 24, 1945, was published by what was then called the US War Department. WWII was still raging. This eight-page publication was given to our soldiers to explain what they were fighting for. “...you are risking your very lives because of a thing called fascism… We Americans have been fighting fascists for more than three years.” It details what fascism is, how it takes hold of a population, and the human misery it has fueled. It is just one of many examples of how the USA has always been ANTI-FA - anti-fascist - and to not be a part of that fight is to shame the founding principles of our country.

Excerpts from the publication:

Fascism is government by the few and for the few. The objective is seizure and control of the economic, political, social, and culture life of the state… Anyone who is not a member of their inner gang has to do what he’s told. They permit no civil liberties, no equality before the law. They make their own rules and change them when they choose. If you don’t like it, it’s “T.S.” They maintain themselves in power by use of force…

The official title of the Nazi party was deliberately worded for its propaganda value, appealing to the “nationalists,” “socialists,” “workers,” and all others who might be favorably influences by these labels. At the very time that the fascists proclaimed that there party was the party of the “average citizen” they were in the pay of certain big industrialists and financiers who wanted to run the people with an iron hand.
The racists promised everything to everyone… to the whole nation they promised glory and wealth by conquest. They asserted it was their right, as a “superior people,” to rule the world…

It was easy enough for the fascists to promise all things to all people before they were in power. Once they were actually in power, they could not, of course, keep their contradictory promises…. out went equality b before the law, free elections and free political parties, independent trade unions and independent schools, freedom of speech and freedom of the press and, in time, freedom of religion.

Here is the entire PDF of this issue of Army Talk.  



  Discuss this web page, or comment on it, here.


  Quick Links 

   my home page
 
 my consulting services  &  my workshops & presentations
 
 my credentials & expertise

 Affirmation that this web site is created & managed by a human.
 
 My book: The Last Virtual Volunteering Guidebook

 contact me   or   see my schedule
 
 Free Resources: Community Outreach, With & Without Tech


 Free Resources: Engaging & Supporting Volunteers
 
 Free Resources: Technology Tips for Non-Techies

 Free Resources: Nonprofit, NGO & other mission-based management resources

 Free Resources: Web Development, Maintenance, Marketing for non-Web designers

 Free Resources: Corporate philanthropy / social responsibility programs

 Free Resources: For people & groups that want to volunteer
 
 linking to or from my web site
 
 The Coyote Helps Foundation
 
 me on social media (follow me, like me, put me in a circle, subscribe to my newsletter)

support my workhow to support my work

To know when I have developed a new resource related to the above subjects, found a great resource by someone else, published a new blog, uploaded a new video,
or to when & where I'm training or presenting, use any of the following social media apps to follow me on any of these social media platforms:

like me on Facebook     Mastodon logo    Bluesky logo    follow me on Reddit    follow me on LinkedIn     view my YouTube
                videos


Disclaimer: No guarantee of accuracy or suitability is made by the poster/distributor of the materials on this web site.
This material is provided as is, with no expressed or implied warranty or liability.

See my web site's privacy policy.

Permission is granted to copy, present and/or distribute a limited amount of material from my web site without charge if the information is kept intact and without alteration, and is credited to:

Jayne Cravens
          & Coyote Communications, www.coyotebroad.com

Otherwise, please contact me for permission to reprint, present or distribute these materials (for instance, in a class or book or online event for which you intend to charge).

The art work and material on this site was created and is copyrighted 1996-2026
by Jayne Cravens, all rights reserved
(unless noted otherwise, or the art comes from a link to another web site).