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Can the term 'cloud fascism' help us to resist the hard right?
May 16, 2025
|The Guardian Weekly
Last month, a few weeks into the random detentions and denied entries at the US border, I was supposed to go to Princeton University as a guest lecturer to discuss global fascism.

I asked the professors who invited me whether they thought it was safe to come. When I was in Turkey, European journalist friends once similarly asked me whether they'd be detained. And just as I did then, the American professors hesitated with half sentences: "Well, you know..." It was decided that a law firm should be involved. After some back and forth, the final assessment remained unsettlingly ambiguous: "A detention is unlikely, but we cannot be sure." Eventually, to be on the safe side, we choose the online option.
In the end all was fine on the surface, but I know from being on the other side of this story that the silk threadlike connection between us humans had been cut.
They felt their land a shade darker, and I felt like giving up on the unfortunate in dire times. After all, I should know: this is how a country drifts into darkness -not by a dictator's orders but rather by the outside world abandoning its people to their own means, by cutting millions of the threads that hold humanity together.
هذه القصة من طبعة May 16, 2025 من The Guardian Weekly.
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المزيد من القصص من The Guardian Weekly

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