In August 1936, in the first Moscow trial, Grigori Zinoviev and Lev Kamenev (early Bolsheviks, Lenin's comrades) were found guilty of belonging to a Trotsky-fascist bloc. The accusation was not based on any evidence of collusion with real fascism, embodied at that time by Mussolini and Hitler; it served to merge all possible opponents into a single word, placing them, according to the formula of prosecutor Vishinski, among the enemies of the people whom it was no longer worth contradicting, as they were outside legitimate political humanity.
Almost ninety years later, the procedure has not disappeared; it has only changed its vocabulary.
A word emptied of meaning
In 1946, George Orwell already noted in Politics and the English Language that the word fascism had lost its own meaning, except to designate "something undesirable." Eighty years later, his diagnosis applies almost literally to the Western political use of the terms "fascist" or "racist": wielded in Parliament, on television, or on social media, they describe less and less a precise ideology (integral nationalism, economic corporatism, cult of the leader) and more and more a simple moral boundary between the side of good and the rest.
During the 2023 pension reform in France, for example, several opposition deputies labeled the government as fascist, without ever discussing the pension funding figures. Few of those who use these words would, moreover, be able to define historical fascism beyond the insult itself.








