What's the difference between national Bolshevism, National Socialism and Stalinism (minus the metaphysical commitment to materialism?). My understanding is that fascism allies with big business to crush the labour unions and reforms but Stalinism/National Bolshevism doesn't do that, so the difference is only philosophical?
All three are the same thing and reactionary, yeah.
>nationalize the factories
<yayyyyy
>nationalize the banks
<wooooohoooo
>nationalize the real estate
<yup sounds good
>nationalize the socialism
<nooooo not like that
National Bolshevism is not a coherent and well-defined ideology, in the past it comprised some RW thinkers who wanted to with ally the USSR against decadent capitalism but left very little in the way of legacy. Today the largest NB movement is Russian nazbols but they are first and foremost activists who criticize capitalism from "both the left and the right" and have a very eclectic ideological foundation. It is mostly a meme.
National "Socialism" is just reactionary capitalism/fascism
Stalinism is just Marxism-Leninism
>National Bolshevism
Born from the German Communist Party but most famously expounded by Karl Otto Paetel in The Nazbol Manifesto. I haven't read it in years but basically he advocated a planned economy while rejecting Marxist philosophy and the withering away of the state. Nations are forever, or something like that. He also advocated a German alliance with the USSR.
>National Socialism
That is just the name the 'German Workers Party' adopted to sound cooler and more populist, but it was very right wing from the start, mixing chauvinism, anticommunism and antisemitism. Supposedly it was Anton Drexler who coined the name. Hitler completely rejected Socialism as evident by his disputes with the Strassers and his embrace of German capitalism. Class didn't matter, only race did. He advocated racial collectivism and compared that to socialism, aka great nonsense.
>Stalinism
Mostly just a name for Stalin's government and policies from the first 5 year plan to his death. Some people use it as a pejorative, others call themselves like that proudly. Some use it more broadly to mean all soviet-aligned states or all Marxism-Leninism.