| > Right-wing is usually in favor of free market and free enterprise Nope; while that's a libertarian point of view also shared (though typically balanced against other concerns, for those not primarily libertarians) by a number of center- and moderate-right (and center- and moderate-left) groups. > Right-wing is usually against gun controls, whilst NSAP was very gun control. That's a fairly recent quirk of the American Republican party, not true of the general right-wing. > Right-wing is usually pro free speech for everyone no matter what. NSAP was not pro free speech. Government literally ran the media. Free speech, is again, a libertarian position with fairly broad support from the moderate left to moderate right, though those that aren't primarily libertarians on both sides tend to be likely to favor significant restrictions because of competing priorities. Pure free speech has never been a position typifying the right wing. >
> Right-wing is mostly against welfare state, while NSAP was very pro welfare state No, the NSDAP was not pro-welfare state. (The welfare state is not just any state that does more than libertarian minarchists would prefer.) |