Fascism and The Leaf: Tobirama's Legacy, Pt.1
The thing is, Fascism isn't a static ideology, but rather it's a miscellaneous agglomeration of various political and philosophical ideas, which makes it a hive of contradictions. In and on itself, fascism lacks even a single essence, or quintessence, and because of this it's often used as a pars pro toto designation for several authoritarian ideologies.
The Leaf isn't just a totalitarian entity - base them as military authoritarianism if you prefer, but there's no escaping the fact that its precepts are rooted in fascism, as these boil down to a hotchpotch of antithetical ideals roughly sewn together. Many of them are in fact very blatantly inconsistent.
What I intend to do here is illustrate how the the Leaf suffered a distortion, as it was moulded into a fascistic entity after its birth, and not at its conception, with the Senju's influence (but specifically Tobirama's) being the caveat.
This'll be part one of a series of analyses. Enjoy and please do consider giving this a reblog!
Konohagakure was initially perceived as a new revolutionary order, avant-garde almost, and the Senju, especially Hashirama, were seen as the conduit for pioneering this change:
"Everyone knows that you're the driving force behind the village..."
Tobirama is such a subtly adroit manipulator, because not only is he the only one that's heavily shouldering this specific narrative, but it serves a duplicitous scope.
To devise a democratic election, one that's held exclusively for this instance, ensures consolidation of power in the hands of the Senjus, with Hashirama as Hokage.
It was always Hashirama who possessed a charisma that moved the masses, what with his jovial "golden retriever" energy, while Madara was never really the crowd-pleasing type, he himself states this and upon defeat he draws attention to the complete lack of adherents:
This doesn't necessarily equate to Madara having little to no importance within the sphere of village founding, but that Tobirama deviates the focus, diminishing Madara's contributions, to assign greater gravity to Hashirama's magnetic personality.
Hashiram admits to depending on Madara's unwavering support - he didn't solo the feat of statecraft, he's not that level of visionary - legislation, policymaking, electioneering, internal affairs, intra and inter clan relationships, foreign affairs, commerce, defence, fucking agriculture and distribution of goods even, they're all procedures that can't possibly be dealt with by one man, nor clan, alone, no matter the god-tier status!
Realistically speaking, these clans during the Warring States Period most probably ceaselessly forged bonds and fleeting alliances with one another; it purely was a matter of survival, and since they were by definition mercenaries, money: honour can go fuck itself - this, all to state that it's highly improbable that the Uchiha wouldn't do the same: so surely, surely, Madara, as head of the most gifted clan of all, was an indispensable figure when devising, say, intraclan allegiances within the village structure?
Tobirama's take is heavily objectionable, to use a euphemism. It's illogical to think that Madara would have such little impact in the creation of their, of his and Hashirama's village - wasn't this their synergistic dream since childhood, wasn't that the initial premise?
And then I've just got to love Hashirama's reaction to Madara's elucidations circa the duality of these polar opposite force, light and shadow, cooperation and conflict:
Dot, dot, dot...
... something something, the obvious and embarrassing elephant in the room that I've politely ignored and that's gone unacknowledged for several years now, deary me...
You leave Tobirama to me...
Hashirama knows that the bone of contention here is his brother's conniving ways, that this lack of collaboration is, for Madara, a point of rupture between himself and the village (I'll elaborate on this further, in seperate meta.)
Just look at the sheer unadulterated disdain here, these two absolutely loathe one another:
Unsurprisingly, here he's only addressing Hashirama - he couldn't give a rat's arse about Madara and it would hardly surprise me if the latter had been shunned from persuaded into renouncing participation in this roundtable with the daimyo. Senju access only, Uchiha access denied.
Tobirama's very obviously been interfering relentlessly, spoiling Madara's and the Uchiha's reputation, sowing discord between the two clans, and in fact most of what he propagates is based on back-fence talk alone.
Here's an example of his misuse of your run of the mill village hearsay:
"Haven't you heard the rumours about the Uchiha?"
From this, I'd gather that Tobirama hadn't quite begun dabbling in the more obscure regions of fringe pseudo-scientific research, as he has yet to bring to the table his pudding (because the proof is in the pudding, get it? Nevermind), the very same pseudo-science that leads him down the path of eugenics and genetic discrimination, which will later on serve as a basis for the Uchiha's extirpation.
For now, his discourse lacks a clincher, so it's based entirely on rumour:
This is the first symptom of Tobirama's disingenuous intent, the very same that later on is force fed into this budding system, buttressing his fascistic hold over the village...
Aversion (or fear) to difference
A fascist or impendingly fascist movement's initial appeal is one against those who are perceived as "foreign", that is to say, a fascist or prematurely fascist movement grows in credence by emotionally leveraging the general populace against an "intruder" (like Hitler did with Jews, Slavs, Roma etc).
This is a practice known as "othering", and it occurs when we draw attention to distinctions between groups of people in an effort to make us more suspicious of them, to belittle them, or to exclude them.
As a result, racism becomes an inherent part of the ideology.
Therefor, fascism grows and seeks consensus precisely by exploiting and exacerbating the natural fear of diversity: which is exactly what Tobirama is doing here, in the above panel.
This very specific rumour, that it's hate that magnifies an Uchiha's ocular power, derives from Tobirama's mouth. He is the perpetrator of these cleverly crafted fabrications, and it's done to create a sense of "otherness", of "us versus them", like a diligent fascist would - It generates an atmosphere of uncertainty and suspicion towards the Uchiha, such that not even Hashirama does much to shut him up.
Now, there are two steps in the othering process:
Indexing a group of individuals into categories based on perceived distinctions such as ethnicity, skin tone, religion, cultural heritage, gender, sexual orientation.
Branding that group as either inferior or threatening, or both, thus sowing dissension with a "us vs. them" mentality.
Focusing on a difference and exploiting it to undermine a feeling of resemblance or connection between individuals is hence known as othering.
By lowering empathy and stifling meaningful conversation, othering prepares the ground for prejudice or worse, persecution. When it is taken to its logical conclusion, othering can lead to one group of people rejecting that another group is even human.
Genocide doesn't occur in a vacuum, but requires years, if not decades, for a political situation to ferment and reach a pinnacle of intolerability.
In due course, this is precisely what occurs to the Uchiha: this ranking of the clan as "threatening to the village", which begins with Tobirama, is a process of othering that contributed massively to create the conditions for the genocide.
"You can never tell what they might do... So for the sake of the village's future..."
They can't be trusted, they're unstable, they're driven by unbridled hate, didn'tcha know? Won't someone please think of the Village!
Tobirama is very much aware of the lengths his brother will go to in order to ensure the village's stability: the dream of Konoha is everything to Hashirama, it's grander than himself, it holds more value than brother, friend or even his very own child ever could.
So he very conveniently brings up this assumed unpredictability at a very crucial moment, one where the two brothers are on the brink of determining Konoha's fate - and sealing their hegemony over it: cunningly, he sways his brother into accepting a fleeting phase of political suffrage by banking on his qualms and misgivings, after all, the village must succeed all:
From now on, Leaf's to be administered democratically!
It's only to be a democracy when the threat of Madara becoming leader was a true threat in Tobirama's eyes.
Popular vote will never occur ever again, as it begins and dies with Hashirama: from here on out, the Hokage, who symbolises the most potent military figure within the village and by extension the Land of Fire, is appointed solely via cronyism, and at best with the blessings of wealthy landowners, the daimyo, rather than through the druthers of the general populace (which would be the shinobi themselves).
It's unclear how long the Hokage clutches onto this power, but it seems to be decided by natural life-span or personal discretion, you know, until they feel like it (just as Hiruzen did - I mean, come on, he was a decrepit old fool when he succeeded Minato, couldn't he have just retired and vacated the role for someone fitter for the job? Fugaku anyone? Or, I don't know, popped his clogs off to save us the embarrassment of his second reign?) - it's safe to say that the Hokage remains in power for an indefinite period of time.
And it's not necessarily required they be the optimal choice mind you, qualities such as wisdom, intellectual aptitude, empathy, compassion, honesty are well overlooked; even sheer unadulterated power or ability isn't much appreciated, otherwise Madara would have been next in line after Hashirama - the sine qua non here is that whoever gleans leadership must have a direct connection to the Senju in some capacity.
Hashirama -> Tobirama (self-explanatory) -> Hiruzen (Tobirama's pupil) -> Minato (Jiraiya's pupil, who in turn was Hiruzen's) -> Hiruzen (again) -> Tsunade (Hiruzen's pupil and Hashirama's granddaughter) -> Kakashi (Minato's pupil) -> Naruto (both Kakashi's and Jiraiya's pupil, and Minato's son - also, protagonist of the series, kinda discounted he'd get there eventually)
Now back to the curious case of Nidaime: does anyone seriously expect us to believe that he was selected as Hokage through popular vote in the wake of Hashirama's death, that he somehow managed to garner the sympathy of the Uchiha despite ostracising them?
And yes, his persecution of the clan had begun while Hashirama was still alive, otherwise, why would the First chide him for it, as if he were exasperated at the prospect of having to nag him again, even as an impure shell of a corpse...? Perhaps because he'd griped about it ad infinitum in life? Over and over again, hm?
Or is it more likely that Tobirama affirmed the Senju's ascendance over the village, given his inherent mistrust of that one specific clan, by gradually isolating it and precluding their exponents the possibility of ever reaching political power?
Come on, the answer is so obvious, Madara was remarkably insightful with his predictions after all:
Under fascism, individuals qua individuals have no natural rights, so the "people", or shinobi, is conceived more as a quality, like this monolithic entity that expresses the "common will", which under Tobirama becomes the ideology of Will of Fire (WoF) - and since no shinobi can actually "possess" this common will, it is the supreme leader that claims to be their interpreter.
Having lost their power of delegation (or rather, never having acquired it in the first place if not only in the favour of Hashirama), average shinobis do not express their volition directly, they're simply invoked pars pro toto, to enact the role of the "people" or "citizens" as a sort of collective, or less poetically, the rank and file.
Hence, this request for popular opinion is but a facade:
Which leads us to the following...
The rejection of modernism
Same panel, but focus on a different Tobirama quote.
"These are different times compared to fathers!"
Pah, HARDLY! What changed? No, seriously, what fucking changed?
Very little, that's what. With respect to the Warring States Period, the village is negligibly any better, it just centralises violence on a grander scale!
Konoha is still financed by the more conservative landowners, who expected the village to preserve belligerent dynamics: warfare is the prime generator of capital!
Because instead of the countless chaotic and dispersed mercenary clans that engaged in perpetual conflict, the system just turns out to be a macro state of affairs: the daimyo's still there, aristocratic landowners are still there, the Kage inexplicably obeys their whims, villagers still depended on these for sustenance via the assignment of all kinds of missions, morally sound or otherwise - the shinobi apparatus by design (Tobirama's) still has to rely on a niche elitist rich for economic support: it's not auto-sufficient in any respect.
Ninja are still mercenaries, the difference being they've now systematically organised into secretive (or hidden), discriminative complexes that are categorically segregated from the outside world. That is to say, the villages and shinobi are still clannish in nature, ninja have simply upgraded from provincial war dogs to international warmongers.
So there, Hashirama's dreamland is just an ambitious war machine that thrives off of state-sponsored terrorism, one that's capable of producing mass destruction on a more efficient level.
So when compared to the previous circumstances, again, what fucking changed?
Sure the Leaf was founded in a desperate attempt to control rampant violence, because, as far as Hashiramaâs understandings could lead him, unconstrained conflict between mercenary clans was the source of greater bloodshed.
But it never really even crossed his mind, be it because he lacked the foresight, or if you want, pin it down to him forcefully accepting the limits of his vision, the point is he miserably failed to think laterally, revolutionarily, as Madara did, and realise that condensing all violence into a singular superstructure (Konoha) would only result in more widespread, systematic destruction.
Madara was given the assurance by Hashirama that the role of Hokage was to be created with the specific intention of protecting people and above all children. That's what it was all about, protecting their loved ones and watching over them!
Is that what happens? Absolutely not! Despite Madara's obvious warnings, Hashirama ends up relinquishing his "Village of Peace" to a fascist!
Tobirama's the one who architects and defines the determinants of ninja creed (WoF and the tenets the Hokage must abide by - if it wasn't him personally, he at least gave his unfiltered opinion in quality of Hashirama's advisor, so it's not like it makes much difference) and military establishment: academy, chunin exams, shinobi ranking, the Konoha military police force, ANBU which is a faction of specialised shinobi granted special permission for roles such as seek and destroy and espionage etc.
Everything he devised, ideology, shinobi credo, infrastructure, it all revolves around strategic military brutality, and warfare. And the most horrific dimension in all of this? How the village takes advantage of children and subjugates in order to transform them into weapons.
Children are still exploited for military machinations: Konoha's bloody history is rife with tales of kiddie soldiers, just barely weened off their mother's teats, who've suffered mind-numbing WoF indoctrination and are sent on the battlefield to die.
Children still serve as canon fodder, just like in his father's times.
In a way, Tobirama's traditionalism implies the rejection of modernism.
Now, while fascism did revere technological advancement and the movement was proud of its industrial prowess, this was simply the surface manifestation of a philosophy rooted in "blood" and "earth".
Notice the parallels with Tobirama's supremacy? Replace "technology" with Jutsu, and "blood and earth" with "Will of Fire" and it becomes self-explanatory...