Conclusions first.Trump is a fascist that won power in a time of non-crisis which may be a tactical advantage to communists if we recognise the situation quickly enough, if we do not we're worse off.Allow me to paint two pictures.Clinton won the presidency, Trump and his fascist allies spend the next year or two absolutely RAILING against the current administration. Suddenly, as Arty has predicted here http://thewolfatthedoor.blogspot.com/20 ... wrong.html the next "big ass recession" lands. Trump and the fascist use this as an excuse to seize power and begin their attacks on the minorities of the working class and we see traditional fascism at work. The communists, during this time, have been probably doing what they always do, which is to say nothing.Trump won the presidency, Trump is forced, due to the (present) lack of crises to stall precipitating a full fascist movement in society. He has, however, revealed his hand to the communists who are as we speak beginning to mobilize against him. Thus we have the opportunity to build networks and connections of resistance before the next crises hits when the hard crackdown will begin. What are the fascists doing in the mean time? Possibly due to the inability of Trump to begin a full fascist movement, the more hardcore fascists will become impatient and more or less abandon Trump and seek leadership elsewhere in unofficial ranks, thus leading to a divided leadership amongst their ranks when the crises strikes. They may hold fast behind Trump of course though.The task facing the communists today, is to prepare networks of resistance while we are not presently experiencing a crises, and to mobilize those networks when the crackdown inevitably follows. We will fail if, after becoming president, Trump winds up being relatively bound by the fact that capitalism isn't currently experiencing a crises, and we let our guard down.I can be proven wrong if, instead of lessening, the fascist violence continues to escalate in the coming weeks. I expect to see a surge in fascist violence the day he won, and the day he becomes president, but that, due to the lack of a present capitalist crises, it will be forced to relatively lower levels. If he becomes president, fascist violence spikes and declines, I stand by my predictions. If the violence continues to escalate, or remains at a high level, I will be wrong and any perceived tactical advantage we have was just an illusion.Either way, the task is to organise networks of resistance in the current relative lull, and to not let them wither and decay, because the crises WILL happen soon, and we must be prepared for it. If I am right, we must ensure that our guard is NOT let down. That mistake will be fatal.Evidence in my favour is the following graph at the bottom of the article.