Were fascism and national-socialism really defeated after the deaths of their two founders, after the Duce's execution by a firing squad and the Fuhrer's suicide at the end of April 1945, actually several days later, after the total collapse of the Third Reich, or did they continue their infernal march against everything human? Historical facts convince us that after the WWII the ghosts (or evil spirits) of the teacher from Emillia-Romagna and a wall painter from Braunau on Inn did not return to the stage; instead the orthodox theology student from the Caucasus appeared on the world scene to, on his own or through his proxies, continue their crimes: Stalin, who perfected Lenin's concentration camps and their methods of destruction, who divided Poland with Hitler and committed genocide against the Polish people, suddenly became an "antifascist", even a symbol of antifascism. That antifascism was demonstrated immediately after the end of the WWII, after the surrender of arms [by the defeated fascist units]: massacres all over Europe, among which the one that started in Bleiburg is the largest. The fascism under red flags with swastikas was substituted by the fascism under red flags with a hammer and sickle. Even those who were defeated as fascists, raised the new flag to continue the same monstrous program, this time under the guise of antifascism. An example from the former Yugoslavia is the most obvious: fascism of Rankovic and Milosevic [president of Serbia since 1987] is the same as that of Draza Mihailovic [leader of royalist resistance (so called chetniks) in Yugoslavia during the WWII].
Red fascism of Serbia revealed its real, monstrous face in the fall of 1990 and especially in the spring of 1991: it started an open genocide against the Croatian people, destroying everything Croatian, from the centuries old ancestral buildings to a child in a womb. When Croatia and Croatians confronted that beast, stopping it with almost bare chests, the red fascism found shelter in some papers printed in the Republic of Croatia, in certain groups which under the guise of antifascism pretend to worry about "pluralism" and democracy. Thus, struggle against fascism still goes on in Croatian territories, on the front as well as in the media.
When the Croatian police forces liberate Western Slavonia from the Serbian fascism, it responds with rocket attacks on Croatian cities and even the Capital, where its targets are among others, city trams, a theater and even the children's hospital. In spite of that, the Croatian flag is again flying on the bridge across the Sava river toward Bosanska Gradiska, a Croatian man in Western Slavonia is again free on his own land and now controls and protects the ancestral soil. Fascism has been defeated on that territory.