<<I think that Tee is separating the bourgeoisie from the proletariat, but I could possibly be wrong.>>
I was actually responding to BT's response to a capsule description of fascism, the capsule description being:
<<The idea is that the workers are organized into state-affiliated syndicates, called corporations, and the government, the capitalists, and the workers are joined together in a common national purpose>>,
to which BT had responded: <<And this is a bad system because . . . ?>>
BT was in effect asking for (or challenging anyone to show) a reason why the system (fascism) being described was a bad system. While there are other major defects in the fascist system, I chose to limit my response to the elements of the capsule description, the most obviously "bad" being the idea that class enemies (capitalists and workers) could ever be joined together in a common "national purpose."
What usually happens is that the "common national purpose" is defined first by the ruling class, and obviously in its own class interest, with a few sold-out union "leaders" induced by various shady means, to lend their names to the "common national purpose" in betrayal of real class interests.
The other flaw in the description, of course, is the false portrayal of a supposedly tri-partite partnership of "government," capitalists and workers. The "government" is nothing more than a creature of the capitalists, serving their interests and heavily bribed and subsidized by them to do so. So the "tri-partite partnership" is really a partnership of only two. The fascist system is actually a dictatorship in both form and substance, with the workers getting nothing but a "partnership" in name only with their class enemy, which retains the fully dominant position within the "partnership."