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Thank you.
He is a little off on his history, but ultimately, yes, 'Corporatism' is what we have here. We do not have any 'National Socialism' in the usa as he says though. Also, that is not how the name 'Nazi' was derived.

You may want to check out the 25 points of the nazi party. They held to these almost exactly:

*Edit. I pasted it here but it was all borked. So you can just go to the source below to see :)

https://www.historyplace.com/worldwar2/riseofhitler/25points.htm

Some highlights,

We wage war against the corrupt parliamentary administration whereby men are appointed to posts by favor of the party without regard to character and fitness.

And of course, the ultimate evil,

COMMON GOOD BEFORE INDIVIDUAL GOOD

I disagree that it is the ultimate evil. It can be used for ultimate evil. However, if Ultimate Evil is already abound, it is the the proper course correction in my opinion. So I think that all 25 points should be taken into account first, especially this one:

19 - We demand that Roman law, which serves a materialist ordering of the world, be replaced by German common law.

That was the death knell for the Nazi party. The powers that should not be will stop at NOTHING to prevent that.

The Brits and the Americans rejected the CORPUS JURIS CIVILIS hundreds of years ago.

They're both operating on an ad-hoc mutation of Blackstone's "common law".

"Common good before individual good" may not be "the ultimate evil" but it's certainly its birthplace.

It very clearly opens the door to justify the trampling of individual "rights".

The Brits and the Americans rejected the CORPUS JURIS CIVILIS hundreds of years ago.

That is news to me. Can you tell me how you arrived at that conclusion?
Asks my name in capitis diminutio maxima..
-OLDONEEYE

The Origin of Law

So where does law come from? In America, our law system came from Great Britain. The settlers of the original thirteen colonies came from Europe, and they brought with them their own set of rules and principles to be used in their new society.

The English common law was the system of law in England at that time and was quickly adopted throughout the colonies. The English common law is rooted in centuries of English history. Much of the common law was formed in the years between the Norman Conquest of England in the early 11th century and the settlement of the American colonies in the early 17th century.

https://study.com/academy/lesson/american-law-history-origins-from-english-common-law.html

I dug this up awhile back when someone claimed "the bible" is the foundation of the American legal system.

I've not much issue with Common Law. I abide by common law.
The usa is not under common law anymore. This is a huge study in itself, but we are running on Maritime Admiralty Law.
A corporation. USA Inc.
It is a trick. To give you a very quick delve into what I am even touching on, check this nice vid out, only 5 minutes long or so but will open you up to........a whole new world my friend!