Kidding.
But in all seriousness, I agree with your statement. I think class conflict is becoming the predominant flashpoint of our time. Fascism doesn't rise out of a bubble, historically, it has risen out of parliamentary democracies and republics failing to deliver on their values and allowing those guaranteed rights to be stripped from others based on their lack of wealth/means. Its the allowance of some to live in such extreme opulance versus those that live in squalor while working full time. That is what happened after WWI, and that is exactly what is happening now.
Fascism gives those disenfranchised people an outlet and the feelings of empowerment after being cast aside by the system previously, but it has no interest in actually improving their lot in life or dealing with the cause of that disenfranchisement. It is incapable of doing so. What it does is create and ever shrinking circle of "chosen" people, usually along the lines of race and ethnicity and the language of supremacy over the "other" as the cause of all of their ills. It is wildly destructive.
The elite don't mind playing ball with fascism as despite its populist messaging, it has no interest in actually confronting power, it usually empowers it. We saw this in Italy, Germany and Spain in the 1920s and 1930s, and we are seeing it in the US now with similar trends in Europe. It is worth mentioning that this would not have been possible without a right-libertarian influenced neoliberal economic order. We created these circumstances over time through excessive deregulation in the corporate and financial sectors combined with unsound monetary policy. These gutted the working class through union busting and weakening collective bargaining, while banks were able to lend large sums of money at lower interest rates to the already biggest fish.
Saving, something the middle class was always good at became a detriment, you were actually losing money if you saved it thanks to low interest rates and rising inflation.The middle class interest has often served as a buffer between the working class and the elites, but now that it is shrinking and in a full decline, that is no longer possible.
There is a remedy to both combat fascism and to allay the needs of the common person, that is through the reinstallation of a FDR-like social democracy or through a Zohran/Bernie Sandersesque implementation of democratic socialsm.
In the past, both on here and on OP.com I pushed for deregulation and those ideas directly contributed to where we are now. I pushed for right-libertarian economic ideas. I was wrong and have had to live through this portion of history to see things differently. But now I do. It is time for a new economic system, I think that should be economic democracy to match our political system so there is no longer friction there.
Its time to try democratic socialism, IMO.