For example, it's flat-out stated that the bad guy is a Nietzschean over-man who, by his superior nature, is a "focal point" of history and civilization that can bend humanity to his will. By his very being and his vigorous actions. It isn't that he thinks he can do this, it's that he absolutely can do this, if he isn't stopped.
I'm going to go way off on a limb here, and say that the Fascist part is the belief in divisions (over-man vs. common man, superior nature, etc.) rather than the belief that one person can be the focal point of a significant change.
e.g. Einstein effectively transformed physics. This was not a matter of Willpower or somesuch stupid illusion, but because
a) He developed the right skills
b) He found the right people to help him out
c) He was *seriously* dedicated to solving certain problems
d) He was in the right place at the right time
A lot of social thinkers would accentuate (d) above everything else, but the thing is, every aspect of a person, period relies on them being born and raised in that place at that time. So I think that it's kind of diminishing to say "Well, Einstein was really just a puppet of circumstances." That he was not operating on Pure Willpower, but on the sum of his own history, does not make him just a set of statistics.
Granted, again, Einstein did not work alone. Nobody who makes waves works alone (that would be kind of impossible!). But he came up core ideas that are now essential to science, and he worked hard on them, and look where that got us.
tl;dr if you're wondering where this came from, it's that I've often seen people so anxious to sound not even slightly Fascist that they throw out all pretense of changing the world. No, you can't make a difference. No, you can't improve things qualitatively, only quantitatively and only in the smallest way. You can't help, you just a cog on the machine... Which, ironically, might be the kind of attitude that let Fascists triumph in 20th century Europe in the first place.
Basically what bothers me is the emphasis on stasis and powerlessness; rather than the idea that society is malleable, and people can change it and improve it without having to be "overmen".
Will post more as I reread your post above, give me a minute please...