>>127502292 Everybody is educated to become a hero - The Crucible literally a tool of indoctrination and radicalization. You are murdered in combat and taught that to be a true mutant you must be willing to die for the sake of Krakoa. Likewise, Way of X shows that characters in Krakoa are literally taught fighting and dying for the sake of Krakoa is treated as a great honour.
Machismo and weaponry - There are two ways to interpret this. In the psychosexual manner and the displays of machismo. I'll do both, "Make more mutants", which fits a lot of 20th century rhetoric, which saw fascist states encourage and reward the making of more citizens as a sign of virility and femininity (that being said, this isn't 1:1 as so far, Krakoa isn't punishing 'degenerate' sex
acts.As for displays, other than how they conduct their foreign policy, how Krakoa venerates it's heroes, the Crucible being used as a place of displaying your strength and literally terraforming Mars as a way of showing your metaphorical big dick pretty much follows this stuff to a T.
Selective Populism - The Quiet Council decides what the will of the people is and refuses to address the needs/wants that do not conform to their agenda. Likewise, it refuses to acknowledge the other issues that its citizenry may have like Apocalypse, Sinister, the Acolytes and Brotherhood doing harm to mutants/their families or the fact that the Hellfire Club funded the Sentinels or that the Upstarts/Marauders hunted mutants deemed "inferior" for shit and giggles. Likewise, there is no democracy or ability for the people to choose new leaders ensuring a near static interpretation of Krakoa.
Fascism speaks Newspeak - The language of the average citizen seems to be quite radicalized and limited, speaking in broad terms of "Us vs Them" and creating terms like "Wanda". Likewise, Kurt for some reason is unable to express his feelings properly throughout way of X, despite the horrific imagery that surrounds him.
Done!