I hope you being ironic with that last sentence.
Not at all. I think that any serious debate about replacing democracy with something better must include a review of fascism. Not the psychotic version implemented by Adolf Hitler. The ideals put forth by Mussolini and others.
Democracy has an ideal form, and yet it fails quite often in implementation. Why should you be so quick to judge fascism based on its failures, when it had so little chance to succeed, and was so quickly overshadowed by the NSDAP?
Some systems are clearly designed to benefit the few, at the expense of the many. Oligarchies and Kleptocracies, for example. Other systems only work well for the many in certain times and places--Feudalism, for example. Feudalism wasn't great, but given the constraints on pre-industrial societies, it was probably pretty close to optimal.
Other systems, at least in theory, are clearly designed to benefit the many. Various forms of democracy, for example. Also communism, and fascism. Democracy is obviously flawed in practice. For every libertarian ranting about their freedoms, there is a statist insisting that we must have an authoritarian override on the will of the people, for the greater good.
Fascism, in its essence, simply provides a stronger form of that authoritarian override. At the same time, it also seeks to strengthen popular unity, thus reducing the need to exercise the authoritarian override.
If America, for example, were united against institutional racism, against poverty, against sexism; if America were united against military adventurism and environmental exploitation; if in America these harmful tendencies were purged; if American industry were regulated by the government to act in concert with the ideals of the united citizenry--would this not be a better America?
What's more important? That everybody be free? Or that everybody be well?