Mole, I think you're confusing things here.
I don't think Jung was a fascist, I'm aware of those accusations, but I just don't think there's any basis to it except that he was Swiss and Switzerland was a neutral country during the war, and Jung seemed to follow that line. And even if he was, it isn't a reason to dismiss his work, not anymore than Heidegger should be dismissed because of his sympathy for nazis.
Also, as far as Reich goes, I seriosuly doubt he would have approved of what you call liberal democracy, he was a revolutionary communist, not a liberal democrat or even a social democrat.
That all sounds about right.
Jung wrote repeatedly about how he was an individualist and disliked all the collectivist political ideals, including nationalism and communism, its all there in Modern Man In Search of His Soul or any of the books he wrote around that time.
A lot of the condemnation of people at that time for their apparent neutrality I kind of think is pretty rich coming from people in contexts which are free of the kind of things they encountered, the same thing happens with the Tin Tin author, its sort of hard to be an anti-fascist with the SS in the immediate neighbourhood. It also cheapens the actual bravery of open and covert resistors to presume that their courage ought to have been common place rather than the reality that it is often exceptional.