Benito Mussolini — "Fascism should more properly be called corporatism because it is the merger of s…"
Fascism should more properly be called corporatism because it is the merger of state and corporate power.
Fascism should more properly be called corporatism because it is the merger of state and corporate power.
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"The Fascist State organizes the nation, but it leaves sufficient elbow-room to the individual."
"The March on Rome was not a coup d'état. It was a revolution, prepared, organized, and executed by the Fascist Party."
"The crowd is like a woman. It doesn't want to be told, but to be loved."
"We crucify the past, we liberate the future."
"We deny all the universalistic claims of the Fascist doctrine. We believe that Fascism is not for export."
Italian fascist who founded the National Fascist Party in 1919 and ruled Italy 1922-1943, before being executed by partisans in April 1945. Closely associated with Adolf Hitler (Axis ally and ideological successor) and Francisco Franco (Spanish authoritarian and ideological cousin). For an intellectual contrast, see Antonio Gramsci, Italian Marxist intellectual and Communist Party founder — Gramsci's Prison Notebooks — written 1929-1935 inside Mussolini's prisons — became the foundational text of cultural-hegemony theory. The cleanest 'fascist regime vs intellectual it imprisoned' pairing in 20th-century history; Gramsci developed his analysis of how fascism wins through cultural consent while dying in Mussolini's custody.
Written in the definition of fascism for the Italian Encyclopedia
Date: 1932
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