Word: fascistes
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...Chamber of Deputies has never pleased me!" II Duce exuberantly told the Council which pleases him at the moment very much. "When the Fascist regime was created we buried political liberalism.* Today we bury economic liberalism...
...Sweden the internal attack of Fascism is beginning; before it becomes too potent, the Liberal and Labor parties of each nation may find it logic to oppose the foreign menace no less than the domestic, thus gravitating toward triple agreements with Denmark against Herr Hitler. Though the Fascist movement in Norway has not made startling progress as yet, it is still very young. Moreover, if its strength lies in the ineptitude of the democracy it opposes, then it has ample grounds for optimism. The Labor Party in Norway has barely missed a clear majority over the Conservatives and Liberals...
Whanging a big dinner bell, the Premier rang to order in Rome the National Council of Corporations, destined, most Italians assume, to supplant the Chamber. In Italy corporazioni ("corporations") are the higher groups which represent the basic Fascist syndicates of employers and employes. Every Italian, whatever his business, trade or profession, is represented by and must pay dues to the local syndicate of his occupation. He need not belong to the syndicate but he is bound by the bargains it makes respecting his wages and working hours or-if he is an employer-respecting the wages he must...
Promptly up popped that fiery Roman Syndicalist President Arturo di Marsanich of the National Confederation of Fascist Syndicates of Commerce. While Il Duce sat expressionless as stone, Signor Marsanich cried: "There is only one logical consequence of Fascist corporative policy: the Council of Corporations should absorb the Chamber of Deputies and become the sole legislative assembly. . . . Italy will then have an assembly of men qualified to legislate on economic matters as well as those qualified to legislate in the fields of ethics and politics...
...Every Italian paper was recently instructed: first, to print the name of the Premier and the King in capitals; second, to omit the names of lesser official personages whenever possible, printing only their titles. Explained Achille Starace, National Fascist secretary: "The party has been made absolutely impersonal. The hierarchy . . . is composed of faithful Blackshirts who, at the change of the guard, present arms with the sense of duty fulfilled...