(ONLY COMPLETE OFFICIAL TEXT
ON THE INTERNET)
(This article, co-written by Giovanni Gentile,
is considered to be the most complete articulation of Mussolini's political
views. This is the only complete official translation we know of on the web,
copied directly from an official Fascist government publication of 1935,
Fascism Doctrine and Institutions, by Benito Mussolini, Ardita Publishers,
Rome, pages 7-42. This translation includes all the footnotes from the
original.)
Like all sound political conceptions, Fascism is
action and it is thought; action in which doctrine is immanent, and doctrine
arising from a given system of historical forces in which it is inserted, and
working on them from within (1). It has therefore a form correlated to
contingencies of time and space; but it has also an ideal content which makes
it an expression of truth in the higher region of the history of thought (2).
There is no way of exercising a spiritual influence in the world as a human
will dominating the will of others, unless one has a conception both of the
transient and the specific reality on which that action is to be exercised, and
of the permanent and universal reality in which the transient dwells and has
its being. To know men one must know man; and to know man one must be
acquainted with reality and its laws. There can be no conception of the State
which is not fundamentally a conception of life: philosophy or intuition,
system of ideas evolving within the framework of logic or concentrated in a
vision or a faith, but always, at least potentially, an organic conception of
the world.
Thus many of the practical expressions of
Fascism such as party organization, system of education, and discipline can
only be understood when considered in relation to its general attitude toward
life. A spiritual attitude (3). Fascism sees in the world not only those
superficial, material aspects in which man appears as an individual, standing
by himself, self-centered, subject to natural law, which instinctively urges
him toward a life of selfish momentary pleasure; it sees not only the
individual but the nation and the country; individuals and generations bound
together by a moral law, with common traditions and a mission which suppressing
the instinct for life closed in a brief circle of pleasure, builds up a higher
life, founded on duty, a life free from the limitations of time and space, in
which the individual, by self-sacrifice, the renunciation of self-interest, by
death itself, can achieve that purely spiritual existence in which his value as
a man consists.
The conception is therefore a spiritual one,
arising from the general reaction of the century against the materialistic
positivism of the XIXth century. Anti-positivistic but positive; neither
skeptical nor agnostic; neither pessimistic nor supinely optimistic as are,
generally speaking, the doctrines (all negative) which place the center of life
outside man; whereas, by the exercise of his free will, man can and must create
his own world.
Fascism wants man to be active and to engage in
action with all his energies; it wants him to be manfully aware of the
difficulties besetting him and ready to face them. It conceives of life as a
struggle in which it behooves a man to win for himself a really worthy place,
first of all by fitting himself (physically, morally, intellectually) to become
the implement required for winning it. As for the individual, so for the
nation, and so for mankind (4). Hence the high value of culture in all its
forms (artistic, religious, scientific) (5) and the outstanding importance of
education. Hence also the essential value of work, by which man subjugates
nature and creates the human world (economic, political, ethical, and
intellectual).
This positive conception of life is obviously an
ethical one. It invests the whole field of reality as well as the human
activities which master it. No action is exempt from moral judgment; no
activity can be despoiled of the value which a moral purpose confers on all
things. Therefore life, as conceived of by the Fascist, is serious, austere,
and religious; all its manifestations are poised in a world sustained by moral
forces and subject to spiritual responsibilities. The Fascist disdains an
“easy" life (6).
The Fascist conception of life is a religious
one (7), in which man is viewed in his immanent relation to a higher law,
endowed with an objective will transcending the individual and raising him to
conscious membership of a spiritual society. "Those who perceive nothing
beyond opportunistic considerations in the religious policy of the Fascist
regime fail to realize that Fascism is not only a system of government but also
and above all a system of thought.
In the Fascist conception of history, man is man
only by virtue of the spiritual process to which he contributes as a member of
the family, the social group, the nation, and in function of history to which
all nations bring their contribution. Hence the great value of tradition in
records, in language, in customs, in the rules of social life (8). Outside
history man is a nonentity. Fascism is therefore opposed to all individualistic
abstractions based on eighteenth century materialism; and it is opposed to all
Jacobinistic utopias and innovations. It does not believe in the possibility of
"happiness" on earth as conceived by the economistic literature of
the XVIIIth century, and it therefore rejects the theological notion that at
some future time the human family will secure a final settlement of all its
difficulties. This notion runs counter to experience which teaches that life is
in continual flux and in process of evolution. In politics Fascism aims at
realism; in practice it desires to deal only with those problems which are the
spontaneous product of historic conditions and which find or suggest their own
solutions (9). Only by entering in to the process of reality and taking
possession of the forces at work within it, can man act on man and on nature
(10).
Anti-individualistic, the Fascist conception of
life stresses the importance of the State and accepts the individual only in so
far as his interests coincide with those of the State, which stands for the
conscience and the universal, will of man as a historic entity (11). It is
opposed to classical liberalism which arose as a reaction to absolutism and
exhausted its historical function when the State became the expression of the
conscience and will of the people. Liberalism denied the State in the name of
the individual; Fascism reasserts
The rights of the State as expressing the real
essence of the individual (12). And if liberty is to he the attribute of living
men and not of abstract dummies invented by individualistic liberalism, then
Fascism stands for liberty, and for the only liberty worth having, the liberty
of the State and of the individual within the State (13). The Fascist
conception of the State is all embracing; outside of it no human or spiritual
values can exist, much less have value. Thus understood, Fascism, is
totalitarian, and the Fascist State - a synthesis and a unit inclusive of all
values - interprets, develops, and potentates the whole life of a people (14).
No individuals or groups (political parties,
cultural associations, economic unions, social classes) outside the State (15).
Fascism is therefore opposed to Socialism to which unity within the State
(which amalgamates classes into a single economic and ethical reality) is
unknown, and which sees in history nothing but the class struggle. Fascism is
likewise opposed to trade unionism as a class weapon. But when brought within
the orbit of the State, Fascism recognizes the real needs which gave rise to
socialism and trade unionism, giving them due weight in the guild or
corporative system in which divergent interests are coordinated and harmonized
in the unity of the State (16).
Grouped according to their several interests,
individuals form classes; they form trade-unions when organized according to
their several economic activities; but first and foremost they form the State, which
is no mere matter of numbers, the suns of the individuals forming the majority.
Fascism is therefore opposed to that form of democracy which equates a nation
to the majority, lowering it to the level of the largest number (17); but it is
the purest form of democracy if the nation be considered as it should be from
the point of view of quality rather than quantity, as an idea, the mightiest
because the most ethical, the most coherent, the truest, expressing itself in a
people as the conscience and will of the few, if not, indeed, of one, and
ending to express itself in the conscience and the will of the mass, of the
whole group ethnically molded by natural and historical conditions into a
nation, advancing, as one conscience and one will, along the self same line of
development and spiritual formation (18). Not a race, nor a geographically
defined region, but a people, historically perpetuating itself; a multitude
unified by an idea and imbued with the will to live, the will to power,
self-consciousness, personality (19).
In so far as it is embodied in a State, this
higher personality becomes a nation. It is not the nation which generates the
State; that is an antiquated naturalistic concept which afforded a basis for
XIXth century publicity in favor of national governments. Rather is it the
State which creates the nation, conferring volition and therefore real life on
a people made aware of their moral unity.
The right to national independence does not
arise from any merely literary and idealistic form of self-consciousness; still
less from a more or less passive and unconscious de facto situation, but from
an active, self-conscious, political will expressing itself in action and ready
to prove its rights. It arises, in short, from the existence, at least in
fieri, of a State. Indeed, it is the State which, as the expression of a
universal ethical will, creates the right to national independence (20).
A nation, as expressed in the State, is a
living, ethical entity only in so far as it is progressive. Inactivity is
death. Therefore the State is not only Authority which governs and confers
legal form and spiritual value on individual wills, but it is also Power which
makes its will felt and respected beyond its own frontiers, thus affording
practical proof of the universal character of the decisions necessary to ensure
its development. This implies organization and expansion, potential if not
actual. Thus the State equates itself to the will of man, whose development
cannot he checked by obstacles and which, by achieving self-expression,
demonstrates its infinity (21).
The Fascist State , as a higher and more
powerful expression of personality, is a force, but a spiritual one. It sums up
all the manifestations of the moral and intellectual life of man. Its functions
cannot therefore be limited to those of enforcing order and keeping the peace,
as the liberal doctrine had it. It is no mere mechanical device for defining
the sphere within which the individual may duly exercise his supposed rights.
The Fascist State is an inwardly accepted standard and rule of conduct, a
discipline of the whole person; it permeates the will no less than the
intellect. It stands for a principle which becomes the central motive of man as
a member of civilized society, sinking deep down into his personality; it
dwells in the heart of the man of action and of the thinker, of the artist and
of the man of science: soul of the soul (22).
Fascism, in short, is not only a law-giver and a
founder of institutions, but an educator and a promoter of spiritual life. It
aims at refashioning not only the forms of life but their content - man, his
character, and his faith. To achieve this propose it enforces discipline and
uses authority, entering into the soul and ruling with undisputed sway. Therefore
it has chosen as its emblem the Lictor’s rods, the symbol of unity, strength,
and justice.
POLITICAL AND SOCIAL DOCTRINE
When in the now distant March of 1919, speaking
through the columns of the Popolo d'Italia I summoned to Milan the surviving
interventionists who had intervened, and who had followed me ever since the
foundation of the Fascist of revolutionary action in January 1915, I had in
mind no specific doctrinal program. The only doctrine of which I had practical
experience was that of socialism, from until the winter of 1914 - nearly a
decade. My experience was that both of a follower and a leader but it was not
doctrinal experience. My doctrine during that period had been the doctrine of
action. A uniform, universally accepted doctrine of Socialism had not existed
since 1905, when the revisionist movement, headed by Bernstein, arose in
Germany, countered by the formation, in the see-saw of tendencies, of a left
revolutionary movement which in Italy never quitted the field of phrases,
whereas, in the case of Russian socialism, it became the prelude to Bolshevism.
Reformism, revolutionism, centrism, the very
echo of that terminology is dead, while in the great river of Fascism one can
trace currents which had their source in Sorel, Peguy, Lagardelle of the
Movement Socialists, and in the cohort of Italian syndicalist who from 1904 to
1914 brought a new note into the Italian socialist environment - previously
emasculated and chloroformed by fornicating with Giolitti's party - a note
sounded in Olivetti's Pagine Libere, Orano's Lupa, Enrico Leone's Divenirs
Socials.
When the war ended in 1919 Socialism, as a
doctrine, was already dead; it continued to exist only as a grudge, especially
in Italy where its only chance lay in inciting to reprisals against the men who
had willed the war and who were to be made to pay for it.
The Popolo d'Italia described itself in its
subtitle as the daily organ of fighters and producers. The word producer was
already the expression of a mental trend. Fascism was not the nursling of a
doctrine previously drafted at a desk; it was born of the need of action, and
was action; it was not a party but, in the first two years, an anti-party and a
movement. The name I gave the organization fixed its character.
Yet if anyone cares to reread the now crumpled
sheets of those days giving an account of the meeting at which the Italian
Fasci di combattimento were founded, he will find not a doctrine but a series
of pointers, forecasts, hints which, when freed from the inevitable matrix of contingencies,
were to develop in a few years time into a series of doctrinal positions
entitling Fascism to rank as a political doctrine differing from all others,
past or present.
“If the bourgeoisie - I then said - believe that
they have found in us their lightening-conductors, they arc mistaken. We must
go towards the people... We wish the working classes to accustom themselves to
the responsibilities of management so that they may realize that it is no easy
matter to run a business... We will fight both technical and spiritual
rear-guirdism... Now that the succession of the regime is open we must not be
fainthearted. We must rush forward; if the present regime is to be superseded
we must take its place. The right of succession is ours, for we urged the
country to enter the war and we led it to victory... The existing forms of
political representation cannot satisfy us; we want direst representation of
the several interests... It may be objected that this program implies a return
to the guilds (corporazioni). No matter!. I therefore hope this assembly will
accept the economic claims advanced by national syndicalism …
Is it not strange that from the very first day,
at Piazza San Sepolcro, the word "guild" (corporazione) was
pronounced, a word which, as the Revolution developed, was to express one of
the basic legislative and social creations of the regime?
The years preceding the March on Rome cover a
period during which the need of action forbade delay and careful doctrinal
elaborations. Fighting was going on in the towns and villages. There were
discussions but... there was something more sacred and more important...
death... Fascists knew how to die. A doctrine - fully elaborated, divided up
into chapters and paragraphs with annotations, may have been lacking, but it
was replaced by something far m :) re decisive, - by a faith. All the same, if
with the help of books, articles, resolutions passed at congresses, major and
minor speeches, anyone should care to revive the memory of those days, he will
find, provided he knows how to seek and select, that the doctrinal foundations
were laid while the battle was still raging. Indeed, it was during those years
that Fascist thought armed, refined itself, and proceeded ahead with its
organization. The problems of the individual and the State; the problems of
authority and liberty; political, social, and more especially national problems
were discussed; the conflict with liberal, democratic, socialistic, Masonic
doctrines and with those of the Partito Popolare, was carried on at the same
time as the punitive expeditions. Nevertheless, the lack of a formal system was
used by disingenuous adversaries as an argument for proclaiming Fascism
incapable of elaborating a doctrine at the very time when that doctrine was
being formulated - no matter how tumultuously, - first, as is the case with all
new ideas, in the guise of violent dogmatic negations; then in the more
positive guise of constructive theories, subsequently incorporated, in 1926,
1927, and 1928, in the laws and institutions of the regime.
Fascism is now clearly defined not only as a
regime but as a doctrine. This means that Fascism, exercising its critical
faculties on itself and on others, has studied from its own special standpoint
and judged by its own standards all the problems affecting the material and
intellectual interests now causing such grave anxiety to the nations of the
world, and is ready to deal with them by its own policies.
First of all, as regards the future development
of mankind, and quite apart from all present political considerations. Fascism
does not, generally speaking, believe in the possibility or utility of
perpetual peace. It therefore discards pacifism as a cloak for cowardly supine
renunciation in contradistinction to self-sacrifice. War alone keys up all
human energies to their maximum tension and sets the seal of nobility on those
peoples who have the courage to face it. All other tests are substitutes which
never place a man face to face with himself before the alternative of life or
death. Therefore all doctrines which postulate peace at all costs are
incompatible with Fascism. Equally foreign to the spirit of Fascism, even if
accepted as useful in meeting special political situations -- are all
internationalistic or League superstructures which, as history shows, crumble
to the ground whenever the heart of nations is deeply stirred by sentimental,
idealistic or practical considerations. Fascism carries this anti-pacifistic
attitude into the life of the individual. " I don't care a damn „ (me ne
frego) - the proud motto of the fighting squads scrawled by a wounded man on
his bandages, is not only an act of philosophic stoicism, it sums up a doctrine
which is not merely political: it is evidence of a fighting spirit which
accepts all risks. It signifies new style of Italian life. The Fascist accepts
and loves life; he rejects and despises suicide as cowardly. Life as he
understands it means duty, elevation, conquest; life must be lofty and full, it
must be lived for oneself but above all for others, both near bye and far off,
present and future.
The population policy of the regime is the
consequence of these premises. The Fascist loves his neighbor, but the word
neighbor “does not stand for some vague and unseizable conception. Love of one's
neighbor does not exclude necessary educational severity; still less does it
exclude differentiation and rank. Fascism will have nothing to do with
universal embraces; as a member of the community of nations it looks other
peoples straight in the eyes; it is vigilant and on its guard; it follows
others in all their manifestations and notes any changes in their interests;
and it does not allow itself to be deceived by mutable and fallacious
appearances.
Such a conception of life makes Fascism the
resolute negation of the doctrine underlying so-called scientific and Marxian
socialism, the doctrine of historic materialism which would explain the history
of mankind in terms of the class struggle and by changes in the processes and
instruments of production, to the exclusion of all else.
That the vicissitudes of economic life -
discoveries of raw materials, new technical processes, and scientific
inventions - have their importance, no one denies; but that they suffice to
explain human history to the exclusion of other factors is absurd. Fascism
believes now and always in sanctity and heroism, that is to say in acts in
which no economic motive - remote or immediate - is at work. Having denied
historic materialism, which sees in men mere puppets on the surface of history,
appearing and disappearing on the crest of the waves while in the depths the
real directing forces move and work, Fascism also denies the immutable and
irreparable character of the class struggle which is the natural outcome of
this economic conception of history; above all it denies that the class
struggle is the preponderating agent in social transformations. Having thus
struck a blow at socialism in the two main points of its doctrine, all that
remains of it is the sentimental aspiration-old as humanity itself-toward
social relations in which the sufferings and sorrows of the humbler folk will
be alleviated. But here again Fascism rejects the economic interpretation of
felicity as something to be secured socialistically, almost automatically, at a
given stage of economic evolution when all will be assured a maximum of
material comfort. Fascism denies the materialistic conception of happiness as a
possibility, and abandons it to the economists of the mid-eighteenth century.
This means that Fascism denies the equation: well-being = happiness, which sees
in men mere animals, content when they can feed and fatten, thus reducing them
to a vegetative existence pure and simple.
After socialism, Fascism trains its guns on the
whole block of democratic ideologies, and rejects both their premises and their
practical applications and implements. Fascism denies that numbers, as such,
can be the determining factor in human society; it denies the right of numbers
to govern by means of periodical consultations; it asserts the irremediable and
fertile and beneficent inequality of men who cannot be leveled by any such
mechanical and extrinsic device as universal suffrage. Democratic regimes may
be described as those under which the people are, from time to time, deluded
into the belief that they exercise sovereignty, while all the time real
sovereignty resides in and is exercised by other and sometimes irresponsible
and secret forces. Democracy is a kingless regime infested by many kings who
are sometimes more exclusive, tyrannical, and destructive than one, even if he
be a tyrant. This explains why Fascism - although, for contingent reasons, it
was republican in tendency prior to 1922 - abandoned that stand before the
March on Rome, convinced that the form of government is no longer a matter of
preeminent importance, and because the study of past and present monarchies and
past and present republics shows that neither monarchy nor republic can be
judged sub specie aeternitatis, but that each stands for a form of government
expressing the political evolution, the history, the traditions, and the
psychology of a given country.
Fascism has outgrown the dilemma: monarchy v.
republic, over which democratic regimes too long dallied, attributing all
insufficiencies to the former and proning the latter as a regime of perfection,
whereas experience teaches that some republics are inherently reactionary and
absolutist while some monarchies accept the most daring political and social
experiments.
In one of his philosophic Meditations Renan -
who had prefascist intuitions remarks, "Reason and science are the
products of mankind, but it is chimerical to seek reason directly for the
people and through the people. It is not essential to the existence of reason
that all should be familiar with it; and even if all had to be initiated, this
could not be achieved through democracy which seems fated to lead to the
extinction of all arduous forms of culture and all highest forms of learning.
The maxim that society exists only for the well-being and freedom of the
individuals composing it does not seem to be in conformity with nature's plans,
which care only for the species and seem ready to sacrifice the individual. It
is much to be feared that the last word of democracy thus understood (and let
me hasten to add that it is susceptible of a different interpretation) would be
a form of society in which a degenerate mass would have no thought beyond that
of enjoying the ignoble pleasures of the vulgar ".
In rejecting democracy Fascism rejects the
absurd conventional lie of political equalitarianism, the habit of collective
irresponsibility, the myth of felicity and indefinite progress. But if
democracy be understood as meaning a regime in which the masses are not driven
back to the margin of the State, and then the writer of these pages has already
defined Fascism as an organized, centralized, authoritarian democracy.
Fascism is definitely and absolutely opposed to
the doctrines of liberalism, both in the political and the economic sphere. The
importance of liberalism in the XIXth century should not be exaggerated for
present day polemical purposes, nor should we make of one of the many doctrines
which flourished in that century a religion for mankind for the present and for
all time to come. Liberalism really flourished for fifteen years only. It arose
in 1830 as a reaction to the Holy Alliance which tried to force Europe to
recede further back than 1789; it touched its zenith in 1848 when even Pius
IXth was a liberal. Its decline began immediately after that year. If 1848 was
a year of light and poetry, 1849 was a year of darkness and tragedy. The Roman
Republic was killed by a sister republic, that of France . In that same year
Marx, in his famous Communist Manifesto, launched the gospel of socialism.
In 1851 Napoleon III made his illiberal coup
d'etat and ruled France until 1870 when he was turned out by a popular rising
following one of the severest military defeats known to history. The victor was
Bismarck who never even knew the whereabouts of liberalism and its prophets. It
is symptomatic that throughout the XIXth century the religion of liberalism was
completely unknown to so highly civilized a people as the Germans but for one
parenthesis which has been described as the “ridiculous parliament of Frankfort
" which lasted just one season. Germany attained her national unity
outside liberalism and in opposition to liberalism, a doctrine which seems
foreign to the German temperament, essentially monarchical, whereas liberalism
is the historic and logical anteroom to anarchy. The three stages in the making
of German unity were the three wars of 1864, 1866, and 1870, led by such
"liberals" as Moltke and Bismarck. And in the upbuilding of Italian
unity liberalism played a very minor part when compared to the contribution
made by Mazzini and Garibaldi who were not liberals. But for the intervention
of the illiberal Napoleon III we should not have had Lombardy, and without that
of the illiberal Bismarck at Sadowa and at Sedan very probably we should not
have had Venetia in 1866 and in 1870 we should not have entered Rome. The years
going from 1870 to 1915 cover a period which marked, even in the opinion of the
high priests of the new creed, the twilight of their religion, attacked by
decadentism in literature and by activism in practice. Activism: that is to say
nationalism, futurism, fascism.
The liberal century, after piling up innumerable
Gordian Knots, tried to cut them with the sword of the world war. Never has any
religion claimed so cruel a sacrifice. Were the Gods of liberalism thirsting
for blood?
Now liberalism is preparing to close the doors
of its temples, deserted by the peoples who feel that the agnosticism it
professed in the sphere of economics and the indifferentism of which it has
given proof in the sphere of politics and morals, would lead the world to ruin
in the future as they have done in the past.
This explains why all the political experiments
of our day are anti-liberal, and it is supremely ridiculous to endeavor on this
account to put them outside the pale of history, as though history were a
preserve set aside for liberalism and its adepts; as though liberalism were the
last word in civilization beyond which no one can go.
The Fascist negation of socialism, democracy,
liberalism, should not, however, be interpreted as implying a desire to drive
the world backwards to positions occupied prior to 1789, a year commonly
referred to as that which opened the demo-liberal century. History does not travel
backwards. The Fascist doctrine has not taken De Maistre as its prophet.
Monarchical absolutism is of the past, and so is ecclesiolatry. Dead and done
for are feudal privileges and the division of society into closed,
uncommunicating castes. Neither has the Fascist conception of authority
anything in common with that of a police ridden State.
A party governing a nation “totalitarianly"
is a new departure in history. There are no points of reference nor of
comparison. From beneath the ruins of liberal, socialist, and democratic
doctrines, Fascism extracts those elements which are still vital. It preserves
what may be described as "the acquired facts" of history; it rejects
all else. That is to say, it rejects the idea of a doctrine suited to all times
and to all people. Granted that the XIXth century was the century of socialism,
liberalism, democracy, this does not mean that the XXth century must also be
the century of socialism, liberalism, democracy. Political doctrines pass;
nations remain. We are free to believe that this is the century of authority, a
century tending to the " right ", a Fascist century. If the XIXth
century was the century of the individual (liberalism implies individualism) we
are free to believe that this is the "collective" century, and
therefore the century of the State. It is quite logical for a new doctrine to
make use of the still vital elements of other doctrines. No doctrine was ever
born quite new and bright and unheard of. No doctrine can boast absolute
originality. It is always connected, it only historically, with those which
preceded it and those which will follow it. Thus the scientific socialism of
Marx links up to the utopian socialism of the Fouriers, the Owens, the
Saint-Simons ; thus the liberalism of the XIXth century traces its origin back
to the illuministic movement of the XVIIIth, and the doctrines of democracy to
those of the Encyclopaedists. All doctrines aim at directing the activities of
men towards a given objective; but these activities in their turn react on the
doctrine, modifying and adjusting it to new needs, or outstripping it. A
doctrine must therefore be a vital act and not a verbal display. Hence the
pragmatic strain in Fascism, it’s will to power, its will to live, its attitude
toward violence, and its value.
The keystone of the Fascist doctrine is its
conception of the State, of its essence, its functions, and its aims. For
Fascism the State is absolute, individuals and groups relative. Individuals and
groups are admissible in so far as they come within the State. Instead of
directing the game and guiding the material and moral progress of the
community, the liberal State restricts its activities to recording results. The
Fascist State is wide awake and has a will of its own. For this reason it can be
described as " ethical ".
At the first quinquennial assembly of the
regime, in 1929, I said “The Fascist State is not a night watchman, solicitous
only of the personal safety of the citizens; not is it organized exclusively
for the purpose of guarantying a certain degree of material prosperity and
relatively peaceful conditions of life, a board of directors would do as much.
Neither is it exclusively political, divorced from practical realities and
holding itself aloof from the multifarious activities of the citizens and the
nation. The State, as conceived and realized by Fascism, is a spiritual and
ethical entity for securing the political, juridical, and economic organization
of the nation, an organization which in its origin and growth is a manifestation
of the spirit. The State guarantees the internal and external safety of the
country, but it also safeguards and transmits the spirit of the people,
elaborated down the ages in its language, its customs, its faith. The State is
not only the present; it is also the past and above all the future.
Transcending the individual's brief spell of life, the State stands for the
immanent conscience of the nation. The forms in which it finds expression
change, but the need for it remains. The State educates the citizens to civism,
makes them aware of their mission, urges them to unity; its justice harmonizes
their divergent interests; it transmits to future generations the conquests of
the mind in the fields of science, art, law, human solidarity; it leads men up
from primitive tribal life to that highest manifestation of human power,
imperial rule. The State hands down to future generations the memory of those
who laid down their lives to ensure its safety or to obey its laws; it sets up
as examples and records for future ages the names of the captains who enlarged
its territory and of the men of genius who have made it famous. Whenever
respect for the State declines and the disintegrating and centrifugal
tendencies of individuals and groups prevail, nations are headed for
decay".
Since 1929 economic and political development
have everywhere emphasized these truths. The importance of the State is rapidly
growing. The so-called crisis can only be settled by State action and within
the orbit of the State. Where are the shades of the Jules Simons who, in the
early days of liberalism proclaimed that the "State should endeavor to
render itself useless and prepare to hand in its resignation "? Or of the
MacCullochs who, in the second half of last century, urged that the State
should desist from governing too much? And what of the English Bentham who
considered that all industry asked of government was to be left alone, and of
the German Humbolt who expressed the opinion that the best government was a
lazy " one? What would they say now to the unceasing, inevitable, and
urgently requested interventions of government in business? It is true that the
second generation of economists was less uncompromising in this respect than
the first, and that even Adam Smith left the door ajar - however cautiously -
for government intervention in business.
If liberalism spells individualism, Fascism
spells government. The Fascist State is, however, a unique and original
creation. It is not reactionary but revolutionary, for it anticipates the solution
of certain universal problems which have been raised elsewhere, in the
political field by the splitting up of parties, the usurpation of power by
parliaments, the irresponsibility of assemblies; in the economic field by the
increasingly numerous and important functions discharged by trade unions and
trade associations with their disputes and ententes, affecting both capital and
labor; in the ethical field by the need felt for order, discipline, obedience
to the moral dictates of patriotism.
Fascism desires the State to be strong and
organic, based on broad foundations of popular support. The Fascist State lays
claim to rule in the economic field no less than in others; it makes its action
felt throughout the length and breadth of the country by means of its
corporative, social, and educational institutions, and all the political,
economic, and spiritual forces of the nation, organized in their respective
associations, circulate within the State. A State based on millions of
individuals who recognize its authority, feel its action, and are ready to
serve its ends is not the tyrannical state of a mediaeval lordling. It has
nothing in common with the despotic States existing prior to or subsequent to
1789. Far from crushing the individual, the Fascist State multiplies his
energies, just as in a regiment a soldier is not diminished but multiplied by
the number of his fellow soldiers.
The Fascist State organizes the nation, but it
leaves the individual adequate elbow room. It has curtailed useless or harmful
liberties while preserving those which are essential. In such matters the
individual cannot be the judge, but the State only.
The Fascist State is not indifferent to
religious phenomena in general nor does it maintain an attitude of indifference
to Roman Catholicism, the special, positive religion of Italians. The State has
not got a theology but it has a moral code. The Fascist State sees in religion
one of the deepest of spiritual manifestations and for this reason it not only
respects religion but defends and protects it. The Fascist State does not
attempt, as did Robespierre at the height of the revolutionary delirium of the
Convention, to set up a "god” of its own; nor does it vainly seek, as does
Bolshevism, to efface God from the soul of man. Fascism respects the God of
ascetics, saints, and heroes, and it also respects God as conceived by the
ingenuous and primitive heart of the people, the God to whom their prayers are
raised.
The Fascist State expresses the will to exercise
power and to command. Here the Roman tradition is embodied in a conception of
strength. Imperial power, as understood by the Fascist doctrine, is not only
territorial, or military, or commercial; it is also spiritual and ethical. An
imperial nation, that is to say a nation a which directly or indirectly is a
leader of others, can exist without the need of conquering a single square mile
of territory. Fascism sees in the imperialistic spirit -- i.e. in the tendency
of nations to expand - a manifestation of their vitality. In the opposite
tendency, which would limit their interests to the home country, it sees a
symptom of decadence. Peoples who rise or rearise are imperialistic;
renunciation is characteristic of dying peoples. The Fascist doctrine is that
best suited to the tendencies and feelings of a people which, like the Italian,
after lying fallow during centuries of foreign servitude, are now reasserting
itself in the world.
But imperialism implies discipline, the
coordination of efforts, a deep sense of duty and a spirit of self-sacrifice.
This explains many aspects of the practical activity of the regime, and the
direction taken by many of the forces of the State, as also the severity which
has to be exercised towards those who would oppose this spontaneous and
inevitable movement of XXth century Italy by agitating outgrown ideologies of
the XIXth century, ideologies rejected wherever great experiments in political
and social transformations are being dared.
Never before have the peoples thirsted for
authority, direction, order, as they do now. If each age has its doctrine, then
innumerable symptoms indicate that the doctrine of our age is the Fascist. That
it is vital is shown by the fact that it has aroused a faith; that this faith
has conquered souls is shown by the fact that Fascism can point to its fallen
heroes and its martyrs.
Fascism has now acquired throughout the world
that universally which belongs to all doctrines which by achieving
self-expression represent a moment in the history of human thought.
APPENDIX
1. Philosophic conception
(1) If Fascism does not wish to die or, worse
still, commit suicide, it must now provide itself with a doctrine. Yet this
shall not and must not be a robe of Nessus clinging to us for all eternity, for
tomorrow is some thing mysterious and unforeseen. This doctrine shall be a norm
to guide political and individual action in our daily life.
I who have I dictated this doctrine, am the
first to realize that the modest tables of our laws and program the theoretical
and practical guidance of Fascism should be revised, corrected, enlarged,
developed, because already in parts they have suffered injury at the hand of
time. I believe the essence and fundamentals of the doctrine are still to be
found in the postulates which throughout two years have acted as a call to arms
for the recruits of Italian Fascism. However, in taking those first fundamental
assumptions for a starting point, we must proceed to carry our program into a
vaster field.
Italian Fascists, one and all, should cooperate
in this task, one of vital importance to Fascism, and more especially those who
belong to regions where with and without agreement peaceful coexistence has
been achieved between two antagonistic movements.
The word I am about to use is a great one, but
indeed I do wish that during the two months which are still to elapse before
our National Assembly meets, the philosophy of Fascism could be created. Milan
is already contributing with the first Fascist school of propaganda.
It is not merely a question of gathering elements
for a program, to be used as a solid foundation for the constitution of a party
which must inevitably arise from the Fascist movement; it is also a question of
denying the silly tale that Fascism is all made up of violent men. In point of
fact among Fascists there are many men who belong to the restless but
meditative class.
The new course taken by Fascist activity will in
no way diminish the fighting spirit typical of Fascism. To furnish the mind
with doctrines and creeds does not mean to disarm, rather it signifies to
strengthen our power of action, and make us ever more conscious of our work.
Soldiers who fight fully conscious of the cause make the best of warriors.
Fascism takes for its own the twofold device of Mazzini : Thought and Action u.
(Letter to Michele Bianchi, written on August 27, 1921, for the opening of the
School of Fascist Culture and Propaganda in Milan, in Messaggi e Proclami,
Milano, Libreria d'Italia, 1929, P. 39).
Fascists must be placed in contact with one
another; their activity must be an activity of doctrine, an activity of the
spirit and of thought
Had our adversaries been present at our meeting,
they would have been convinced that Fascism is not only action, but thought as
well (Speech before the National Council of the Fascist Party, August 8, 1924,
in La Nuova Politica dell'Italia, Milano, Alpes, 1928, p. 267).
(2) Today I hold that Fascism as an idea, a
doctrine, a realization, is universal; it is Italian in its particular
institutions, but it is universal in the spirit, nor could it be otherwise. The
spirit is universal by reason of its nature. Therefore anyone may foresee a
Fascist Europe. Drawing inspiration for her institutions from the doctrine and
practice of Fascism; Europe , in other words, giving a Fascist turn to the
solution of problems which beset the modern State, the Twentieth Century State
which is very different from the States existing before 1789, and the States
formed immediately after. Today Fascism fills universal requirements; Fascism
solves the threefold problem of relations between State and individual, between
State and associations, between associations and organized associations.
(Message for the year 1 October 27, 1930, in Discorsi del 1930, Milano, Alpes,
1931, p. 211).
2. Spiritualized conception
(3) This political process is flanked by a
philosophic process. If it be true that matter was on the altars for one
century, today it is the spirit which takes its place. All manifestations
peculiar to the democratic spirit are consequently repudiated: easygoingness,
improvisation, the lack of a personal sense of responsibility, the exaltation of
numbers and of that mysterious divinity called n The People a. All creations of
the spirit starting with that religious are coming to the fore, and nobody dare
keep up the attitude of anticlericalism which, for several decades, was a
favorite with Democracy in the Western world. By saying that God is returning,
we mean that spiritual values are returning. (Da the parte va it mondo, in
Tempi della Rivoluzione Fascista, Milano, Alpes, 1930, p. 34).
There is a field reserved more to meditation
upon the supreme ends of life than to a research of these ends. Consequently
science starts from experience, but breaks out fatally into philosophy and, in
my opinion, philosophy alone can enlighten science and lead to the universal
idea. (To the Congress of Science at Bologna , October 31, 19,26, in Discorsi
del 1926. Milano, Alpes, 1927, p. 268).
In order to understand the Fascist movement one
must first appreciate the underlying spiritual phenomenon in all its vastness
and depth. The manifestations of the movement have been of a powerful and
decisive nature, but one should go further. In point of fact Italian Fascism
has not only been a political revolt against weak and incapable governments who
had allowed State authority to decay and were threatening to arrest the progress
of the country, but also a spiritual revolt against old ideas which had
corrupted the sacred principles of religion, of faith, of country. Fascism,
therefore, has been a revolt of the people. (Message to the British people;
January 5, 1924, in Mes-saggi e Proclami, Milano, Libreria d' Italia, 1929, p.
107).
3. Positive conception of life
as a struggle
(4) Struggle is at the origin of all things, for
life is full of contrasts: there is love and hatred, white and black, day and
night, good and evil; and until these contrasts achieve balance, struggle
fatefully remains at the root of human nature. However, it is good for it to be
so. Today we can indulge in wars, economic battles, conflicts of ideas, but if
a day came to pass when struggle ceased to exist, that day would be tinged with
melancholy; it would be a day of ruin, the day of ending. But that day will not
come, because history ever discloses new horizons. By attempting to restore
calm, peace, tranquility, or. A would be fighting the tendencies of the present
period of dynamism. Ore must be prepared for other struggles and for other
surprises. Peace will only come when people surrender to a Christian dream of
universal brotherhood, when they can hold out hands across the ocean and over
the mountains. Personally I do not believe very much in these idealisms, but I
do not exclude them for I exclude nothing. (At the Politeama Rossetti, Trieste
, September 20, 1920 ; in Discorsi Politici, Milano, Stab. Tipografico del «
Popolo d' Italia » , 1921, p. 107).
(5) For me the honor of nations consists in the
contribution they have severally made to human civilization. (E. Ludwig, Talks
with Mussolini, London, Allen and Unwin, 1932, p. 199)
4. Ethical conception
I called the organization Fasci Italiani Di combat
tin onto. This hard metallic name compromised the whole program of Fascism as I
dreamed it. Comrades, this is still our program: fight.
Life for the Fascist is a continuous, ceaseless
fight, which we accept with ease, with great courage, with the necessary
intrepidity. (C n the VIIth anniversary of the Foundation of the Fasci, March
2E, 1926, in Discorsi del 1926, Milano, Alpes, 1927, P. 98).
You touch the core of Fascist philosophy. When
recently a Finnish philosopher asked me to expound to him the significance of
Fascism in one sentence, I wrote in German: ((We are against the “easy, lift!
a. (E. Ludwig: Talks with Mussolini, London, Allen and Unwin, 1932, p. 190).
5. Religious conception
(7) If Fascism were not a creed how could it
endow its followers with courage and stoicism only a creed which has soared to
the heights of religion can inspire such words as passed the lips, now lifeless
alas, of Federico Florio. (Legami di Sangue, in Diuturna, Milano, Alpes, 1930,
p. 256).
6. Historical and realistic
conception
(8) Tradition certainly is one of the greatest
spiritual forces of a people, inasmuch as it is a successive and constant
creation of their soul. (Breve Preludio, in Tempi della Rivoluzione Fascista,
Milano, Alpes, 1930, P- 13)
(9) Our temperament leads us to appraise the
concrete aspect of problems, rather than their ideological or mystical
sublimation. Therefore we easily regain our balance. (Aspetti del Dramma, in
Diuturna, Milano, Alpes, 1930, p. 86).
Our battle is an ungrateful one, yet it is a
beautiful battle since it compels us to count only upon our own forces.
Revealed truths we have torn to shreds, dogmas we have spat upon, we have
rejected all theories of paradise, we have baffled charlatans white, red, black
charlatans who placed miraculous drugs on the market to give a happiness n to
mankind. We do not believe in program, in plans, in saints or apostles, above
all we believe not in happiness, in salvation, in the Promised Land. (Diuturna,
Milano, Alpes, 1930, p. 223).
We do not believe in a single solution, be it
economical, political or moral, a linear solution of the problems of life,
because of illustrious choristers from all the sacristies life is not linear
and can never be reduced to a segment traced by primordial needs. (Navigare
necesse, in Diuturna, Milano, Alpes, 1930, p. 233).
(10) We are not and do not wish to be motionless
mummies, with faces perpetually turned towards the same horizon, nor do we wish
to shut ourselves up within the narrow hedges of subversive bigotry, where
formulas, like prayers of a professed religion, are muttered mechanically. We
are men, living men, who wish to give our contribution, however 'modest, to the
creation of history. (Audacia, in Diu turna, Milano, Alpes, 1930, p.')
We uphold moral and traditional values which
Socialism neglects or despises; but, above all, Fascism has a horror of
anything implying an arbitrary mortgage on the mysterious future. (Dopo due
anni, in Diuturna, Milano, Alpes, 1930, p. 242).
In spite of the theories of conservation and
renovation, of tradition and progress expounded by the right and the left, we
do not cling desperately to the past as to a last board of salvation: yet we do
not dash headlong into the seductive mists of the future. (Breve preludio, in
Diuturna, Milano, Alpes, 1930, p. 14). `negation, eternal immobility, mean
damnation. I am all for motion. I am, one who marches on (E. Ludwig, Talks with
Mussolini, Lot Jon, Allen and Unwin, 1932, p. 203).
7. The individual and liberty
(11) We were the first to state, in the face of
demo liberal individualism, that the individual exists only in so far as he is
within the State and subjected to the requirements of the state and that, as
civilization assumes aspects which grow more and more complicated, individual
freedom becomes more and more restricted. (To the General staff Conference of
Fascism, in Discorsi del 1929, Milano, Alpes, 1930, p. 280).
The sense of the state grows within the
consciousness of Italians, for they feel that the state alone is the irreplaceable
safeguard of their unit and independence; that the state alone represents
continuity into the future of their stock and their history. (Message on the
VIIth all anniversary, October 25, 1929, Discorsi del 1929, Milano, Alpes,
1930, p. 3oo).
If, in the course of the past eight years, we
have made such astounding progress, you may well think suppose and foresee that
in the course of the next fifty or eighty years the onward trend of Italy , of
this Italy we feel to be so powerful, so full of vital fluid, will really be
grandiose. It will be so especially if concord lasts among citizens, if the
State continues to be sole arbitrator in political and social conflicts, if all
remains within the state and nothing outside the State, because it is
impossible to conceive any individual existing outside the State unless he be a
savage whose home is in the solitude of she sandy desert. (Speech before the
Senate, May 12, 1928, in Discorsi del 1928, Milano, Alpes, 1929, p. 109).
Fascism has restored to the State its sovereign
functions by claiming its absolute ethical meaning, against the egotism of
classes and categories; to the Government of the state, which was reduced to a
mere instrument of electoral assemblies, it has restored dignity, as
representing the personality of the state and its power of Empire. It has
rescued State administration from the weight of factions and party interests
(To the council of state, December 22, 1928, in Discorsi Del 1928, Milano,
Alpes, 1929 p.328).
(12) Let no one think of denying the moral
character of Fascism. For I should be ashamed to speak from this tribune if I
did not feel that I represent the moral and spiritual powers of the state. What
would the state be if it did not possess a spirit of its own, and a morality of
its own, which lend power to the laws in virtue of which the state is obeyed by
its citizens?
The Fascist state claims its ethical character:
it is Catholic but above all it is Fascist, in fact it is exclusively and
essentially Fascist. Catholicism completes Fascism, and this we openly declare,
but let no one think they can turn the tables on us, under cover of metaphysics
or philosophy. (To the Chamber of Deputies, May 13, 1929, in Discorsi del 1929,
Milano, Alpes, 1930, p. 182).
A State which is fully aware of its mission and
represents a people which are marching on; a state which necessarily transforms
the people even in their physical aspect. In order to be something more than a
mere administrator, the State must utter great words, expound great ideas and
place great problems before this people (Di scorsi del 1929, Milano, Alpes,
1930, p. 183).
(13) The concept of freedom is not absolute
because nothing is ever absolute in life. Freedom is not a right, it is a duty.
It is not a gift, it is a conquest; it is not equality, it is a privilege. The
concept of freedom changes with the passing of time. There is a freedom in
times of peace which is not the freedom of times of war. There is a freedom in
times of prosperity which is not a freedom to be allowed in times of poverty.
(Fifth anniversary of the foundation of the Fasci di Contbattimento, March 24,
1924, in La nuova politica dell'Italia, vol. III, Milano, Alpes, 1925, p. 30).
In our state the individual is not deprived of
freedom. In fact, he has greater liberty than an isolated man, because the
state protects him and he is part of the State. Isolated man is without
defence. (E. Ludwig, Talks with Mussolini, London, Allen and Unwin, 1932, P.
129).
(14) Today we may tell the world of the creation
of the powerful united State of Italy, ranging from the Alps to Sicily; this
State is expressed by a well-organized, centralized, Unitarian democracy, where
people circulate at case. Indeed, gentlemen, you admit the people into the
citadel of the State and the people will defend it, if you close them out, the
people will assault it. (speech before the Chamber of Deputies, May 26, 1927 ,
in Discorsi del 1927, Milano, Alpes, 1928, p. 159).
In the Fascist regime the unity of classes, the
political, social and coral unity of the Italian people is realized within the
state, and only within the Fascist state. (speech before the Chamber of
Deputies, December 9, 1928 , in Discorsi del 1928, Milano, Alpes, 1929, p.
333).
8. Conception of a corporative
state
(15) We have created the united state of Italy
remember that since the Empire Italy had not been a united state. Here I wish
to reaffirm solemnly our doctrine of the State. Here I wish to reaffirm with no
weaker energy, the formula I expounded at the scala in Milan everything in the
state, nothing against the State, nothing outside the state. (speech before the
Chamber of Deputies, May 26, 1927 , Discorsi del 1927, Milano, Alpes, 1928, p.
t57).
(16) We are, in other words, a state which
controls all forces acting in nature. We control political forces, we control
moral forces we control economic forces, therefore we are a full-blown
Corporative state. We stand for a new principle in the world, we stand for
sheer, categorical, definitive antithesis to the world of democracy,
plutocracy, free-masonry, to the world which still abides by the fundamental
principles laid down in 1789. (Speech before the new National Directory of the
Party, April 7, 1926, in Discorsi del 1926, Milano, Alpes, 1927, p. 120).
The Ministry of Corporations is not a
bureaucratic organ, nor does it wish to exercise the functions of syndical
organizations which are necessarily independent, since they aim at organizing,
selecting and improving the members of syndicates. The Ministry of Corporations
is an institution in virtue of which, in the centre and outside, integral
corporation becomes an accomplished fact, where balance is achieved between
interests and forces of the economic world. Such a glance is only possible
within the sphere of the state, because the state alone transcends the
contrasting interests of groups and individuals, in view of co-coordinating
them to achieve higher aims. The achievement of these aims is speeded up by the
fact that all economic organizations, acknowledged, safeguarded and supported
by the Corporative State, exist within the orbit of Fascism; in other terms
they accept the conception of Fascism in theory and in practice. (speech at the
opening of the Ministry of Corporations, July 31, 1926, in Discorsi del 1926,
Milano, Alpes, 1927, p. 250).
We have constituted a Corporative and Fascist
state, the state of national society, a State which concentrates, controls,
harmonizes and tempers the interests of all social classes, which are thereby
protected in equal measure. Whereas, during the years of demo-liberal regime,
labour looked with diffidence upon the state, was, in fact, outside the State
and against the state, and considered the state an enemy of every day and every
hour, there is not one working Italian today who does not seek a place in his
Corporation or federation, who does not wish to be a living atom of that great,
immense, living organization which is the national Corporate State of Fascism.
(On the Fourth Anniversary of the March on Rome, October 28, 1926, in Discorsi
del 1926, Milano, Alpes, 1927, p. 340).
9. Democracy
(17) The war was revolutionary, in the sense
that with streams of blood it did away with the century of Democracy, the
century of number, the century of majorities and of quantities. (Da the pane va
it Mondo, in Tempi della Rivoluzione Fascista, Milano, Alpes, 1930, p. 37)
(18) Cf. note 13.
(19) Race: it is a feeling and not a reality; 95
%, a feeling. (E. Ludwig, Talks with Mussolini, London, Allen and Unwin, 1932,
p. 75).
10. Conception of the state
(20) A nation exists inasmuch as it is a people.
A people rise inasmuch as they are numerous, hard working and well regulated.
Power is the outcome of this threefold principle. (To the General Assembly of
the Party, March lo, 1929, in Discorsi del 1929, Milano, Alpes, 1930, p. 24).
Fascism does not deny the State; Fascism
maintains that a civic society, national or imperial, cannot be conceived
unless in the form of a State (Stab, anti-Slato, Fascismo, in Tempi della
Rivoluzione Fascista, Milano, Alpes, 1930, p. 94).
For us the Nation is mainly spirit and not only
territory. There are States which owned immense territories and yet left no
trace in the history of mankind. Neither is it a question of number, because
there have been, in history, small, microscopic States, which left immortal,
imperishable documents in art and philosophy.
The greatness of a nation is the compound of all
these virtues and conditions. A nation is great when the power of the spirit is
translated into reality. (Speech at Naples, October 24, 1922, in Discorsi della
Rivoluzione, Milano, Alpes, 1928, p. 103). We wish to unity the nation within
the sovereign State, which is above everyone arid can afford to be against
everyone, since it represents the moral continuity of the nation in history.
Without the State there is no nation. There are, merely. human aggregations.
subject to all the disintegration's which history may inflict upon them.
(Speech before the National Council of the Fascist Party, August 8, 1924, in La
Nuova Politica dell'Italia, vol. III; Milano, Alpes, 1928, p. 269).
Dynamic reality
(21) I believe that if a people wish to live they should develop a will to power,
otherwise they vegetate, live miserably and become prey to a stronger people,
in whom this will to power is developed to a higher degree. (Speech to the
Senate, May 28, 1926).
(22) It is Fascism which has refashioned the
character of the Italians, removing impurity from our souls, tempering us to
all sacrifices, restoring the true aspect of strength and beauty to our Italian
face. (Speech delivered at Pisa , May 25, 1926 , in Discorsi del 1926, Milano,
Alpes, 1927, p. 193).
It is not out of place to illustrate the
intrinsic character and profound significance of the Fascist Levy. It is not
merely a ceremony, but a very important stage in the system of education and
integral preparation of Italian men which the Fascist revolution considers one
of the fundamental duties of the State: fundamental indeed, for if the State
does not fulfill this duty or in any way accepts to place it under discussion,
the State merely and simply forfeits its right to exist. (Speech before the
Chamber of Deputies, May 28, 1928, in Discorsi del 1928, Milano, Alpes, 1929,
p. 68).
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