National Fascist Party

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    political party and carefully controlled violence from the bases of complete social and political control. Fascism derives from the term fasces. Fascism had a powerful influence from the 1920s to 1940s. There are different examples of fascism such as the axis powers during World War II such as Germany, Italy, and Japan. Italy was a fascist county before Germany. It became a fascist country under Benito Mussolini. He used the word fascist in 1919. He formed the Black Shirt Militia as a party to promote

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    of mobilization and modernization originally asserted by socialist parties, poorly organized middle-class and political party structures. Fascism was motivated by deep resting fears of social and political revolutions of the ruling elites and large parts of the middle and lower-middle classes. Nazism had the theory of racism and of the perfect Aryan chosen people using propaganda and philosophy to boost them into power . Fascist and Nazi movements appeared throughout Europe during the period between

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    A Comparison Between Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini There is no doubt that Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini shared many similar characteristics. They shared movements that were typical of National Socialism: they adopted a radical nationalism, militaristic hierarchies, violence, the cult of charismatic leadership, contempt for individual liberties and civil rights, an anti-democratic and anti-socialist orientation, and a refusal to socialize industries. Hitler and Mussolini looked

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    Benito Mussolini was an Italian leader who reigned from 1922 to 1943. He created a government plan, which supported feeling superior to other countries and having a strong military defense. He also ran a dystopian country because of the lack of equality, communism, etc. There are currently several nations around the world in which dystopia exists, and it is powered by fear. A dystopian society is a place in which there is a disparity of rights of the government and citizens of the nation; for example

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    research examines the development of fascism and ultranationalism in contemporary Croatia, Hungary, and Serbia. Fascism and ultranationalism are not one and the same thing. While a fascist likely will be an ultranationalist (and will certainly be nationalistic), an ultranationalist need not necessarily be a fascist. As these two terms are critical to this examination, they must be defined. Ultranationalism Ultranationalism implies not only an intensely patriotic attitude toward and a highly chauvinistic

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    A comparison between Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini There is no doubt that Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini shared many similar characteristics. They shared movements that were typical of National Socialism: they adopted a radical nationalism, militaristic hierarchies, violence, the cult of charismatic leadership, contempt for individual liberties and civil rights, an anti-democratic and anti-socialist orientation, and a refusal to socialize industries. Hitler and Mussolini looked upon

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    Essay on Fascism

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    (including Mussolini) winning a single seat in the 1919 elections. How was it that a party with no clear programme, save a belief in action of some sort, became a ruling dictatorship little more than ten years later? By the end of 1919, Mussolini possessed hardly more than 2% of the vote in Milan, less than

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    right-wing politics and Fascism has made lasting impacts on the right-wing parties still in existence today. This literature review will discuss the rise and fall of fascism in Italy through Adrian Lyttelton’s The Seizure of Power; Fascism in Italy, 1919-1929, the radical right wing as a consequence of fascism through Franco Farreresi’s Threats to Democracy: The Radical Right in Italy after the War, and the lasting impact of the fascist political era on contemporary Italian society up until the late 1960’s

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    broke out in 1914, many of the socialist political parties in Italy supported their country’s intervention in the war. The Italian Socialist Party, at which Mussolini was a leading member, had decided to oppose the war, and initially Mussolini supported this idea. (Gregor 55) However, he eventually declared his support for the war, claiming that

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    term meant/was, and when and where it was significant (3 points). Friedrich Ebert: He was the first President of Germany a renowned German Politician belonging to the Social Democratic Party in 1919 until he died in 1925. He became the leader of the Social Democratic Party after the death of August Bebel, the then party leader passed on. Béla Kun: He was a Revolutionary of the Hungarian Nation who championed the Hungarian Soviet Republic in the year 1919. After the revolution, he moved to the Soviet

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