🍕 ¿Qué fue el FASCISMO ITALIANO? | Historia
Clases Particulares en Ávila por Miguel Fernández Collado
In this section, the speaker introduces the topic of history and encourages viewers to subscribe to the channel for educational content. The focus is on Italy during the fascist era.
Italy Post World War I
- After World War I, Italy entered the war without parliamentary authorization or adequate military preparation, resulting in significant losses and a high debt burden.
- The peace treaties post-war were disappointing for Italy as they did not receive territories promised by the Allies, leading to external debt, inflation, industrial reconversion challenges, and rising unemployment.
- Economic crisis heightened social tensions with peasants occupying land and industrial workers striking. Fear of a communist revolution grew among the upper and middle classes.
Ideological Foundations of Fascism
- Benito Mussolini's fascist movement emerged as a response to societal unrest. The ideology opposed democracy and communism while emphasizing total state control under an infallible leader.
- Key features of Italian fascism included opposition to democracy and communism, individual submission to the state led by an all-powerful leader, existence of a single party without free elections, cult of violence to eliminate opposition through physical or psychological means, monopoly on mass media for propaganda purposes.
Characteristics of Fascism Continued
- Fascism emphasized control over mass media like radio and press for public opinion manipulation. Symbolism through rallies aimed at indoctrinating masses was crucial. Education was controlled through youth organizations.
- State control over the economy for self-sufficiency (autarky), promotion of national values with an ideology supporting inequality between nations, glorification of war and militarism fostering fierce nationalism.
Creation of a Dictatorship
This part delves into how Mussolini established his dictatorship through violent means after facing electoral setbacks initially.
Strategy for Establishing Dictatorship
- Facing electoral challenges in 1919 and 1921, fascists resorted to violence against left-wing activists. The "March on Rome" in 1922 successfully pressured King Victor Emmanuel III to appoint Mussolini as Prime Minister.
- Mussolini consolidated power through terror campaigns against opponents, establishing a dictatorship that eliminated political rivals. He banned all parties except the fascist party, suppressed individual freedoms, created a secret police force for surveillance and repression.
Economic Policies and Foreign Relations
- Supported by industrial bourgeoisie and financial elites, Mussolini gained almost unlimited economic power by boosting production levels towards autarky goals. His regime expanded territorially into Ethiopia and Albania while backing Franco in the Spanish Civil War.