Abstract

It is a serious mistake to think that fascism set out from 1920, or from the March on Rome, with a pre-arranged plan .... All the historical facts of the development of fascism contradict such an idea . . . fascism was not born totalitarian, it became so. . .. If you look at the first conception of relations between the citizen and the State, you will find elements not'unlike those of anarchist liberalism. . . . What I have been trying to show . . . is that fascism should not be regarded as something definitively characterized, it should be thought of rather as something developing, never static, never as a pattern or a model.1

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