FASCISM.
“The foreigner may lecture Fascism, tolerate it. vehemently condemn, or as vehemently exalt it. But there ought not to he two views about Fascism as the trustee for historic Italy, or about the services that the masterful, oven the headstrong, touch can do for buried glories in which all the Western world can claim a certain filial interest. There is no less contentious expression ol the national spirit than in the new works proposed in Borne, at Herculaneum, and elsewhere, and the undertaking is as characteristic o! Fascism in its settle as the corporative state. Whatever else may be saitl in praise or dispraise of the Fascist mind, it does „o( boggle at huge enterprises. There is no die-hard meanness about the scope in which it dares to think. Nor is there any fear that looking to the past neeesstriiy means living in it. Fascism, expressly claiming to recreate the Imperial spirit of Borne, has, of course, reasons of its own for returning to the records of the Fmniro.”—“ The Observer.”
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Hokitika Guardian, 30 July 1927, Page 1
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172FASCISM. Hokitika Guardian, 30 July 1927, Page 1
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