EUROPE’S POSITION
WORLD POLITICS
MUSSOLINI’S GENERAL REVIEW.
United Press Association—By Electric Telegraph—Copyright!.
(Received tiii s day at 8.50 a.m.) ROME, November 15
Signor Mussolini, addressing the Council of -Corporations, with which lie intends to replace the Deputies, announced the suppression of capitalistic production, the burial of economic liberalism, and the fragmentation , 0 f all Socialist parties in Europe. He claimed unlimited consumption ■was a pretext for super-capitalism whose ideal was the standardisation of humanity from the cradle to the gr-'ve. Kreuger and Tnsull represented its latest s.(age. Not only .countries but con-, tinenty were opposed to each other in i economic warfare. Europe no longer dominated the wuftfd, ia-s America had arisen, and Japan was advancing by rapid strides. 'Europe could still regain the political •rudder if it found the minimum of political unity. 11 Duce added that, as the corporative system would not be ripe for enforcement for some months, the chamber would be re-elected but would subsequently decide its own fate. It was anachronistic and alien to Italian mentulity.
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Hokitika Guardian, 16 November 1933, Page 5
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171EUROPE’S POSITION Hokitika Guardian, 16 November 1933, Page 5
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