Filippo Turati (November 26, 1857 - March 29, 1932) on War and Workers

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(1857 - 1932)

Italian Sociologist, Criminologist, Poet, Socialist Politician, Graduated in Law at the University of Bologna in 1877, and Participated in the Scapigliatura Movement with the Most Important Artists of the Period in Milan

: An Italian sociologist, criminologist, poet and socialist politician. (From: Wikipedia.org.)


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Quote #12 on Political Struggle Quotes >> War and Workers

“The war has proven how much more solid and persistent than we thought was the power and strength of the bourgeois state. When you have seen millions and millions of proletarians marching for a good five years at the behest of a carabineer or of a shock trooper, almost without a single revolt; when you have seen that the executions by shooting, the decimation, and all that is most horrible in the military courts, have been tolerated by the proletarians of all nations; when you have seen that a war, which was one of the most hateful expressions of the cannibalistic antagonisms of the various bourgeois states, has not served to rekindle, strengthen and renew the proletarian International but instead has suffocated and scattered it; finally, when you have gone through all these experiences, you are honestly forced to take them into account in forming your predictions and evaluations.”

Source: "Neither Liberty Nor Bread: The Meaning and Tragedy of Fascism," edited by Frances Keene, Kennikat Press, Port Washington, New York, London, 1940. Section I: The Rise of Fascism, Chapter 2: Useless Warnings, by F. Turati, Page 11.

"Neither Liberty Nor Bread: The Meaning and Tragedy of Fascism," edited by Frances Keene, Kennikat Press, Port Washington, New York, London, 1940.

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April 11, 2020; 2:23:11 PM (UTC)
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July 14, 2022; 6:36:06 PM (UTC)
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