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Fascism's Hatred Of Religion 165
appear to be totally opposed ideologies. However, they are quite similar to
each other, both being cruel, oppressive, totalitarian, oligarchic (based on
minority rule) systems, exhibiting enmity towards religion, and espousing a
Darwinian perspective of reality. (See Communism in Ambush by Harun Yahya,
March 2001) So there is actually very little difference between a communist and
a fascist, for one can very easily turn from one into the other. A communist who
spills blood dreaming of a proletarian revolution can later begin to exhibit the
same behavior for fascist ideals. Because violence is an indispensable element
of both ideologies.
Mussolini spent years as an atheist communist, an enemy of religion
and a fanatical Darwinist, trying to make a place for himself in Italian politics.
When by these means he was not able to achieve his aims, he became a fascist.
Mussolini's Communist Years
Mussolini was born in a small village in 1883. His father was an avowed
Marxist, an ideology he passed on to his son. According to the Oxford historian
Denis Mack Smith, in his book Mussolini, "his father used to read parts of Das
Kapital to the family." 114
Mussolini received a communist education from his father, and was
known at school as a difficult and aggressive boy, and a smart-aleck. He had
almost no friends.
In his 20s Mussolini became a fanatical communist, supporting
anarchism, an even more radical and fanatical revolutionary ideology than
communism. Denis Mack Smith writes:
By 1903 he was calling himself an 'authoritarian communist'. From his
father he had learnt to have little patience with sentimental, reformist
socialism or with democratic and parliamentary methods; instead he
preached revolution to expropriate a ruling class that would never
voluntarily renounce power and possessions. Parliament should be
abolished; class struggle must replace class collaboration; private
property should disappear altogether. Socialists should never
collaborate with bourgeois governments and never pursue a policy of
strikes merely to get better wages, but should be ready to use terrorism
and mob violence to effect a wholesale social revolution. 115
As we have seen, in his youth Mussolini was a fanatical communist.