Originally posted by CoolMyth:Stomp.
Got read today's Sunday Times, comments about our MM?
His objectives are
i)strong treasury
ii)control of the gun
[b]iii)influence of the voice
There are such tactics around.[/b]


Originally posted by CoolMyth:One more thing to add!!!
Got read today's Sunday Times, comments about our MM?
His objectives are
i)strong treasury
ii)control of the gun
[b]iii)influence of the voice
There are such tactics around.[/b]
Not many things are said explicitly. Nation building may be one of the components, but in which direction? Angle is dictated by one group here, that's why there may be a spillover effect.Originally posted by TooFree:Unless the syllabus contains party intention to solicit or force doctrine if not, National Building is the right word to use.
How history is interpreted is always dictated by those in power. Hence 'point of view' is the right term to describe historical references.Originally posted by TooFree:Unless the syllabus contains party intention to solicit or force doctrine if not, National Building is the right word to use.
Despite the facist party coming to power, no doubt supported in the wings by his friend and benefactor Adolf Hitler, Italians as a whole, rejected facism at the climax of WWII in europe.Originally posted by LazerLordz:There is something the Mussolini camp leveraged on when he took power, the use of iconoclasm and historiography as a tool to reach the masses and capitalise on their immediate past as a downtrodden people to bootstrap themselves into willing supporters of a regime that can make them feel strong and confident.
Iconoclasm is about the denial, be it physical or in the context of narrative's memory of the use of symbols, flags and monuments. This denial can be used to depoliticise a nation and re-craft it into a sterile fascist ideology.
that post of mine was something inspired by what I learnt in history class last semester, the idea of iconoclasm in the role of power politics.Originally posted by BillyBong:Despite the facist party coming to power, no doubt supported in the wings by his friend and benefactor Adolf Hitler, Italians as a whole, rejected facism at the climax of WWII in europe.
Of course there are a minute few troublemakers who 'worship' facism leftover, just like the white supremists and Nazi skinheads in Germany. Even Mussolini's daughter is viewed with suspicion.
Italy has viewed its own humiliation enough, especially when it made the wrong allies and were 'colonized' for a time by allied forces. Italians have vowed never to repeat such naviety in the face of adversity.