Monday, February 1, 2010

BENITO MUSSOLINI AS A ROMAN CATHOLIC



MUSSOLINI'S WARNING TO THE WORLD

Today the only way not to live in fear of revolution is to think that we are now in the full swing of one. I am not afraid of the word I am a revolutionary and a reactionary. I am afraid of the revolution which destroys and does not create. I fear going to extremes, the policy of madness, at the bottom of which may lie the destruction of our fragile mechanical civilization, robbed of its solid moral basis, and the coming of a terrible race of dominators who would reintroduce discipline into the world and re-establish the necessary hierarchies with the cracking of whips and machine guns. At the same time, as regards reaction and revolution, I have a compass in my pocket which guides me. All that which tends towards making the Italian people great finds me favourable and, vice versa, all which tends towards lowering, brutalizing, and impoverishing them finds me opposed.

September 3, 1939: Start of The Second World War

“WORLD WAR II COULD HAVE BEEN AVOIDED”

FRANCE AND BRITAIN ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR THE DEATH OF EUROPE

Sixty Million Innocent Lives Were Extinguished by Cruel and Vicious Governments



Assuming in 1922 the Supreme Political Command of Italy as the Prime Minister of a centuries old Roman Catholic country, at the young age of thirty-nine years old he soon recognized the importance and the spiritual value of the Church and its universal mission to one billion people and the long held Catholic spirituality as lived and demonstrated by the fifty million citizens of Italy. He had inherited from former Italian governments a festering sore of conflict and distrust between the Holy See at the Vatican and the Government of Italy and The Kingdom of Italy. He
decided in 1929 which road he would follow. By his diplomatic triumph of The Lateran Pact, the Church and the State both were confident and secure in their co-habitation of the City of Rome and the Church’s relationship with the Kingdom of Italy and sovereignty of the House of Savoy along with the sovereignty of the Holy See in Rome



"I am a Catholic by conviction, because I believe that Catholicism is the religion which possesses a doctrine capable of resolving all the problems of life, individual and social, national, and international, and in the conflict between spiritualism and materialism it sustains and desires the primacy and victory of the spirit". M