
This Monday marks 80 years since Italian dictator Benito Mussolini was killed in an Italian village towards the end of the Second World War in 1945. The following day, his body was publicly desecrated in Milan. Today, as commentators, bloggers and scholars are debating whether the governments of US President Donald Trump, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban and Russian President Vladimir Putin are 'fascist', we can learn from Il Duce's career about how democracies fail and dictators consolidate autocratic rule. Mussolini had been raised in a leftist family. Before WWI, he edited and wrote for socialist newspapers. Yet, from early on, the young rebel was also attracted to radically anti-democratic thinkers like Friedrich Nietzsche, George Sorel, and Wilfred Pareto. When WWI broke out, Mussolini broke from the socialists, who opposed Italy's involvement in the conflict. Like Hitler, he fought in the war. Mussolini considered his front-line experience as formative for his future...
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