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Intransigent fascism orrevolutionary fascism, in some respects analogous to so-calledleft-wing fascism, is a minority current ofItalian fascism that, drawing on the integrity of theSan Sepolcro Programme and the movement's original ideals, those preMarch on Rome, departed from thePNF (of which dissident members founded theNational Fasces) and from the experience of the twenty-year period, during which in fact fascism was areactionary regime of theextreme right, compromised with theCatholic Church, theMonarchy andconservative political forces, because of the common opposition tomaterialistMarxism andindividualistliberalism.[1][2]
The typical ideas of this line of thought, which never gained much support except among a few early Fascist exponents such as theFreemasonRoberto Farinacci or theNeapolitanrevolutionary syndicalistAurelio Padovani (expelled and readmitted to the party, who later died under circumstances never fully clarified), and was all in all ignored byBenito Mussolini himself, are:national socialism,revolutionary syndicalism,republicanism,futurism,thirdism,anti-clericalism,anti-parliamentarism,anti-communism andanti-capitalism.
Certain elements of the more orthodox and terribilist fascism, such as socialization of the economy,corporatism andhostility to the monarchy, were taken up by theRepublican Fascist Party in the short-livedItalian Social Republic and today can be found in part in the small Fascism andFreedom Movement – National Socialist Party [it].
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