Word: cianetti
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...proletariat. Last week in Rome some of the strides which European workmen are making toward an easier and more varied life-irrespective of what kind of regime they toil under- brought into genial conference the chief exponents of Fascist and Nazi labor: for Italy, Grand Councilman Tullio Cianetti, president of the Fascist Confederation of Industrial Workers; for Germany, Labor Front Leader Dr. Robert...
President Cianetti was born and reared a soil-grubbing peasant, while Dr. Ley worked originally as a chemist. Cianetti is ebullient, fiery, humorous-Ley full of German mysticism and plodding pugnacity. In a recent two-hour address to proletarians at Hamburg, Labor's Ley key- noted : "Those German employers who dare to rate machines higher than men are going to be given plenty of opportunity to arrive at a contrary opinion in concentration camps!" In Italy's present production spurt toward rearmament, Labor's Cianetti dashes incessantly about the kingdom, addressing workers' meetings, hearing grievances...
Last week Germany's Ley and Italy's Cianetti met to sign the first pact between Nazi and Fascist labor organizations. They denied they were founding a "Fascist Labor International'' but the alignment of their followers along the Hitler-Mussolini "Axis" was patent...
...Germany the similar organization has been copying the Italian model fast, outstripping it in the matter of proletarian pleasure cruise ships now slated to take the unprecedented number of 12.000 German toilers clear around to Tokyo in 1940 just to cheer German athletes in the Olympic Games. Announced Cianetti & Ley: "Our two labor fronts have agreed to consult each other before taking any international action, to recognize labor organizations affiliated with each other, and to exchange information and data...
...contend with. Nevertheless, though every Fascist officer says, "There are no strikes in Italy," Spivak dug out records of 153 illegal strikes under Fascism. The humblest Italian is paralyzed with fear by the secret police ("The Bats") headed by an imitation Mussolini. Another imitation Mussolini, handsome President Tullio Cianetti of the Confederation of Labor, conceded that "Fascism has not abolished the class struggle or class distinctions." Mussolini, says Spivak, has smashed the middle classes, degraded the workers and all but bankrupted Big Business. His standbys are the Army, the Fascist! and the War veterans who have been settled on farms...