Each dot in this picture is a Nazi-fascist massacre in Italy that happened between 1943 and 1945.

This is the result of a project that lasted years, summarized by the Atlante delle Stragi Nazifasciste https://www.straginazifasciste.it/

6000 of them, the whole peninsula is covered in red. Almost every village from Naples to Bozen has at least a monument to keep the memory of the massacred alive.

Note that this doesn’t include battlefield or other warfare acts. Only acts of violence against the civilian population. Which resulted in more than 24,000 deaths in two years. More than 33 civilians killed every day.

This is the memory that is worth keeping alive now that the world is again sleepwalking towards those horrors.

This is why even a bulwark of liberalism like Popper said that freedom of speech and action doesn’t apply to fascists.

This is why grandsons of partisans keep repeating that the only good fascist is a dead one, and that violence against them should not only be tolerated but encouraged.

This is why we keep repeating that you can’t just talk or vote fascism out - it never leaves without a lot of blood.

And then those filthy pigs also dare to play the part of the victims when we invoke violence against them.

And then they keep repeating stale (and utterly false) refrains like “but Mussolini also did some good things”.

@fabio

I have a lot of respect for the Italian partisans. They mounted an effective resistance, and even managed to bring Mussolini to justice.

Meanwhile, in Germany, Hitler had to kill himself because no other German was up to the task.

@juergen_hubert @fabio Maybe Hitler treated non-Jew and non-opposing German civilians slightly better ?

Mussolini, with the Fasci Italiani di Combattimento, would confiscate every crop farmers would produce, even hidden stocks. Violence was there against every non-complying group from the beginning. And I believe that is ultimately what led the resistance.

@s1m0n4 @fabio

There was no shortage of political prisoners in German concentration camps, even at the start.

Especially at the start.

@juergen_hubert @fabio
This is clear. However the authority to put someone in camps comes from a position of executive power.
The black shirts were a violent squad intimidating socialists and oppositors since before Mussolini even entered the Parliament as elected member.
These militias were beating up anyone coming their way and they had close ties with the police.

I guess maybe Germany didn't experience the widespread climate of terror the fascist generated from the beginning.

@s1m0n4 @fabio

Let me tell you about the Sturmabteilung.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sturmabteilung

Sturmabteilung - Wikipedia