MARXIST HISTORICAL ANALYSIS - CRITIQUE TO SOCIALISM AND ITS PROSPECTS - PROTEST
These and others are the subjects treated during the entire life of a pure defender of the Social Progress.
But the search of truth, hated by the degenerate totalitarians, is not welcome by the prostituted Western “political class”, and so, since it is not possible to send the “disturbers” to Siberia, it confines them to predicate in the desert.
A voice which cries in the tempest is not heard. Thus, it is necessary to drive everyone away from the heretic, by organizing for him the “conspiracy of silence”. Those who threaten the high profits and denounces mystifications have to be immediately suppressed.
Parties, transformed by now into electoral shops and only interested in the haughty state meal, do not want the beloved “masses” be enlightened.
It is necessary to leave them in the actual Economical, Sociological and Historical ignorance, by contrasting the intention of a theorist of Protest, even if he is considered as “deep and original”.
THE LIFE OF A FREE AND ISOLATED THINKER
"“La Gazzetta di Mantova”, February 19th 1990
Bruno Rizzi was born in Poggio Rusco in 1901 and spent its childhood in Gazoldo degli Ippoliti, where his father worked as municipal employee. When he was 20, and already an activist of the Socialist Party, he joins the Communist fraction, upon the ideal spur of the success of the Russian revolution. In that period, he attended the Politecnico of Milan and then The Sorbona in Paris, above all in order to satisfy his intellectual thirst of politics: in fact, he will never get graduated. In Paris, he enters in contact with the circles of the Quarta Internazionale (N.d.T.: The Fourth International, a political movement). In 1921, he joins the Communist party, at the moment of its foundation, but almost immediately he begins to criticize the Marxist-Leninist thought and this will cause, 16 years later, his expulsion from the party. In the same year, he writes his first book, “Dove va l’Urss?” (N.d.T.: Where is URSS going?) and two years later his most famous text, “La Bureaucratisation du Monde” (N.d.T.: World Bureaucratisation), published in Italy only in 1967 with the title “Il colletivismo burocratico” (N.d.T.: Bureaucratic Collectivism). He wrote then at least other four essays but none of them became famous. But his thought was known abroad, and, in 1942 the American sociologist James Burnham plagiarized the book of Rizzi, and wrote what then became a world best-seller “The Managerial revolution”. Bruno Rizzi has never been a professional intellectual. He was the owner of a shoes shop. He died in Bussolengo in 1977, but he was buried in Gazzoldo degli Ippoliti.
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