A. James Gregor

A. James Gregor


The more corporatism is implemented and fully developed, the more we return to Syndicalism. This is the starting point; tha is the point of arrival. This emerges clearly and impeccably from the current evolution and morphology of the trade union system in relation to the institution of corporations. We also talk about corporations. We also speak, very significantly, about the corporations and the movement within them of the different productive categories, "syndicate time." From the logical and static side, there is no doubt that syndicalism and corporatism are connected and complementary facts, and that, just as the unions are, so to speak, blind without the corporation, which is their outlet and their ideal goal, so the corporations are empty, they do not exist, they can neither function nor be thought of, without the unions. The more the corporations establish themselves with their practical functioning, the lower, correspondingly, they will affirm themselves, or rather reaffirm themselves, the unions. The return to unions is immanent, just as the path and progress from unions to corporations is immanent. The one movement is linked to the other, it is born and develops from the other. Making the history of syndicalism, without actually making the history of the latter, is impossible

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