Talk:Cesare Mori

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This article has a lot of opinion-based information and is almost definitely in violation of the Neutral Point of View policy.

New version: translated from Italian Wiki
I've replaced the text with a translation of the Italian article in Mori, which is much more complete, informative and balanced. Here is the original English text I've replaced, in case it's needed: ''Cesare Mori was born in 1872 in Pavia, Italy, and was raised in an orphanage. He joined the police and served in various cities. In 1924 he became the prefect of Trapani. On 22 October 1925 he was transferred to Palermo by Mussolini and given special powers with the aim of eradicating the Mafia. He began a ruthless campaign and also investigated high-ranking mafiosi and saw that they had a relationship with Fascism. Mori understood the fear, honor and respect of the mafiosi. So he started adopting mafia tactics (respect and honor) to fight the Mafia. This anti-mafia campaign was from 1924 until 1929. He mistrusted the legal system greatly. He knew that the law was weak, and therefore, he intervened by police violence and not the mafioso. His tactic was considered as "the biggest mafioso of them all". Mori reduced the crime rate but did not tackle the social and economic part.'' --Zeisseng 16:45, 3 December 2006 (UTC)

Mori's impact
On the other hand, they mainly targeted the small-time criminals of Sicily and left the big-timers, the real mafia bosses, relatively unscathed.

This is an inaccurate statement. Although he undeniably started with the "low" Mafia, after his first successes Mori did try to target also the real mafia bosses and their political connections, facing very important personalities in Sicily. But he was sent away before he could do more and open the canworm. He even closed the Fascio of Palermo (a surprisingly daring move) because of its mafioso connections.

In addition, the severity of the methods used created great resentment among the more impoverished sectors of society, leading to growing discontent and mistrust of the State.

Again, not true. Mori was regarded as something of a legend, a hero, in Sicily (See Arrigo Petacco's book "Il prefetto di ferro", the most important Italian biography about Mori). Those who did not like him were mostly the mobsters and criminals! But, apart for them, he was second in popularity only to Mussolini in those years.

I agree with author of this remark. If you read Leonardo Sciascia's "Il giorno della civetta" (The Day of the Owl), the first italian novel about the Mafia, the author stated clearly that Cesare Mori was beloved by Sicilian farmers and poor people because he had freed them from the arrogance of "Dons" --S vecchiato (talk) 07:54, 28 March 2009 (UTC)

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