Maurizio Murelli, a well-known former neofascist militant in Milan, sentenced to 18 years in prison for moral complicity in the death of agent Antonio Marino in what is remembered as Black Thursday in Milan, on 12 April 1973, when during a neo-fascist demonstration hand grenades were launched.
Today Murelli is a scholar, editor and point of reference in Italy for the so-called “rossobruni”, the name used to indicate opinion leaders and groups originally from the radical left, who have adopted rhetoric, approaches and contents from the far right.
Much revered in this area is Aleksandr Dugin, a Russian political scientist and philosopher, theorist of National Bolshevism, that is, of “socialism without materialism, atheism, modernism and progressivism”.