[1][2] Țuțea moved to Bucharest and in 1932 he founded, together with Petre Pandrea,[3] a leftist newspaper, "Stânga" ("The Left"),[4] that was quickly and forcefully closed by the government.
[1] In 1935 Țuțea and four other writers published a nationalist program of economic and social development, "Manifestul Revoluției Naționale" ("Manifesto for a National Revolution").
[3] He also noted that many Romanian intellectuals had supported the Legionnaires, because "their radical position against the harmful influence of Russian Bolshevism", which he considered to be "controlled by Jews" (see Judeo-Bolshevism).
[3] Speaking of the Iron Guard, Țuțea believed the main difference between this organization and Fascism or National Socialism was its avowed Christian character.
[9] Țuțea was arrested by the Communist regime in 1949, and was sent, without a trial, to "re-education" (euphemism for forced labor) at Ocnele Mari state prison.
He also started to write books and essays, created an original dramatic form, "theater as seminar", and produced a philosophical manifesto, "The Philosophy of Nuances" (1969).
[12] A very popular book (sold in more than 70,000 copies) is 322 de vorbe memorabile, a collection of aphorisms taken from various interviews, ordered alphabetically.
In these interviews Țuțea adopted a hyperbolic, rhetorical style and the editor's choices included several controversial topics, such as atheism, Communism, and Antisemitism.