enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Might makes right - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Might_makes_right

    "Might makes right" or "Might is right" is an aphorism on the origin of morality, with both descriptive and prescriptive senses. Descriptively, it asserts that a society's view of right and wrong is determined by those in power, with a meaning similar to "History is written by the victors".

  3. Stalin's speech of 19 August 1939 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stalin's_speech_of_19...

    Whether this speech was ever given by Stalin is still the subject of dispute by historians. According to Viktor Suvorov's book Icebreaker, Soviet historians laid special emphasis on claiming that no Politburo meeting took place on 19 August 1939, but the Russian military historian Dmitri Volkogonov has found the evidence that a meeting really took place on that day.

  4. Totalitarianism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Totalitarianism

    Modern political science catalogues three régimes of government: (i) the democratic, (ii) the authoritarian, and (iii) the totalitarian. [4] [5] Varying by political culture, the functional characteristics of the totalitarian régime of government are: political repression of all opposition (individual and collective); a cult of personality about The Leader; official economic interventionism ...

  5. List of totalitarian regimes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_totalitarian_regimes

    Britannica and various authors noted that the policies of Vladimir Lenin, the first leader of the Soviet Union, contributed to the establishment of a totalitarian system in the USSR, [3] [7] but while some authors, such as Leszek Kolakowski, believed Stalinist totalitarianism to be a continuation of Leninism [7] and directly called Lenin's ...

  6. Totalitarian democracy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Totalitarian_democracy

    Indeed, from the vantage point of the mid-twentieth century the history of the last hundred and fifty years looks like a systematic preparation for the headlong collision between empirical and liberal democracy on the one hand, and totalitarian Messianic democracy on the other, in which the world crisis of to-day consists.

  7. Vladimir Lenin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vladimir_Lenin

    The founder and leader of the Bolsheviks, Lenin led the October Revolution which established the world's first socialist state. His government won the Russian Civil War and consolidated power in a one-party state under the Communist Party. Ideologically a Marxist, his developments to the ideology are called Leninism.

  8. President George H. W. Bush's first inauguration speech: Full ...

    www.aol.com/news/2017-01-19-president-george-h-w...

    The totalitarian era is passing, its old ideas blown away like leaves from an ancient, lifeless tree. A new breeze is blowing, and a nation refreshed by freedom stands ready to push on.

  9. Stalin and the Fate of Europe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stalin_and_the_Fate_of_Europe

    Stalin and the Fate of Europe: The Postwar Struggle for Sovereignty is a historical book written by Stanford University historian Norman Naimark.. Published in 2019 by Harvard University Press, the book delves into Soviet leader Joseph Stalin's post-World War II strategies and interactions with Eastern European countries as they sought to assert their sovereignty amidst growing Cold War tensions.