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dictatorship speech: The World's Great Speeches Lewis Copeland, Lawrence W. Lamm, Stephen J. McKenna, 1999-09-21 Provides almost three hundred speeches delivered from ancient to modern times. |
dictatorship speech: Dictatorship Carl Schmitt, 2013-12-23 Now available in English for the first time, Dictatorship is Carl Schmitt’s most scholarly book and arguably a paradigm for his entire work. Written shortly after the Russian Revolution and the First World War, Schmitt analyses the problem of the state of emergency and the power of the Reichspräsident in declaring it. Dictatorship, Schmitt argues, is a necessary legal institution in constitutional law and has been wrongly portrayed as just the arbitrary rule of a so-called dictator. Dictatorship is an essential book for understanding the work of Carl Schmitt and a major contribution to the modern theory of a democratic, constitutional state. And despite being written in the early part of the twentieth century, it speaks with remarkable prescience to our contemporary political concerns. |
dictatorship speech: The Secret Speeches of Chairman Mao Roderick MacFarquhar, Eugene Wu, Timothy Cheek, 2020-10-26 In 1957 and 1958, Chairman Mao Zedong led China into two major experiments: the Hundred Flowers policy of encouraging literary and political free expression and the economic Great Leap Forward. Each was a disaster. Repression followed the first when it became clear that intellectuals would criticize the Communist Party itself; famine followed the second. During two crucial years when the movements were being initiated, however, Mao addressed various Party groups behind closed doors to explain the new policies and exhort compliance. Recorded at the time and collected for limited circulation in the 1960s by his admirers among the Red Guards, the speeches, question-and-answer sessions, and letters here translated have never before been published in China or the West. These new, candid materials revise our understanding of how the policies developed and reveal not only the extent of Mao’s power but the startling flights his untethered thought could take. Introductory essays by Roderick MacFarquhar, Benjamin Schwartz, Eugene Wu, Merle Goldman, and Timothy Cheek provide a context for evaluating and interpreting the nineteen texts translated in this volume. |
dictatorship speech: The Ethics and Politics of Speech Pat J. Gehrke, 2009-10-20 In The Ethics and Politics of Speech, Pat J. Gehrke provides an accessible yet intensive history of the speech communication discipline during the twentieth century. Drawing on several previously unpublished or unexamined sources—including essays, conference proceedings, and archival documents—Gehrke traces the evolution of communication studies and the dilemmas that often have faced academics in this field. In his examination, Gehrke not only provides fresh perspectives on old models of thinking; he reveals new methods for approaching future studies of ethical and political communication. Gehrke begins his history with the first half of the twentieth century, discussing the development of a social psychology of speech and an ethics based on scientific principles, and showing the importance of democracy to teaching and scholarship at this time. He then investigates the shift toward philosophical—especially existential—ways of thinking about communication and ethics starting in the 1950s and continuing through the mid-1970s, a period associated with the rise of rhetoric in the discipline. In the chapters covering the last decades of the twentieth century, Gehrke demonstrates how the ethics and politics of communication were directed back onto the practices of scholarship within the discipline, examining the increased use of postmodern and poststructuralist theories, as well as the new trend toward writing original theory, rather than reinterpreting the past. In offering a thorough history of rhetoric studies, Gehrke sets the stage for new questions and arguments, ultimately emphasizing the deeply moral and political implications that by nature embed themselves in the field of communication. More than simply a history of the discipline's major developments, The Ethics and Politics of Speech is an account of the philosophical and moral struggles that have faced communication scholars throughout the last century. As Gehrke explores the themes and movements within rhetoric and speech studies of the past, he also provides a better understanding of the powerful forces behind the forging of the field. In doing so, he reveals history’s potential to act as a vehicle for further academic innovation in the future. |
dictatorship speech: Totalitarian Dictatorship Daniela Baratieri, Mark Edele, Giuseppe Finaldi, 2013-10-08 This volume takes a comparative approach, locating totalitarianism in the vastly complex web of fragmented pasts, diverse presents and differently envisaged futures to enhance our understanding of this fraught era in European history. It shows that no matter how often totalitarian societies spoke of and imagined their subjects as so many slates to be wiped clean and re-written on, older identities, familial loyalties and the enormous resilience of the individual (or groups of individuals) meant that the almost impossible demands of their regimes needed to be constantly transformed, limited and recast. |
dictatorship speech: Dictatorship of Proletariat Hal Draper, 1987 |
dictatorship speech: Universities Under Dictatorship John Connelly, 2005 Dictatorships destroy intellectual freedom, yet universities need it. How, then, can universities function under dictatorships? Are they more a support or a danger for the system? In this volume, leading experts from five countries explore the many dimensions of accommodation and conflict, control and independence, as well as subservience and resistance that characterized the relationship of universities to dictatorial regimes in communist and fascist states during the twentieth century: Nazi Germany, Mussolini&’s Italy, Francoist Spain, Maoist China, the Soviet Union, and the Soviet bloc countries of Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Hungary, and Poland. Comparisons across these cases reveal that the higher-education policies of modern dictatorships were characterized by a basic conflict of aims. On the one hand, universities were supposed to propagate reigning ideology and serve as training grounds for a dependable elite. Consequently, university autonomy was restricted, research used for political legitimation, personnel policies subjected to political calculus, and many undesired scholars simply put out on the street. On the other hand, modern dictatorships needed well-educated scientists, physicians, teachers, and engineers for the implementation of their political, economic, and military agendas. Communist and fascist leaders thus confronted the basic question of whether universities should be seen primarily as producers of ideology and functionaries loyal to the party line or as places where indispensable knowledge was made available. Dictatorships that opted to subject universities to rigorous political control reduced their scholarly productivity. But if the institutes of higher learning were left with too much autonomy, there was a danger that they would go astray politically. Besides the editors, the contributors are Ruth Ben-Ghiat, Michael David-Fox, Jan Havr&ánek, Ralph Jessen, Gy&örgy P&éteri, Miguel &Ángel Ruiz Carnicer, and Douglas Stiffler. |
dictatorship speech: Dictators Frank Dikötter, 2020-07-09 A New Statesman, Financial Times and Economist Book of the Year 'Brilliant' NEW STATESMAN, BOOKS OF THE YEAR 'Enlightening and a good read' SPECTATOR 'Moving and perceptive' NEW STATESMAN Mussolini, Hitler, Stalin, Mao Zedong, Kim Il-sung, Ceausescu, Mengistu of Ethiopia and Duvalier of Haiti. No dictator can rule through fear and violence alone. Naked power can be grabbed and held temporarily, but it never suffices in the long term. A tyrant who can compel his own people to acclaim him will last longer. The paradox of the modern dictator is that he must create the illusion of popular support. Throughout the twentieth century, hundreds of millions of people were condemned to enthusiasm, obliged to hail their leaders even as they were herded down the road to serfdom. In Dictators, Frank Dikötter returns to eight of the most chillingly effective personality cults of the twentieth century. From carefully choreographed parades to the deliberate cultivation of a shroud of mystery through iron censorship, these dictators ceaselessly worked on their own image and encouraged the population at large to glorify them. At a time when democracy is in retreat, are we seeing a revival of the same techniques among some of today's world leaders? This timely study, told with great narrative verve, examines how a cult takes hold, grows, and sustains itself. It places the cult of personality where it belongs, at the very heart of tyranny. |
dictatorship speech: Cassius Dio's Speeches and the Collapse of the Roman Republic Christopher Burden-Strevens, 2020-06-15 In Cassius Dio’s Speeches and the Collapse of the Roman Republic, Christopher Burden-Strevens provides a radical reinterpretation of the importance of public speech in one of our most significant historical sources for the bloody and dramatic transition from Republic to Principate. Cassius Dio’s Roman History, composed in eighty books early in the 3rd century CE, has only recently come to be appreciated as a sophisticated work of history-writing. In this book, Burden-Strevens demonstrates the central role played by speeches in Dio’s original analysis of the decline of the Republic and the success of the emperor Augustus’ regime, including a detailed study of their possible sources, themes, methods of composition, and their distinctiveness within the traditions of Roman historiography. |
dictatorship speech: On People's Democratic Dictatorship Tse-tung Mao, 1960 |
dictatorship speech: Discourse, Dictators and Democrats Dr Richard D Anderson, Jr, 2014-05-28 Many people take the trouble to vote even though each voter's prospect of deciding the election is nearly nil. Russians vote even when pervasive electoral fraud virtually eliminates even that slim chance. Could people vote or protest because they stop considering their own chances and start to think about an identity shared with others? With this in mind, Discourse, Dictators and Democrats presents a ground-breaking theory of what language use does to politics. |
dictatorship speech: Sulla Alexandra Eckert, Alexander Thein, 2019-11-05 This book brings together an international group of scholars to offer new perspectives on the political impact and afterlife of the dictator Lucius Cornelius Sulla Felix (138–78 B.C.), one of the most important figures in the complex history of the last century of the Roman Republic. It looks beyond the march on Rome, the violence of the proscriptions, or the logic of his political reforms, and offers case studies to illustrate his relations with the Roman populace, the subject peoples of the Greek East, and his own supporters, both veterans and elites, highlighting his long-term political impact and, at times, the limits on his exercise of power. The chapters on reception reassess the good/bad dichotomy of Sulla as tyrant and reformer, focusing on Cicero, while also examining his importance for Sallust, and his characterisation as the antithesis of philhellenism in Greek writers of the Imperial period. Sulla was not straightforward, either as a historical figure or exemplum, and the case studies in this book use the twin approach of politics and reception to offer new readings of Sulla’s aims and impact, both at home and abroad, and why he remained of interest to authors from Sallust to Plutarch and Aelian. |
dictatorship speech: Writing against Boundaries , 2021-10-18 Writing against Boundaries. Nationality, Ethnicity and Gender in the German-speaking Context presents a series of essays by prominent scholars who critically explore the intersection of nation and subjectivity, the production of national identities, and the tense negotiation of multiculturalism in German-speaking countries. By looking at a wide spectrum of texts that range from Richard Wagner's operas to Hans Bellmer's art, and to literature by Aras Ören, Irene Dische, Annette Kolb, Elizabeth Langgässer, Karin Reschke, Christa Wolf, to contemporary German theater by Bettina Fless, Elfriede Jelinek, Anna Langhoff, Emine Sevgi Özdamar, and to Monika Treut's films, the volume explores the intersection of gender, ethnicity and nation and examines concepts of national culture and the foreigner or so-called 'other.' Focusing on such issues as immigration, xenophobia, gender, and sexuality, the volume looks at narratives that sustain the myth of a homogeneous nation, and those that disrupt it. It responds to a growing concern with borders and identity in a time in which borders are tightening as the demands of globalization increase. |
dictatorship speech: The Dictators Richard Overy, 2005-04-28 Half a century after their deaths, the dictatorships of Stalin and Hitler still cast a long and terrible shadow over the modern world. They were the most destructive and lethal regimes in history, murdering millions. They fought the largest and costliest war in all history. Yet millions of Germans and Russians enthusiastically supported them and the values they stood for. In this first major study of the two dictatorships side-by-side Richard Overy sets out to answer the question: How was dictatorship possible? How did they function? What was the bond that tied dictator and people so powerfully together? He paints a remarkable and vivid account of the different ways in which Stalin and Hitler rose to power, and abused and dominated their people. It is a chilling analysis of powerful ideals corrupted by the vanity of ambitious and unscrupulous men. |
dictatorship speech: The Politics of Literary Prestige Sarah E.L. Bowskill, 2022-04-07 The Politics of Literary Prestige provides the first comprehensive study of prizes for Spanish American literature. Covering state-sponsored and publisher-run prizes including the Biblioteca Breve Prize – credited with launching the 'Boom' in Spanish American literature – the Premio Cervantes and the Nobel Prize for Literature, this book examines how prizes have underpinned different political agenda. As new political positions have emerged so have new awards and the role of the author in society has evolved. Prizes variously position the winners as public intellectual, spokesperson on the world stage or celebrity in the context of an increasingly globalized literature in Spanish. Drawing on a range of sources, Sarah E.L Bowskill analyses prizes from the perspective of different stakeholders including states, publishers, authors, judges and critics. In so doing, she untangles the inner workings of literary prizes in Spanish-speaking contexts, proposes the existence of a prizes network and demonstrates that attitudes to cultural prizes are not universal but are culturally determined. |
dictatorship speech: Department of State Publication , 1948 |
dictatorship speech: Sallust, Florus, and Velleius Paterculus, literally tr. with notes, by J.S. Watson Gaius Sallustius Crispus, 1852 |
dictatorship speech: Sallust, Florus, and Velleius Paterculus Sallust, 1852 |
dictatorship speech: Sallust, Florus, and Velleius Paterculus Caius Sallustius Crispus Sallust, 1852 |
dictatorship speech: Dictators, Democracy, and American Public Culture Benjamin Leontief Alpers, 2003-01-01 Focusing on portrayals of Mussolini's Italy, Hitler's Germany, and Stalin's Russia in U.S. films, magazine and newspaper articles, books, plays, speeches, and other texts, Benjamin Alpers traces changing American understandings of dictatorship from the la |
dictatorship speech: The People’s Dictator Alejandro Quiroga, 2025-01-29 This book is the first major biography of General Miguel Primo de Rivera, dictator of Spain between 1923 and 1930, who played a key role in the shaping of a counterrevolutionary Europe in the interwar era. Following new historiographical trends, this book combines biographical experiences of the dictator with a sociopolitical reading of the dictatorship to reflect on the configuration of national, political, and gender identities at individual and group levels. It challenges traditional readings of Primo de Rivera as a benign, non-ideological leader who established a paternalistic dictatorship, instead showing an astute and ambitious politician who created a nationalist, highly repressive, authoritarian regime profoundly influenced by Italian fascism. The monograph also explores Primo de Rivera's role as the creator of right-wing populism in Spain, who portrayed politicians and judges as enemies of the Spanish people, used 'fake news' in his propaganda machine, and presented himself as a charismatic leader ready to destroy the liberal elites. This book is intended for scholars and students specialising in Spanish history and politics, along with those interested in nationalism, populism, far-right movements, Fascism, dictators and authoritarian regimes in twentieth-century European history. The Open Access version of this book, available at www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution‐Non Commercial‐No Derivatives (CC‐BY‐NC‐ND) 4.0 license. |
dictatorship speech: Parliamentary Debates , 1831 |
dictatorship speech: Cobbett's Parliamentary Debates Great Britain. Parliament, 1831 |
dictatorship speech: Mao Cult Daniel Leese, 2011-10-31 Although many books have explored Mao's posthumous legacy, none has scrutinized the massive worship that was fostered around him during the Cultural Revolution. This book is the first to do so. By analyzing secret archival documents, Daniel Leese traces the history of the cult within the Communist Party and at the grassroots level. The party leadership's original intention was to develop a prominent brand symbol, which would compete with the nationalists' elevation of Chiang Kai-shek. However, they did not anticipate that Mao would use this symbolic power to mobilize Chinese youth to rebel against party bureaucracy itself. The result was anarchy and when the army was called in it relied on mandatory rituals of worship such as daily reading of the Little Red Book to restore order. Such fascinating detail sheds light not only on the personality cult of Mao, but also on hero-worship in other traditions. |
dictatorship speech: Great Women's Speeches Anna Russell, 2021-03-16 Over 50 empowering speeches celebrating women in their own words through extracts and commissioned illustrations, spanning throughout history up to the modern day. |
dictatorship speech: The Twentieth Londoniad, Etc James Torrington Spencer Lidstone, 1875 |
dictatorship speech: The ... Londoniad: giving a full description [in verse] of the principal establishments, together with the most honourable and substantial business men, in the capital. The new or eighth Londoniad James Torrington S. Lidstone, 1876 |
dictatorship speech: The Story of My Dictatorship Lewis Henry Berens, Ignatius Singer, 1894 |
dictatorship speech: Publications Relating to Various Aspects of Communism , 1960 |
dictatorship speech: European and British Commonwealth Series Frederick W. Jandrey, 1948 |
dictatorship speech: Soviet World Outlook United States. Department of State. Bureau of Intelligence and Research, 1948 |
dictatorship speech: Crowds and Politics in North Africa Andrea Khalil, 2014-03-26 This book takes predominant crowd theory to task, questioning received ideas about ‘mob psychology’ that remain prevalent today. It is a synchronic study of crowds, crowd dynamics and the relationships of crowds to political power in Tunisia, Libya and Algeria (2011-2013) that has far reaching implications embedded in its thesis. One central theme of the book is gender, providing an in-depth look at women’s participation in the recent uprisings and crowds of 2011-2013 and the subsequent gender-related aspects of political transitions. The book also focuses on the social and political dynamics of tribalism and group belonging (‘asabiyya), including analysis and discussions with Libyan regional tribal chiefs, Libyan and Tunisian tribal members and citizens regarding their notions of tribal belonging. Crowd language and literature are also central to the book’s discussion of how crowds represent themselves, how we as observers represent crowds, and how crowds confront languages of authoritarianism and subjugation. Crowds and Politics in North Africa includes interviews with crowd participants and key civil society actors from Tunisia, Libya and Algeria. Among these, there are numerous interviews with Benghazi residents, activists and tribal leaders. One of the original case studies in the book is the crowd dynamics during and after the attack on the US consular installation in Benghazi, Libya. The book presents interviews and fieldwork within a literary and cultural theoretical context showing how crowds in the region resonate in forms of cultural resistance to authoritarianism. A valuable resource, this book will be of use to students and scholars with an interest in North African culture, society and politics more broadly. |
dictatorship speech: The Political Thought of Joseph Stalin Erik van Ree, 2003-08-27 This book presents a comprehensive analysis of the political thought of Joseph Stalin. Making full use of the documentation that has recently become available, including Stalin's private library with his handwritten margin notes, the book provides many insights on Stalin, and also on western and Russian Marxist intellectual traditions. Overall, the book argues that Stalin's political thought is not primarily indebted to the Russian autocratic tradition, but belongs to a tradition of revolutionary patriotism that stretches back through revolutionary Marxism to Jacobin thought in the French Revolution. It makes interesting comparisons between Stalin, Lenin, Bukharin and Trotsky, and explains a great deal about the mindset of those brought up in the Stalinist era, and about the era's many key problems, including the industrial revolution from above, socialist cultural policy, Soviet treatment of nationalities, pre-war and Cold War foreign policy, and the purges. |
dictatorship speech: The Roots of Nazi Psychology Jay Y. Gonen, 2000-01-01 Adolf Hitler has always been and will continue to be a tempting subject for psychological analysis -- even if, despite Peter Gay's classic Freud for Historians, psychohistory and psychobiography are still considered the black sheep of historical biography. Gonen (a retired professor of psychology at the University of Cincinnati and author of A Psychohistory of Zionism) offers a brief study and analysis of what he claims is a Nazi psychology. Drawing from an extensive and rigorous reading of Hitler's speeches and published writings (especially Mein Kampf), Freudian theories and social, economic and cultural history, Gonen ponders whether Hitler was an aberration in German society or a man of the people. (The German masses, he concludes, shared in Hitler's paranoia and delusions.) Chapters cover the role of ideology in shaping mass thinking, as well as anti-Semitism, lebensraum and the idea of the Volkish state -- and contain fascinating passages on the image of the Jew, the role of women and the interrelatedness of kitsch and death in the Nazi mentality. Although Gonen doesn't really say anything new (Hitler, he tells us, for example, was a messianic paranoid), what he offers is compellingly written and blessedly free of social science jargon. What is troubling, however, is that Gonen fails to explore concepts central to his inquiry, such as utopia and barbarism, and that he contends that Nazism had its own internal (or) inherent logic. Slightly flawed, this is still a good introduction to a difficult subject. |
dictatorship speech: The Essays of Lord Bacon: with Critical and Illustrative Notes ... By the Rev. John Hunter Francis Bacon, 1873 |
dictatorship speech: The Dictator Justin McCarthy, 1893 |
dictatorship speech: Discourse, Dictators and Democrats Richard D. Anderson, 2016-05-23 Voting hides a familiar puzzle. Many people take the trouble to vote even though each voter's prospect of deciding the election is nearly nil. Russians vote even when pervasive electoral fraud virtually eliminates even that slim chance. The right to vote has commonly been won by protesters who risked death or injury even though any one protester could have stayed home without lessening the protest’s chance of success. Could people vote or protest because they stop considering their own chances and start to think about an identity shared with others? If what they hear or read affects political identity, a shift in political discourse might not just evoke protests and voting but also make the minority that has imposed the dictator’s will suddenly lose heart. During the Soviet Union’s final years the cues that set communist discourse apart from standard Russian sharply dwindled. A similar convergence of political discourse with local language has preceded expansion of the right to vote in many states around the globe. Richard D. Anderson, Jr., presents a groundbreaking theory of what language use does to politics. |
dictatorship speech: The Essays of Lord Bacon Francis Bacon, 1873 |
dictatorship speech: Speeches in World History William E. Burns, 2010-06-25 Features a compilation of the world's greatest speeches, from all major civilizations and throughout history. |
dictatorship speech: THOUGHTS OF THE TRANSPLANTED MISSISSIPPIAN. THOUGHTS OF THE TRANSPLANTED MISSISSIPPIAN CHARLES M. DAY III, 2011 |
Global Virtual Dictatorship “Made in US” - Rapture Forums
Dec 1, 2020 · Global Virtual Dictatorship “Made in US” By Julio Severo Famously, the great American President Ronald Reagan called the Soviet Union “the Evil Empire.” He got it right: the …
Iranians Increasingly Oppose the Theocratic Dictatorship
Jun 24, 2022 · Iranians Increasingly Oppose the Theocratic Dictatorship The people clearly gauge where their future lies. By Dr. Majid Rafizadeh The 1979 Iranian revolution was a repudiation of …
Eritrea’s dictatorship has written a death sentence for its public
Sep 2, 2023 · Eritrea’s dictatorship has written a death sentence for its public The anti- and pro-Eritrean regime protesters have come head-to-head in Tel Aviv, but what is the conflict about? …
A De Facto Dictatorship - Rapture Forums
Jan 18, 2021 · A De Facto Dictatorship By Todd Strandberg “I prefer dangerous freedom over peaceful slavery.” – Thomas Jefferson “If freedom of speech is taken away, then dumb and …
From Bondage...Back Into Bondage - Rapture Forums
Dec 3, 2024 · Which brings us to the last Stage of Tytler’s life cycle; Back into Bondage. But centuries before Tytler, the Apostle John also foretold the collapse of civilization and its …
Justin Trudeau’s Reign of Terror Will Likely Stop Short of Canada’s ...
Jan 6, 2025 · I mean, there is a flexibility that I know Stephen Harper must dream about, of having a dictatorship that he can do everything he wanted, that I find quite interesting.” Then when …
Gaza: The Truths Behind All the Lies - Rapture Forums
Mar 31, 2024 · It established a dictatorship and diverted hundreds of billions of dollars in international aid to build a vast underground labyrinth of military installations. So Gaza has …
Developing Now - Rapture Forums
Aug 8, 2021 · The government of Antichrist will be a worldwide dictatorship, and it is developing now. It may even be more developed than most people realize because it doesn’t appear that …
‘We Dug It, We Own It’ - Rapture Forums
Dec 29, 2024 · The leftist military dictatorship claimed to have carried one out in which a majority voted for the deal, but they did so at gunpoint. When Carter visited Panama in the summer of …
Dark Charisma - Rapture Forums
Sep 15, 2016 · The lessons for our own time are ominous. When Hitler rose to absolute power he was assuming control of an educated, culturally sophisticated and prosperous nation; the …
Global Virtual Dictatorship “Made in US” - Rapture Forums
Dec 1, 2020 · Global Virtual Dictatorship “Made in US” By Julio Severo Famously, the great American President Ronald Reagan called the Soviet Union “the Evil Empire.” He got it right: …
Iranians Increasingly Oppose the Theocratic Dictatorship
Jun 24, 2022 · Iranians Increasingly Oppose the Theocratic Dictatorship The people clearly gauge where their future lies. By Dr. Majid Rafizadeh The 1979 Iranian revolution was a repudiation …
Eritrea’s dictatorship has written a death sentence for its public
Sep 2, 2023 · Eritrea’s dictatorship has written a death sentence for its public The anti- and pro-Eritrean regime protesters have come head-to-head in Tel Aviv, but what is the conflict about? …
A De Facto Dictatorship - Rapture Forums
Jan 18, 2021 · A De Facto Dictatorship By Todd Strandberg “I prefer dangerous freedom over peaceful slavery.” – Thomas Jefferson “If freedom of speech is taken away, then dumb and …
From Bondage...Back Into Bondage - Rapture Forums
Dec 3, 2024 · Which brings us to the last Stage of Tytler’s life cycle; Back into Bondage. But centuries before Tytler, the Apostle John also foretold the collapse of civilization and its …
Justin Trudeau’s Reign of Terror Will Likely Stop Short of Canada’s ...
Jan 6, 2025 · I mean, there is a flexibility that I know Stephen Harper must dream about, of having a dictatorship that he can do everything he wanted, that I find quite interesting.” Then when …
Gaza: The Truths Behind All the Lies - Rapture Forums
Mar 31, 2024 · It established a dictatorship and diverted hundreds of billions of dollars in international aid to build a vast underground labyrinth of military installations. So Gaza has …
Developing Now - Rapture Forums
Aug 8, 2021 · The government of Antichrist will be a worldwide dictatorship, and it is developing now. It may even be more developed than most people realize because it doesn’t appear that …
‘We Dug It, We Own It’ - Rapture Forums
Dec 29, 2024 · The leftist military dictatorship claimed to have carried one out in which a majority voted for the deal, but they did so at gunpoint. When Carter visited Panama in the summer of …
Dark Charisma - Rapture Forums
Sep 15, 2016 · The lessons for our own time are ominous. When Hitler rose to absolute power he was assuming control of an educated, culturally sophisticated and prosperous nation; the …