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There can be no such things as a Communist dictator. Communism is a classless stateless society based on production for use and democratic control.
They took power by force and ruled with total authority.
It symbolizes totalitarian state force.
In some cases, dictators may be able to come to power through a process that involves the manipulation of elections or the interference of the Supreme Court. However, it is important to note that dictators typically do not follow democratic processes or adhere to the rule of law. Dictators often seize power through force, coercion, or other undemocratic means.
None. Dictators TAKE their power by force or by fast-talking the citizens.
Dictators were military leaders who used there force to override the government at the time
Francisco Franco was a totalitarian dictator of Spain but he was not part of the Axis Force because his nation was a neutral nation. There were two totalitarian dictators who were part of the Axis Force in World War 2. They were Benito Mussolini of Italy and Adolf Hitler of Germany. Josef Stalin was the dictator of the communist Soviet Union (Russia). Stalin was allied with Mussolini and Hitler at the beginning of the war but once the Germans attacked The Soviet Union that ended their alliance. The USSR then joined the Allied Forces.
A dictator such as Adolf Hitler uses force to keep control of ones army. Dictators are significant because they make law, making it difficult for anyone to oppose them. Hitler in this case used the secret police and armed forces to in force his law and to round up political parties which opposed him.
Totalitarian government controls everything, using terror to suppress individual rights and silence opposition. People who disagreed with Hitler were silenced, beaten, or killed.
Totalitarian regimes often employ a range of tactics to maintain control and suppress dissent. These can include censorship of media and information, propaganda to shape public opinion, surveillance and monitoring of citizens, persecution of political opponents, control over education and cultural institutions, and the use of force and violence to instill fear and maintain obedience. These tactics are aimed at maintaining absolute control over all aspects of society and suppressing any opposition to the regime.
Most dictators use a combination of the same techniques employed by rulers since the beginning of civilization. This can be summed up as populism and brutality. The dictators establish themselves as ultra-nationalist and jingoistic, supposedly championing their people. Many seemingly benevolent, or charitable, or religious programs are designed to win approval from the uneducated populace. (These require only a small portion of the vast sums of personal wealth that are accumulated at the expense of the nation.) At the same time, political rivals or opposing factions are ruthlessly suppressed by intimidation, imprisonment, torture, and murder. These types of actions occur in most governments to some degree, but they are essential for strongmen or juntas who need absolute control of a state.
Not necessarily. Roman "dictators" were elected into office by the Senate, whereas Socialist dictators of the 20th Century Europe usually led revolutions against a sitting monarch.