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Dictatorship

The English term 'dictatorship' means a form of government in which the ruler is an absolute dictator, not restricted by a constitution or laws or opposition etc. Throughout history, there have been famous dictators such as Adolf Hitler, Joseph Stalin, and Saddam Hussein.

1,458 Questions

Positive things about dictatorship?

Totalitarianism was mainly used in the Great Depression when people needed it to get out their slump. So a totatilarian leader can change the economy, the military, everything for the greater good of the country. In a way its the best form of governemnt since somebody has the extreme power to do something good or save the country and keap helping it. Notice that all the nations with a dictator where the most powerful in WWII (apart from Britain and the US, but the president slightly has totalitarian powers). But overtime we have found out that anybody with that kind of power gets corrupted by it.

What were the goals of englighgened despots?

The goals of enlightened despots was to bring political and social change.

Who owns property when there is dictatorship?

Anyone can own property; a dictatorship which is a subset of an Autocracy, does not define ownership as a part of its base principle. It simply establishes that there is one, unquestionable ruler, over the government.

Another Perspective

That depends on whether private ownership of land is permitted in the particular country. Land ownership in countries ruled by dictators is often clouded. Privately owned land is often expropriated by dictators. An example would be the Castro regime in Cuba where private lands were seized and formerly wealthy Cuban landowners fled to other countries. In China, the state took control of all the land during the Communist takeover in 1949. Communist Party officials have controlled land usage rights since then and private ownership is only now becoming possible with developers being the favored grantees.

Why did many Tejanos considered Santa Anna a dictator?

becuse he did not follow the constitution of 1834 that guaranteed amore democratic government for mexico.

Why become a dictator?

Because the country you are going to control is in so much chaos that having a dictator would be better than the absence of law and peace. This does not mean that remaining a dictator is best for the country, although once a person becomes a dictator s/he becomes intoxicated with the power and refuses to believe s/he can do any wrong and insists on remaining in power.

What is one of the reasons that people in some countries supported dictators in the early 1900s?

The economic and emotional burden of World War I caused people to look for a strong leader.
they want strong leaders

Is Australia democratic or dictatorship?

No, it has never been a dictatorship. Australia is a Constitutional Monarchy where the head of state is the Queen represented by the Governor General.

Australia also is a democracy as the people have a choice of electing representatives that they find are worth of becoming ministers (a minister is a government elected person who is in charge of a specific government portfolio).

Australia also is a federation, which means that its states are united under one national government. New South Wales and Victoria were the first colonies to do this as they became self law making bodies. They found it was easier to control trade, defence and transport.

What happened in the Congo when Mobutu became dictator in 1965?

I like these kind of websites but I would rather look it up on another website

Is the dictator racist?

There are many racist and sexist jokes throughout the movie but overall no

Did Rousseau denounce Napoleon's despotic rule?

No, Rousseau died in 1778 which was before Napoleon ruled anything since he was only 10.

Have brutal dictators been allowed to come to power since ww2?

Brutal dictators aren't "allowed" to come to power, they force their way into it.

A few prime examples who took over after World War II: Iraq's Saddam Hussein, Cuba's Fidel Castro, the Kim dynasty in North Korea, the Ayatollah Khomeini of Iran, Mullah Mohammed Omar in Afghanistan, and Romania's Nicolae Ceaucescu.