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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
An 8 page paper describing the political and social conditions necessary for dictators to rise. The writer explains what a dictator is, characteristics and conditions of a dictatorship, and tests these characteristics by using Hitler, Lenin, and Stalin as examples.
Page Count:
8 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_Dictator.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
or "republics" were frequently subject to civic strife between the rich and established and "the people." Such civic strife often leads to the longing for strong leadership, for the individual
president or premiere, or prime minister who can get things done. This climate is ripe for control by a dictator. What is a dictator? In the most basic terms, a
dictator is a ruler who seeks and gets absolute powers of government, usually without regard to the expressed wishes of the people. A dictator may come to power legally, but
hold on to it by force. Or, he may seize power illegally. A dictator differs from an absolute monarch in that he has no hereditary claim to rule, no recognition
as such by nobility or the people, and no traditions of responsibility to his subjects. A more complete definition can be found in the description of a classical tyrant: a
man (rarely a woman) backed by some sort of military loyal to him alone, who generally seizes power or exercises it illegitimately in times of turmoil, promising social reform while
enriching himself and his friends, and who suppresses those in whose name he rules with brutal terror and arbitrary force through the auspices of a rigid bureaucracy and a ceremonial
display of their own authority. However, the notion of tyranny itself has historically broadened to include all forms of absolute rule, dictatorship, and depotism. And by no means are all
of the personalities labeled as dictators bad, evil, wicked, deluded, depraved, or even simply selfish. Absolute rulers have often acted from what can be described as the best of
intentions and the height of wisdom. It is also true that absolute rulers have brought economic and (although rarely) even spiritual benefit to the people they govern. As we
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