Nazism: Difference between revisions
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imported>Howard C. Berkowitz No edit summary |
imported>Hayford Peirce (remove an "i" and fixed the grammar -- "but also" goes with "not only") |
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''' | '''Nazism''' includes both the German [[Nazi Party]] of 1920-1945 and also more recent neo-Nazi movements. It includes various works of [[political philosophy]] that guided development, although these often are more individualized writings than well-developed and actionable ideologies. Their common threads tend to be an emphasis on a racial elite (e.g., [[Nazi race and biological ideology]]), opposition to democracy, and readiness to resort to authoritarian social control and broader violence. |
Revision as of 11:59, 21 December 2010
Nazism includes both the German Nazi Party of 1920-1945 and also more recent neo-Nazi movements. It includes various works of political philosophy that guided development, although these often are more individualized writings than well-developed and actionable ideologies. Their common threads tend to be an emphasis on a racial elite (e.g., Nazi race and biological ideology), opposition to democracy, and readiness to resort to authoritarian social control and broader violence.