- A Kind of Fascism is Replacing Our Democracy (July 18, 2003)
...ould be difficult to recognize even if achieved. Like previous forms of totalitarianism, the Bush administration boasts a reckless unilateralism that believes the... - The Marines' 'How To' Handbook for Empire (April 13, 2004)
... a subsequent invasion by Japan, a major civil war, and the rise of Maoist totalitarianism. Only after trade was liberalized did China become less belligerent and ec... - Baghdad Council Begins, But Has Small Role in Gov't (July 7, 2003)
...y a new political landscape must be given time to emerge after 24 years of totalitarianism under Saddam. But they plan to set up a national "governance council" w... - Bush Channels Orwell (July 28, 2002)
...suit its needs. It was intended to be read as a warning about the evils of totalitarianism — not a how-to manual. Granted, we're a long way from resembling... - Ashcroft vs. Americans (July 17, 2002)
... to suffer through wrenching revelations about the reporting systems their totalitarian regimes had instituted. The Communist Party bosses in those captive nation... - Empires As Ages Of Religious Ignorance: George W. Bush's Crusade And American Fundamentalism (November 15, 2004)
... to just study what we do.” As Hannah Arendt notes in “The Origins of Totalitarianism,” “since ideologies have no power to transform reality, they achieve this... - Patriotism and Preferences (March 13, 2002)
...re willing to show it. This illustrates, in a mild way, the reason why totalitarian regimes collapse so suddenly. (Click here for a more complex analysis... - Bombs and Bytes: Deleuze, Fascism, and the 'Informatic' (January 12, 2004)
... In this context see Hannah Arendt’s useful elaborations in The Origins of Totalitarianism [3] I am of course alluding to Francis Fukuyama’s KojËvian-Hegelian thes... - What the New Southern Sudan Leaders Must Do (August 8, 2005)
...equired in peacetime. For the SPLA/M to succeed, resistance against the totalitarian north had to be organised on strictly hierarchical and authoritarian lines... - NION: A Representative of the People (October 7, 2002)
...ussein a propaganda coup. JOEL CONNELLY, Seattle Post-Intelligencer: A totalitarian state is an echo chamber, where basically they are repeating the same mess... - Weapons of Mass Destruction Are Overrated as a Threat to America (January 28, 2004)
...cessary preventative invasions. The United States took this route when the totalitarian Soviet Union and the even more radical Maoist China were developing nuclea... - Mideast Invasions Face Unexpected Perils (March 19, 2003)
... passion of a convert to nation-building, he spoke movingly of confronting totalitarianism, of spreading "God's gift" of liberty "to each and every person," and of h... - Illusions of Iraqi Democracy (October 8, 2002)
...e 1950s and 1960s transformed Iraq from a semi-constitutional state into a totalitarian one. When the Baathists took over in 1968, they aimed at consolidating the... - Revision Thing (September 1, 2003)
...ade to spare innocent life, and to help Iraq recover from three decades of totalitarian rule. And plans were in place to provide Iraqis with massive amounts of fo... - What Is a Neo-Conservative Anyway? (August 13, 2003)
.... We don't want that to happen again, and when we have the ability to stop totalitarian regimes we should do so, because when we fail to do so, the results are ca...
Totalitarianism
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Totalitarianism is any political system in which a citizen is totally subject to state authority in all aspects of day-to-day life. It goes well beyond dictatorship or typical police state measures, and even beyond those measures required to sustain total war with other states. It involves constant brainwashing achieved by propaganda to erase any potential for dissent, by anyone, including most especially the state's agents.
The term was originally coined by Benito Mussolini to describe his regime in Italy, although it is arguable that Italian fascism was not truly totalitarian until 1940. It was popularized by Hannah Arendt in order to illustrate the commonalities between Nazism and Stalinism as theories of civics. It has also been used to include all fascist and communist regimes — though some fascist regimes, such as Franco's Spain, and Mussolini's Italy before World War II, and some communist regimes, such as Yugoslavia under Tito and the People's Republic of China under Deng Xiaoping, could be characterized as more authoritarian than totalitarian.
Totalitarian regimes
Totalitarian regimes have generally been far rarer than authoritarian ones. There is no theory of ethics that holds that they are desirable.
Joseph Stalin's Soviet Union and Adolf Hitler's Germany are widely considered to be the two quintessential examples of totalitarian regimes in history. Both held power for long periods despite substantial pressure.
The Khmer Rouge under Pol Pot are widely considered to be the very worst government in human history - that regime transcends all concept of even totalitarian definitions in terms of the sheer horror it unleashed on the citizens of Cambodia. It is certainly totalitarian, but also genocidal - even self-consuming. It eventually collapsed completely.
A contemporary example often cited, e.g. in George W. Bush's Axis of Evil, is North Korea; certain Islamist regimes, such as that found in Iran, are also sometimes described as totalitarian. In fiction, the Big Brother regime described in George Orwell's novel Nineteen Eighty-Four is considered to be a quintessential example of totalitarianism.
Most political scientists believe totalitarian regimes were rare before the 20th century because neither technological means nor ideological justifications existed for controlling large numbers of people. The Qin Dynasty is perhaps a rare example of a possible pre-modern totalitarian state.
Today, however, television, radio, and other mass media make it relatively easy for totalitarian regimes to make their presence felt, often through campaigns of propaganda or the creation of a vast personality cult.
The terms totalitarian democracy and totalitarian republic have also been used to classify a different style of totalitarian rule. In these regimes, the government is generally popular (at least at the beginning), and the ideological justification of the state comes on behalf of the people. Hitler's initially-democratically-elected regime of Nazi totalitarianism is often used as an example of a totalitarian democracy.
Theories of totalitarianism
The relationship between totalitarianism and authoritarianism is controversial: some see totalitarianism as an extreme form of authoritarianism, while others argue that they are completely different.
Some political analysts, notably neo-conservatives such as Jeane Kirkpatrick, have studied the various distinctions between totalitarianism and authoritarianism. They argue that while both types of governments can be extremely brutal to political opponents, in an authoritarian government the government's efforts are directed mostly at those who are considered political opponents, and the government has neither the will or often the means to control every aspect of an individual's life. In a totalitarian system, the ruling ideology requires that every aspect of an individual's life be subordinate to the state, including occupation, income, and religion. Personal survival is tied to the regime's survival, and thus the concept of the state and the people are merged. This is also called the carceral state - like a prison.
In political theories such as libertarianism, totalitarianism is regarded as the most extreme form of statism. However, other political philosophers disagree with this analysis as it implies that totalitarianism can come into being through a slow and gradual increase from an operational government, while totalitarian regimes almost uniformly come into being as a result of a revolution which replaces what is generally regarded as an ineffective government.
It has been argued that totalitarianism requires a cult of personality around a charismatic "great leader" who is glorified as the legitimator of the regime. Many totalitarian societies fit this model - for example, those of Hitler, Stalin, Mao, Mussolini, Pol Pot, and Kim Il-Sung. This is one of the reasons some scholars were reluctant to consider the Brezhnev-era Soviet Union and most of the Warsaw Pact nations totalitarian. When those governments fell, however, the majority of the populations and intellectuals of the countries argued that what they had experienced was indeed totalitarianism. This has made more popular the belief that a charismatic leader is a frequent but not a necessary characteristic of totalitarianism.
Michael Ledeen has advanced the theory that the role of the United States should be to impose by war the institutions it associates with democracy - waging what he calls total war to eradicate the prior society. This would imply at least a brief period of totalitarian style control in order to erase that society, and teach the next generation the democratic civics.
See also