Word: fascistically
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...second inspection, however, Bondaryev seems to be dealing more in apologetics than in admonitions. He carefully distinguishes between the villain and the party. The villain is presented as a fascist infiltrator who got into the party by a trick; the party is presented as the Mystical Body of Marx, the Bride of History invested with infallibility. Current conditions are meticulously unmentioned. Conditions under Stalin are discussed with an almost complicitous complacency-police brutality, for instance, is noted only once, and then it is dismissed as a "mistake" that stems from "love for Stalin" and certainly "cannot last...
...going to be a dirty business of police organization," Fairbank told the audience of 300, "People will call it Fascist and other things." But he noted the policy's usefulness to the Viet Cong and emphasized the government could not do without...
...power spheres that are almost bound to collide in their rush to try to fill the post-Franco vacuum. Strangely enough, the Movimiento Nacional is not one of them. It has been reduced by Franco to a powerless bureaucracy, without credo and virtually without following, deprived even of the fascist ideals on which it was founded...
Civil Process. Politically, too, Spain is better off. The political prisons of the civil war have long since been emptied, the fascist fanatics of the old Falangist Party long since suppressed. Police no longer torture political suspects. The old military kangaroo courts have given way to civil process. Censorship has been somewhat relaxed, and editors have been encouraged to discuss subjects unthinkable a decade ago: two papers last year were allowed to call for a legal opposition party, and a slick magazine published an interview with a film director attacking censorship itself...
...Down to Bare Bone." Right on cue, North Viet Nam President Ho Chi Minh answered the Pope's Christmas plea for peace with a typically savage diatribe against the U.S. Ho denounced "aggression by the American imperialists," accused the U.S. of setting up a "fascist dictatorship" in South Viet Nam, and again served up the same four preconditions whose acceptance by Washington would amount to surrendering South Viet Nam to the Communists. "The U.S. leaders want war and not peace," wrote Ho. "The talks about unconditional negotiations made by the U.S. President are merely a maneuver to cover...