Word: nontotalitarian
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...poverty and welfare dependency? Does the suffering she and the child would undergo if it was born outweigh the horror of snuffing out a potential human personality? It is a close call-and precisely the kind of tortured moral judgment that the government has no business making. A nontotalitarian state must leave such judgments to its citizens to make for themselves, according to their individual ideas of religion and justice. For that matter, my belief that abortion is usually, if not always, immoral is fiercely disputed by many people of great intelligence and high moral character...
...Follette, 89, conservative journalist and founding editor of several magazines, including National Review; in Menlo Park, Calif. An early, ardent feminist, she revived the radical magazine the Freeman in 1930. Gradually departing from leftism, she revived the Freeman yet again in 1950, this time as the voice of the "nontotalitarian right." "I haven't moved," she once said of her views. "The world has moved to the left...
Fairer critics concede that Humphrey's position on Viet Nam is consistent with the Vice President's longstanding views on Communism and international security. Many liberals remain good friends. Former Senator Paul Douglas insists that Humphrey has suffered "no corruption of his spirit. He is still the essentially progressive nontotalitarian liberal." Douglas also argues that Humphrey has been instrumental in liberalizing Lyndon. "It has not been a one-sided affair," he says. Even Dr. Benjamin Spock, a leading antiwar activist, pronounces Humphrey the best of the three candidates, except on Viet Nam, and says that he mistrusts Kennedy's "ambition...
...Chicago Daily News, is now the global-minded editor of the Minneapolis Tribune's editorial page. Said he: the U.S. will not retreat one inch from its concept of press freedom. "To seek compromise merely for the sake of reaching some sort of agreement even among the nontotalitarian points of view would hardly promote freedom...
...selected newsstands in New York City this week appeared an old journalistic name on a new magazine. The name: The Freeman. Once a radical organ of the left, the new Freeman, a fortnightly magazine of opinion, is hopefully aiming to be the voice of the "nontotalitarian right." Founded by the late Albert Jay Nock, author and self-styled radical, the old Freeman died in 1924. It was revived as the New Freeman in the early '30s by Suzanne LaFollette,* oldtime liberal and Freeman editor, author (Art in America), and longtime defender of Leon Trotsky in the Trotsky v. Stalin...