Word: socialist
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...some other political issues, Vatican policy approached the Socialist program: it stressed punishment of war criminals* rather than of nations; it veered away from support of the Italian monarchy...
...Russian domination of eastern Europe had relaxed a bit, there was even less possibility of complete U.S. dominance of western Europe. There socialist governments ruled the northwest periphery and strong and growing Socialist parties stretched into France, Italy, Germany. Whatever else this socialist revival might be, it was no more a creature of Washington than of Moscow...
There was no logical compromise between democratic socialists and authoritarian communists, but there were millions in western Europe who voted Socialist and yet admired both the anti-socialist U.S. and the differently anti-socialist U.S.S.R. In eastern Europe were millions who accepted governments friendly to Russia, yet welcomed a show of U.S. strength to break a Russian strangle hold. Contradictory doctrines lived side by side in the same countries, the same towns and even in the same individuals. (In Slovakia some Catholic priests were writing articles for Moscow's Pravda...
...Stinnes, 48, son of Germany's onetime greatest financier and powerful figure in the Ruhr coal and steel industries. Said the British: "Such men represent the worst in Germany . . . never hesitated to use their vast power to support dubious political movements . . . assisted in the growth of the National Socialist Party...
Living Spirit. In other Latin American countries - Cuba, Chile, Colombia, and even Argentina - smaller colonies worked hard "keeping alive the spirit of Republican Spain." And in Russia thousands of Spanish children were housed and educated. Socialist-minded Diplomat de Palencia does not dwell on the political activities of the Republic's refugees, does her best to lay the bogey of Communism that has so damaged the Loyalist cause in America. But her book leaves no doubt that doctrinal disputes mean far less to her than does a united front to carry the smouldering torch of freedom back to Spain...