fascism

[ UK /fˈæʃɪzəm/ ]
[ US /ˈfæˌʃɪzəm/ ]
NOUN
  1. a political theory advocating an authoritarian hierarchical government (as opposed to democracy or liberalism)
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How To Use fascism In A Sentence

  • Welcome to the authoritarian world of health fascism.
  • an unblushing apologist for fascism
  • I detest the cult of body fascism, the more so since I live in its global capital.
  • Given what most people today think they know about Fascism, this bare recital of facts is a mystery story.
  • He used his celebrity to speak out against fascism and racial prejudice.
  • Born in 1930, Pinter was old enough to see and remember fascist actions in the East End and, of course, to be around when fascism stopped marching and started dropping bombs and launching doodlebugs.
  • He robustly retaliates with the view that nothing is off limits in the defeat of fascism.
  • Among these are the myth that the New Deal ended the Great Depression, that fascism was a plot by big business rather than a mass movement, and that "corporativism" was the rule by corporations of the state, rather than the rule of the state over corporations. Conservapedia - Recent changes [en]
  • The eliminationist project is in many ways the signature of fascism, partly because it proceeds naturally from fascism's embrace of what Oxford Brookes scholar Roger Griffin calls palingenesis, or a Phoenix-like national rebirth, as its core myth. Crooks and Liars
  • Don't call in all our bad debt, we told them, and in return we'll label as terrorists these freedom-fighters who want to escape your insane corporate fascismand you can even come to Cuba and "interrogate" them. Freedom!
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