Verwenden Sie „socialism“ in einem Satz
socialism Beispielsätze
socialism
1. " And here is one of the nicer things he had to say about socialism:
2. " For a fuller exposition by Bastiat on this subject, see his „The Law and Cliches of Socialism
3. Here is what he had to say about socialism in 1918, intending the saying to encompass all times and all places
4. „To reject terror is to reject socialism
5. " In this one instance, an honest man, for notice that he placed terror before socialism
6. It doesn"t take a rocket scientist to turn that around and admit that socialism cannot be imposed without terror
7. Socialism (without the brutal trappings) shares a number of characteristics common to Autocratic Rule including an inherent contempt for mainstream conventions
8. Socialism does a very poor job of running industries like airlines and mines, but it almost always does a better job on healthcare
9. Accepting as truth that greed wasn’t limited to a few corrupt dictators and abusive imperialists proved harder than accepting the failure of socialism itself
10. It is clear that there is a struggle between reactionary forces and the triumph of Socialism in Poland
11. At one checkpoint, a half-intoxicated Russian major insisted that Hermann, Colling and Elizabeth drink vodka with him, toasting the triumph of socialism and the Great Comrade Stalin
12. those 191 countries are a motley crew favoring big government and socialism
13. have elected a more moderate president which may help stop their descent into socialism
14. Everything will occur without equalitarism, without being socialism, communism or capitalism
15. Somehow he failed to mention the Change was to Socialism
16. The Communist Manifesto essentially establishes the attitudes and ideas of modern socialism and communism
17. All right, we have explored the origins of Socialism and Communism and I hope you can see the lack of logic in its manifesto
18. ‖ You have just described the Leftist who continues to pursue Socialism when all history dictates that it fails
19. They have no apparent clue they will be destroyed or their families will be destroyed by Socialism
20. It generates results that cause bigger gains for the corporations with immense well-being for the whole population, without excluding anybody (something impossible of happening in the capitalism, communism or socialism)
21. When he spoke of Socialism he
22. That’s silly, isn’t it? Then there is change in the wrong direction—change toward Socialism, the nanny-state, less individuality, greater dependency
23. This was written long before socialism was
24. These he calls “liberal wreckers… mutants from Communism and socialism
25. Russian mathematician Igor Shafarevich observes in his book The Socialist Phenomenon that socialism has existed throughout history in one form or another
26. Though not called socialism or fascism in earlier periods, the symptoms are the same
27. The model for the Pilgrims’ scheme of production and distribution was that laid out by the ancient Greek philosopher Plato in his classic work The Republic; socialism by another name
28. ” The result, in the mind or in practice, may be called collectivism, communitarianism, socialism, or some other variant of collectivism, some other pattern of fascistic tendencies
29. That the core ideals of socialism have not gone away British historian Eric J
30. The great American free market philosopher Ludwig von Mises, born in Austria, writes that socialism and capitalism cannot long abide
31. Citizens be aware of the ages old and unrelenting urge to move our country towards Socialism
32. This will weaken us as a nation and as a people! I believe that the major cause for this division is America"s drift towards Secularism and Socialism
33. As I was saying, Nazism is an abbreviation of the German word Nationalsozialismus, which in English means National Socialism
34. So Nazism was socialism at a national level rather than an international one
35. And the history of the twentieth century featured the brutal totalitarian regimes of socialism, whether on a national or an international level
36. More than one hundred million innocent people butchered in the name of communism and Marxism, which are just other terms for socialism
37. "But, doctor," I say, "weren't the Nazis more interested in eugenics and genocide rather than advancing any form of socialism?"
38. "Look, my fine sir, all forms of Marxism or socialism share one operational practice: they concentrate all power in the State and its various bodies
39. Nazism, or National Socialism, shared this same ideology of centralised State power
40. So they adopted socialism on a national level, favouring—politically entitling—certain races and groups over others
41. In the pursuit of utopia, Nazism married socialism with eugenic science—yes, science, or at least science as they understood (or misunderstood) it back in their time
42. Some believe that the basic principles of Socialism were taken
43. In his theory on the eras of history, he claimed that capitalism inevitably would be replaced by Socialism and, later, by full-fledged communism and the classless society
44. Socialism became “scientific”—a construct of ideas according to which the end
45. To them the thesis was the set of economic arrangements that was Capitalism, in opposition, or antithesis, was Socialism; between thesis and antithesis, would evolve into a higher stage of synthesis, communism
46. incompatibility of their position with the pretension of Socialism to being an ethical system
47. exceptions, since the 1940s, a democratic version of Socialism was developed that led to the well-known welfare state program that
48. way between Socialism, on the one hand, and “historical”—as he
49. the modern proletariat, but that Socialism was enlarging that class to include the whole of humanity
50. complete abolition of private property and the disappearance of the state but instead envisioned Socialism more as a form of society in which fully democratic control would be exercised over wealth, and production would be controlled by a group of responsible experts
51. was destined to lead the masses toward Socialism, irrespective of the masses’ inclination
52. least an outward appearance of unity, in that it represented the high watermark of classical Marxist influence in West European Socialism
53. and argued that Socialism was compatible with individual econom-
54. They felt that if the working class and its organizations accepted the constitutional state they were merely posponing indefinitely the change to Socialism
55. and vast welfare programs in order to bring about Socialism; their political success has depended on considerable middle-class support
56. Socialism in the Third World
57. Socialism has assumed a number of distinct forms in the Third World
58. In the Third World, Socialism has often been
59. (authors and popular leaders), they have not been distinguished for their originality or for their affect on the worldwide development of Socialism
60. Socialism did not take roots in the United States for several reasons
61. of Socialism was the socialist Labor party, founded in 1877
62. Socialism in the United States was promising indeed
63. whose members have greatest influence in community-level electoral politics and to be a democratic socialist political organization which aims to bring Socialism into the mainstream of American politics
64. This idea is another socialist propaganda line to cover up the failures of Socialism
65. They subtly teach Socialism as the only true course for this country to go
66. Socialism cannot exist under the true meaning of the Bill of Rights
67. Although concepts of Socialism had been sketched by philoso-
68. A quick review of the past is necessary to understand how Socialism has evolved
69. variations of Socialism have one thing in common
70. the following list indicates the true extent of Socialism (as of 1985)
71. ” If anyone still believes that Socialism is the road to ‘heaven on earth’ God help us
72. Socialism has been a
73. The point being that they are trying to sugar coat the term Socialism which, after all of its failures over the last two centuries
74. It is strange how these two terms came into being when originally both terms referred to Socialism
75. Socialism can never exist in a free society! This is the key to
76. To a socialist there is only one God and that is Socialism
77. Karl Marx extolled the virtues of Socialism that was much more appeal to the masses than religion
78. are out to re-write history and social studies into the image of a great one-world society which of course is Socialism
79. lution, but the name Socialism didn’t arise until that time
80. Control the mind of the young and instill in them the love of Socialism instead of country
81. Under Socialism, the purpose of the Law is to expropriate as much private property as possible
82. Some years ago I experienced an example of the lack of initiative native to Socialism
83. 7 However, Bavaria had a religion, and the religion of the people was not Socialism
84. Socialism was brought to Hungary in 1860’s literally in the knapsacks of itinerant
85. Socialism had become sufficiently widespread is given strength by the almost bloodless devolution of power upon the moderate Count Mihaly Karoli following the end of World War I
86. Socialism did not require expropriation of all private property and that Hungarian
87. In a sense, these and other monopolies foreshadowed state Socialism, because what is the difference between a state-owned enterprise and an enterprise that eventually becomes subject to severe state regulation? In fact, Carnegie advocated such late in his life
88. collapse would lead to political turmoil and ultimately socialism
89. Orwell, because the function of the Institute, as we shall see, is to impose corporate Socialism on the U
90. connection with the infantile utopian Socialism he advocates
91. ” Chapter 3 – The Basis and Philosophy of Socialism The starting-point of socialist doctrine is the criticism of the bourgeois order of society
92. The most exhaustive, accurate and well-described observations about Socialism I could find are in the writings of Ludwig von Mises
93. He reported the similarity of Socialism and Communism
94. 2 He wrote, “In the terminology of Marx and Engels the words communism and socialism are synonymous
95. Bartley, who recently described the work of Friedrich von Hayek in the “Opinion” section of The Wall Street Journal, “Fascism and communism are the more virulent cousins of socialism
96. The communists add guns to achieve their power and call their form of Socialism, Communism
97. Nevertheless, a clear exposition of the true nature of a socialist society most probably would have dampened the enthusiasm of the masses that have accepted the ‘religion’ of Socialism
98. When Robert Owen’s experiment with socialism failed* in 1827 he finally concluded that since Socialism could not occur on its own, it would be necessary to change society by political (coercive) means to achieve it