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Word History
Mr. C
Project Part II
During the first part of the twentieth century, a new system of government,
totalitarianism, came into being. The men who governed these governments were called
dictators. These countries shared basic political, social, and economical characteristics but each
ruled in their own specific way. Totalitarian states shared these basic features: (1) a single-party
dictatorship, (2) state control of the economy, (3) use of police spies and terror to enforce the
will of the state, (4) strict censorship and government monopoly of the media, (5) use of schools
and the media to indoctrinate and mobilize citizens, and (6) unquestioning obedience to a single
leader. (Chapter 17.3 PG 458). One man was Joseph Stalin who was the leader of Russia with
communism ideology and had a left-wing style totalitarian government. Another man was Benito
Mussolini who was the leader of the Fascist Party in Italy. The third was Adolf Hitler who was
the leader of Nazi in Germany. Both of these leaders had a right-wing style of totalitarian
government.
Stalin’s Soviet Union, Musselini’s Italy, and Hitler’s Germany all were totalitarian regimes.
They all tried to control all aspects of life with underhanded manipulation and the use of violence
to purge their political enemies. In addition, they all were generally led by a single dictator, who
Stalin enforced left-wing totalitarianism, as it has often developed from working class
movements seeking, in theory, to eliminate, not preserve, class distinctions. (Grobman). Joseph
Stalin used ruthless measures to win dictatorial power and impose a new order on Russia. Before
Lenin’s death, he did urge the party to choose a successor “more tolerant, more loyal, more
polite, and more considerate to comrades.” (Chapter 15.2 PG 406) At Lenin’s death, Trotsky and
Stalin competed for the leadership position. He launched the Great Purge, a campaign of terror
directed at eliminating all his opponents who threatened his power. (History Exploration)
Trotsky was murdered in Mexico by a Stalin agent. Therefore, Stalin became the sole leader over
Russia. Another political policy Stalin implemented was the use of propaganda. The key
components of Stalin’s propaganda campaign was ‘The Cult of Personality’. Images of Stalin
were everywhere. They were designed to make Stalin look powerful and good to his people. All
achievements and successes were credited to Stalin. By eliminating the older figures, Stalin was
The other two dictators were Benito Mussolini and Adolf Hitler whose ruling
style is right-wing totalitarianism. This style has typically supported and enforced the private
ownership of industrial wealth. Its regimes, particularly the Nazis, have arisen in relatively
advanced societies, relying on the support of traditional economic elites to attain power.
(Grobman)
Mussolini returned home after serving in the Italian army during WWI, looking for a way
to unify the Italian people. In 1918, he began to deliver emotional speeches, calling for a dictator
to head the country. He argued that only a strong leader could unite the people to overcome
Italy’s postwar mass unemployment, chaotic political party conflicts, and strikes by socialists
and communists. In 1919, Mussolini organized his fascist movement in the northern city of
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Milan. He formed squads of street fighters who wore black shirts. His “Blackshirts” beat up
socialists and communists and threw them out of local governments. Mussolini’s fascist
movement quickly gained the support of anti-communist business people, property owners, and
middle-class professionals. In 1921, Mussolini formed the National Fascist Party. They took the
name from the Latin fasces, a bundle of sticks wrapped around an ax - a symbol of authority in
ancient Rome. He wanted to rule Italy. In a speech before thousands of his supporters in October
1922, Mussolini declared, “Either the government will be given to us, or we will seize it by
marching on Rome.” (Constitutional Rights Foundation) He promised to end corruption and also
spoke of reviving Roman greatness, pledging to turn the Mediterranean into “Roman lake” once
again. (Chapter 17.3 PG 455) A few days later, he unleashed his followers on a massive march to
Italy’s capital city. As tens of thousands converged on Rome, government leaders became so
unnerved that they resigned. King Victor Emmanuel had the constitutional duty to appoint a new
prime minister, who would form the next government. With his Blackshirts and other supporters
swarming the streets of Rome, Mussolini demanded that the king appoint him prime minister.
The king gave in, Mussolini became Italy’s youngest prime minister on October 29, 1922 at age
39. By 1925, Mussolini had assumed more power and taken the title II Duce, “The Leader”. He
started to suppress rival parties, muzzle the press, rig elections, and replace elected officials with
Fascist supporters.
Adolf Hitler fought in the Germany army during WWI. He perceived Weimar
government as weak and ineffective. In 1919, he joined a small group of right-wing extremists
and later became the leader of the National Socialist German Workers or Nazi party. He
organized his supporters into fighting squads. In 1923, Hitler made a failed attempt to seize
power in Munich. He was arrested and found guilty of treason. While in prison, Hitler wrote
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Mein Kampf (“My Struggle”). It later become the basic book of Nazi goals and ideology, which
reflected Hitler’s obsessions – extreme nationalism, racism, and antisemitism. He said the
greatest German enemies were the Jews, whom he viewed as a separate race. In his recipe for
revival, he urged Germans everywhere to unite into one great nation. He said German must
expand to gain Lebensraum, or living space, for its people. Slavs and other inferior races must
bow to Aryan needs. To achieve this, Germany needed a strong leader or Fuhrer. Hitler was
determined to become that leader. After Hitler left prison, he found enthusiastic followers among
veterans and lower-middle-class Germans who felt frustrated about their future. As
unemployment rose, Nazi membership grew to almost a million. Hitler promised to end
reparations, create jobs and defy the Versailles treaty by rearming Germany. Fearing the growth
of the communist party, the conservatives supported Hitler as elected chancellor in 1933 through
democratic means. Within a year, Hitler because the master of Germany. He turned Germany
into a totalitarian state. He suspended civil rights, destroyed socialists and communists, and
disbanded other political parties. He purged his own party by executing Nazis he felt disloyal. He
began scheming to unite Germany and Austria. “Today Germany belongs to us,” sang young
Nazis. “Tomorrow the world.” CH17.4 PG461. To achieve his goals, Hitler organized a brutal
system of terror and totalitarian rule, controlling all areas of German life, from government to
religion to education. His secret police, the Gestapo, rooted out opposition.
Next, the dictatorships of Stalin, Mussolini, and Hitler shared some general social
characteristics. All three used the government to control the media, applying the twin tools of
censorship and propaganda. They only allow the media to promote their ideas and beliefs. They
used secret police to purge their opponents whom they felt were not loyal to them. The
government organized a system of terror and totalitarian rule, controlling all area of people’s life,
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from government to religion to education. They ensure the young children were thoroughly
indoctrinate with their ideologies (communism, fascist, Nazi). The citizen’s fundamental
freedom of speech, religion, and analytical thinking were denied. Nonetheless, each dictatorship
had their own specific methods for each of these characteristics. In Stalin’s Soviet Union,
Stalinist propaganda revived extreme nationalism. Headlines in the Communist party newspaper,
Pravda, or “Truth”, linked enemies at home to foreign agents seeking to restore power to the
landowners and capitalists. The Soviet Union was the first state to have as an ideological
objective the elimination of religion. The Communist regime confiscated church property,
ridiculed religion, harassed believers, and propagated atheism in the schools. (Revelation) The
communists transformed Russian life by creating a society where a few elite groups emerged as a
new ruling class. They enjoyed benefits denied to most people. Although excluded from party
membership, most people did enjoy benefits such as free education, medical care, day care for
children, inexpensive housing, and public recreation. The communists built schools everywhere.
In addition to learning basic education, students were taught communist values such as atheism,
the glory of collective farming, and love of Stalin. Women won equality under communists.
They gained access to education and a wide range of jobs. However, Stalin controlled the artists
and writers by forcing them to conform to a style called socialist realism. Its goal was to boost
socialism by showing Soviet life in a positive light and to promote hope in the communist future.
Mussolini’s social characteristics were aimed to increase his popularity. The battle for
births was an attempt to increase the number of Italians from 40 to 60 million by 1950. More
men were meant to be more ruthless, selfless soldiers. Women were pushed out of paying jobs
and called on them to have babies. His effort gave a short-term boost to the birth rate but despite
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propaganda. (Gerald Yeo) Shaping the young was a major Fascist goal. They were taught to
obey strict military discipline. By the 1930s, a generation of young soldiers were ready to back
Mussolini’s drive to expand Italian power. Fascism appealed to many Italians because it
promised a strong, stable government and an end to the political feuding that had paralyzed
democracy.
Hitler’s social characteristics included spreading the message of racism, urging young
Germans to destroy their enemies without mercy. In Hitler’s My New Order, he quoted,
“Extremes must be fought by extremes. Against the infection of Marxism, against the Jewish
pestilence, we must hold aloft a flaming ideal. And if others speak of the World and Humanity,
we must say the Fatherland – and only the Fatherland!” (CH 17.4 PG 462) “Hitler youth”
pledged absolute loyalty to Germany and undertook physical fitness to prepare for war. Nazis
were dismissed from upper-level jobs and turned away from universities. They rewarded women
for having more children. Nazis purged German culture by denouncing modern art, condemning
jazz, burning books of which they disapproved. Hitler despised Christianity as “weak” and
“flabby”. He replaced religion with his racial creed. Nazis controlled churches by combining all
Protestant secs to a single state church. They closed all Catholic schools and muzzled the
Catholic clergy. Hitler set out to drive Jews from Germany. The Nuremberg Laws placed severe
restrictions on Jews, prohibiting them from marrying non-Jews, attending or teaching at German
schools, etc. On November 9 and 10 of 1938, Kristallnacht or the “Night of Broken Glass”, Nazi-
led mobs attacked Jewish communities, smashing windows, looting shops, burning synagogues,
and beating Jews on the streets. Hitler’s campaign against Jews intensified. Tens of thousands of
Jews were sent to concentration camps. Nazis even made evil plans to exterminate all Jews.
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characteristics. In all three, their countries experienced severe economic and financial problems
after World War I. Inflation grew and industrial and agricultural workers were on strike, creating
more divisions. One effect of the economic crisis was increased government activities in the
economy. Economic adversity led to political upheavals. People followed the leaders who
promised to provide economic improvements. That’s the reason why the three dictators came to
power during this economic depression. To combat the economic crisis, all three dictators
brought all economic activity under government control. Nevertheless, each dictatorship had
their own ways of carrying out their economies. In the USSR under Stalin, the NEP (New
Economic Plan) was replaced by a system called a Command Economy. The economic focus
was on heavy industry and less on consumer goods. The government of the USSR had abolished
capitalism and owned all the property. Stalin made a significant shift in economic policy when
he launched his First Five-Year Plan. The purpose was to transform Russia from an agricultural
into industrial country. However, the standard of living in Russia remained poor. With rapid
farms were eliminated. Instead, the government owned all the land, while the peasants worked it.
(The West between the Wars, 1919-1939, PG762) Peasants resisted collectivization, and Stalin
confiscated kulaks’ land and sent them to labor camps. Thousands were killed or died from
representatives of business, labor, government and the Fascist Party controlled industry,
agriculture and trade. Workers were forbidden to strike, and their wages lagged. Fascists found
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allies among business leaders, wealthy landowners, and the lower middle class. For Hitler, his
economic priority was reducing or eliminating unemployment. He launched large pubic works
programs. Tens of thousands of people were put to work building highways and housing or
replanting forests. Hitler preserved capitalism but brought big business and labor under
government control. “Strength Through Joy'' programs offered workers vigorous outdoor
vacations that also made them physically fit for military service. (CH 17.4 PG 461)
Joseph Stalin, Benito Mussolini, and Adolf Hitler all three were major dictators that made
a huge impact in what we know as history today. They all came to power during an economic
depression after WWI. They all created their totalitarian parties and states (Stalin’s Communist
Party, Mussolini’s Fascist Party, and Hitler’s Nazi). Their totalitarian systems had different
goals. Despite the differences between these totalitarian states, they all shared several common
characteristics. USSR, Italy and Germany all tried to control all aspects of people’s life with
manipulation. They used violence to purge their political opponents. Also, all the three countries
were led by a single dictator, who controlled the police, the military, the media, and the
educational systems. Finally, they brainwashed their people and required their obedience to their
ideologies instead of allowing them to have any political, social, and economical freedoms.
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Work Cited
Totalitarianism, http://plaza.ufl.edu/lcurta/totalitarian.html
"Totalitarianism in the Soviet Union, Italy, and Germany." StudyMoose, 26 Jun 2016,
http://studymoose.com/totalitarianism-in-the-soviet-union-italy-and-germany-essay
Constitutional Rights Foundation, Bill of Rights in Action, Summer 2010 (Volume 25, No.4,
https://www.crf-usa.org/bill-of-rights-in-action/bria-25-4-mussolini-and-the-rise-of-fascism.html