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The Conflict Between Autocracy and Democracy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 April 2017

Extract

Autocracy and Democracy are mutually antagonistic. A dictatorship, whether that of the proletariat or one established by a totalitarian state, is a menace to popular government. We have all seen in the recent past how it has shown itself a foe to liberty; to freedom of the person, freedom of opinion and speech, freedom of the press, and hostile to religious toleration. Autocracy, relying upon force, is necessarily militaristic and readily assumes an aggressive attitude towards other forms of government.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © by the American Society of International Law 1938

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References

1 St. Paul to the Romane, viii, 37.

2 See The Times (London), Apr. 29, 1919.

3 L’Illustration, March 5, 1938, p. 244, “Si l’on Avait Écouté Pershing.”

4 My diary, Jan. 27, 1918.

5 Archives of Department of State, History of the Treaty of Versailles.

6 Isaiah Bowman, The New World, pp. 263, 264.

7 Bass, The Peace Tangle, p. 149.

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11 See Ito’s Commentary on the Constitution, Chap. I. Also McLaren, op. cit., p. 193, and MacNair, , Par Eastern International Relations, p. 375.Google Scholar

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18 International News Service, Paris, Jan. 4, 1938.

19 International News Service, Boston, June 1, 1938.

20 Address to the Congress, Apr. 2, 1917.