Political Lingo
People Groups
-isms in Culture
-isms in Government
Famous People in History
100

Mobilizing all of a nation's resources both at home and in the field for war.

Total War

100

The class of hereditary nobility, sharing a distinctive lifestyle of wealth and influence in society.

Aristocrats

100

The application of the principles of evolution and survival of the fittest to the social order, leading to the  belief that the fittest races and nations will progress as the weaker ones decline

Social Darwinism

100

An economic ideology that allows for private ownership of property, but calls for collective or government ownership of the major means of production and distribution of goods to promote cooperation rather than competition for the good of society.

Socialism

100

The transcendentalist who wrote Civil Disobedience

Henry David Thoreau 

200

The declaration that Germany was responsible for WWI and demand for reparations.

The War Guilt Clause

200

The lower working class

Proletariats

200

The belief that something is only good if it is useful or for the benefit of the majority

Utilitarianism 

200

A political and economic system with a strong centralized government that aims to create a classless society in which all property is communally owned and portioned according to individual need.

Communism

200

The father of psychoanalysis who promoted the idea that humans are motivated by sexual impulses which are repressed and require release

Sigmund Freud

300

A series of programs, public works projects, financial reforms, and regulations instituted by President Roosevelt during The Great Depression to provide economic relief.

The New Deal

300

The upper ruling class

Borgeoisie 

300

The belief that there is no absolute set of morals, and therefore judgements are true or false only in relation to the standards of a particular individual or group. 

Moral Relativism

300

A totalitarian form of government that exalts the nation above the individual, and calls for a centralized government with a dictatorial leader

Fascism

300
The earliest advocate for Critical Theory, arguing that people are categorized into groups of oppressors and the oppressed, and that traditional institutions create dangerous centers for oppression and must therefore be dismantled.

Karl Marx

400

A U.S. program designed to provide aid to western Europe following WWII to help promote industry and rebuild devastated European economies.

The Marshall Plan

400

Individuals who fought for the right to vote

Suffragettes 

400

The belief that the individual person is a free and responsible agent determining their own development and granting their own meaning to life.

Existentialism

400

An extreme form of fascism that calls for purity of race

Nazism

400

Antebellum political leader who advocated for slavery as a positive moral good, benefitting both the slave and the master based upon their respective moral needs.

John C. Calhoun

500

A promise made by the USA to provide political, military, and economic assistance to all democratic nations under threat from authoritarian forces to prevent the spread of Communism.

The Truman Doctrine

500

Individuals whose power or influence is gained from their wealth

Plutocrats

500

The principle of giving the group priority over each individual in it.

Collectivism

500

A political approach that strives to appeal to ordinary people who feel their concerns are disregarded by established elite groups

Populism

500

Known as the most progressive of the 3 presidents during the "Progressive Era"

Theodore Roosevelt

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