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Agrarian Socialism: Difference between revisions

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the Huks numbered less than 2,000 by 1954 and without the protection and support of local supporters, active Huk resistance no longer presented a serious threat to Philippine security. In 1954, Operation Thunder-Lightning was conducted and resulted in the surrender of the leader of the Huks in May.
 
==Variants==
==Schools of Thought==
===Russian Nihilism===
[[File:RussianNil.png]] [[w:Russian nihilist movement|Russian Nihilism]] was an [[File:Leftunity.png]] [[:Category:Left Unity|economically left]], civically variable, [[File:Farm.png]] [[Agrarianism|agrarian]], and revolutionary [[File:Antimon.png]] anti-monarchist movement from the [[File:Cball-Russian_Empire.png]] Russian Empire in the late 19th century. It was primarily inspired by the thought of the [[File:Hegel.png]] Young Hegelians and Russian anarchist [[File:BakuninHeg.png]] [[Anarcho-Collectivism|Mikhail Bakunin]]. <br>Ideas varied wildly between theoreticians. Some supported [[File:Awaj.png]] [[anarchism]] (Bakunin), some supported [[File:Republicanismpix.png]] [[republicanism]] (Chernyshevsky), and some supported what was perceived as [[File:Totalitarian.png]] [[totalitarianism]] (Nechayev). One thing these theorists all shared was an opposition to traditional values, monarchism, and religion. Another thing to note is that some nihilists were greatly influenced by Russian antinihilist literature such as Ivan Turgenevs "fathers and sons" or Fyodor Dostoevskys work and aspired to be like the nihilist characters in those stories.
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