Republicanism: Difference between revisions
From Polcompball Wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
Content added Content deleted
m (Republics were considered left-wing based on the French Revolution, but I think this is actually incorrect. Republics like Venice or Rome were aristocratic.) |
Rigourdigga (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
Line 39: | Line 39: | ||
|regional= |
|regional= |
||
[[File:Usrep2.png]] '''American Republicanism''' {{Collapse| |
[[File:Usrep2.png]] '''American Republicanism''' {{Collapse| |
||
*[[File:AmericanModel 1.png]] [[American Model]] |
|||
*[[File:Anti-Corrupt.png]] Anti-Corruption |
*[[File:Anti-Corrupt.png]] Anti-Corruption |
||
*[[File:AntiDemAlt.png]] Anti-Democracy (Some)<ref>While historically there had been a few Founding Fathers that were opposed to democracy, such as [[File:Hamiltonianism.png]] [[Hamiltonianism|Alexander Hamilton]] and [[File:Adams.png]] [[Classical Conservatism|John Adams]], this opposition to democracy has become more mainstream in modern times, usually among [[File:Conserv.png]] [[Conservatism#United States|American conservatives]] that prefer to refer to the United States as a "republic" and not a "democracy."</ref> |
*[[File:AntiDemAlt.png]] Anti-Democracy (Some)<ref>While historically there had been a few Founding Fathers that were opposed to democracy, such as [[File:Hamiltonianism.png]] [[Hamiltonianism|Alexander Hamilton]] and [[File:Adams.png]] [[Classical Conservatism|John Adams]], this opposition to democracy has become more mainstream in modern times, usually among [[File:Conserv.png]] [[Conservatism#United States|American conservatives]] that prefer to refer to the United States as a "republic" and not a "democracy."</ref> |