Tridemism: Difference between revisions

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Undo revision 517317 by Applethesky2021 (talk) appl don't remove the reasoning because you are having a fit
(Undo revision 517318 by Applethesky2021 (talk))
Tags: Undo Reverted
(Undo revision 517317 by Applethesky2021 (talk) appl don't remove the reasoning because you are having a fit)
Tags: Undo Reverted
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**[[File:AntiDPP.png]] Anti-Taiwanese Independence (Since 1945)
**[[File:AuthcapROC.png]] [[Authoritarian Capitalism]] (Since 1955)
**[[File:Cultofpersonality.png]] [[{{PCB|Autocracy|Cult of Personality]]}}<br>
**[[File:Chine.png]] [[Chinese Theocracy|Chinese]] [[Buddhist Theocracy|Buddhism]] [[File:Bud.png]] (pre-1930)
**[[File:Crony.png]] [[Corporatocracy|Cronyism]]
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**[[File:NC.png]] [[Meritocracy|Neo-Confucianism]]
**[[File:NSB.png]] [[Police Statism]]{{Refn|*Aka "White Terror"|group = Note}}
**[[File:SocRight.png]] [[Conservative Socialism|Right-Wing Socialism]] (debatable) (Pre-1955)<ref>The Chiangist régime was highly oligarchic and factionalist, essentially an alliance of warlords, large landowners, and a comprador class of capitalists that are heavily reliant on foreign investment, particularly British and then American. Chiang himself was only the “first among equals”, his main power base being the Four Big Families that controlled the central government. However, similar structures existed elsewhere in the areas not under the central government's direct control. The ideology of Chiang was mostly a façade, which he did not have nearly enough power and resources to implement, at least in the mainland period before 1949.</ref><ref>[[W:Socialist_ideology_of_the_Kuomintang#Chiang_Kai-shek|"Socialist ideology of the Kuomintang#Chiang Kai Shek"]], Wikipedia.</ref>
**[[File:SocRight.png]] [[Conservative Socialism|Right-Wing Socialism]] (debatable) (Pre-1955)
**[[File:SocialConservative.png]] [[Traditionalism|Social Conservatism]]
**[[File:SocauthGeo.png]] [[Social Georgism]]{{Refn|Chiang Kai-shek attempted to implement Georgist principles as dictator, despite having to cooperate with the landlord class in response to the instability during his reign. In 1933 he attempted to gradually implement land reform through the Chinese Institute of Land Economics, which he argued was a continuation of Sun Yat-sen's Georgism. He attempted to collect land rents and also ensure the Chinese had "equal right" to the land.|group=Note}}
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