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Totalitarianism has been around since antiquity. Examples include Sparta where state controlled the way of life for lower and upper classes. More modern examples include Edo period Japan.
Leaders and whose regimes have commonly been regarded as being totalitarian include [[File:Nazi.png]] [[Nazism|Adolf Hitler]] in [[File:Cball-Germany.png]] Germany, [[File:
Other examples include [[File:Burmasoc.png]] [[Burmese Socialism|Ne Win]] in [[File:Cball-Myanmar.png]] Burma (Myanmar), [[File:Chine.png]] [[Chinese Theocracy|Qin Shi Huang
▲[[Burmese Socialism|Ne Win]] in Burma, [[File:Chine.png]] [[Chinese Theocracy|Qin Shi Huang ]] in the Qin Dynasty, and more recently, [[file:Cball-Turkmenistan.png]] [[Kleptocracy|Saparmurat Niyazov]] in Turkmenistan.
The origins of modern Totalitarianism as an ideology are debated. Philosopher Karl Popper believed its roots lie in the Hegelian conception of the state, and even more so in the theories of [[File:Ormarxf.png]] [[Marxism|Karl Marx]], while philosophers Theodor W. Adorno and Max Horkheimer of the [[File:Frankfurt.png]] [[Frankfurt Socialism|Frankfurt School]] argued it is rooted in the [[File:Monkeyzz-Enlightenment.png]] [[Enlightenment]].
The term "totalitarianism"
==Personality and Behavior==
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