Tridemism: Difference between revisions
→File:Welf.png 民生 Mínshēng File:Soc-h.png (Welfare/Socialism)
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**[[File:Secular.png]] [[Secularism]]{{Refn|One of Sun's policy changes was a transition from theocracy to a modernized secular constitutional republic.|group=Note}}
**[[File:Socfem.png]] [[Social Democracy|Social Feminism]]
**[[File:Socnat.png]] [[Welfare Chauvinism|Social Nationalism]]
**[[File:GeoSoc.png]] [[Geosyndicalism|Socialist Georgism]]
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Roughly translates to [[File:Dem.png]] [[Democracy|Civil Rights]], this principle stated that instead of having an Emperor to rule China, all Chinese people should be his own Emperor under a democratic system, which citizens have the right to vote and influence politic via democratic means. It also added two more branches--[[w:Control_Yuan|Control Yuan]] and [[w:Examination_Yuan|Examination Yuan]] -- to more commonly adapted tripartite of power separation due to China's political tradition.
===[[File:
Roughly translates to [[File:Welf.png]] [[Welfarism|"Doctrine of Livelihood"]], or [[File:Soc-h.png]] [[Socialism]] more broadly. While Sun Yat-sen stated in a 1924 speech that "’Mínshēng’ is [[File:Soc-h.png]] [[Socialism]]." and even at times calls his proposed policies [[File:Commie.png]] Communist, he was opposed to the [[File:Ormarxf.png]] [[Marxism|Marxist]] definitions of "class struggle" and "surplus value" as well as [[File:ML.png]] [[Marxism–Leninism|Russian style communism]], saying "The Soviet system in Russia is not pure communism but Marxism — and Marxism is not communism; the real communism comes from Proudhon and Bakunin." Despite this, he still chose Lenin's style of party structure for the Kuomintang.
Sun Yat-sen instead defined Mínshēng as a doctrine of "people's livelihood, social existence, national economy, and group life." (ibid)
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