In the year 1989, a brother was born to Hurricane Gabrielle blowing the door off of a small New Jersey apartment frame. In 1989 as well, President Nicolae Ceaușescu was executed via capital punishment. President -- or, more modernly referred to -- Dictator Nicolae Ceaușescu was the leader of Communist Romania for nearly three decades. Similar to Stalin, the majority of Ceaușescu’s life consisted of illegal activity as a minor, ruling Romania to food shortages and despair, and threatening his people due to his own mishaps and faults. Early on, President Ceaușescu was held liable for multiple illegal activities. Likewise to Stalin, these crimes would later affect his career and private life. Nicolae was arrested twice, once in 1933 for street …show more content…
In order to face the severity of debt, Nicolae Ceaușescu plunged his country’s lifestyle to the bottom ranks of Europe. He also threatened to bulldoze around 2,000 people and their housing if they didn’t submit. Albeit he was a photogenic teen, this gentleman had a hideous personality and face more importantly: tactic. His inhabitants were forced to capitulate against his demands. Imagine one’s life being threatened and controlled unwillingly for the sake of debt. Not pretty, is it? Some soldiers were forced to divorce their wives or otherwise they would have to resign. A few Romanians had been put on 24-hour surveillance. A handful of them, however -- they were blindly loyal. If one is planning on running a country, here is some solid advice; do not terrorize the citizens! Ceaușescu’s rule consisted of many Stalin-esque properties, such as: civilization threats, starvation, and illegal activity. Throughout Nicolae Ceaușescu’s reign, never did he once try to mend his faults, only deepening and worsening the damage. Likewise to Stalin, he was a ruthless dictator with a heart frozen and manipulated beyond repair. Even during death, he chanted a communist hymn. Ceaușescu’s last words were “Long live the Socialist Republic of Romania! History will revenge me!“, never once giving up the fight for pure
Some of them were famous men, like a great pre-war figure in Romania. The brutalistic re-education caused unrest in many prisons and rumors spread across the country
verthrow of Antonescu, a struggle for power took place between the democratic parties, which held fast to the Western political tradition, and the Communist Party, which was committed to the Soviet model. The communists, though they had few supporters, came to power in the spring of 1945 because the Soviet Union had intervened forcefully on their behalf. The decisive factor was the Soviet leader Joseph Stalin’s approval of a seizure of power, which he gave during a visit to Moscow in January 1945 by Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej, the leader of the so-called “native” faction of the party (composed mainly of ethnic Romanians)
Jacques Cousteau was a man of all trades. He was a photographer, inventor of diving devices, undersea explorer, soldier, writer, oceanographer, and documentary host (“Jacques Cousteau biography,” n.d.). He developed the first ever trademarked SCUBA device titled the Aqua-Lung (“Invention; the Aqua lung,” n.d.). SCUBA is an acronym for self-contained underwater breathing apparatus. Cousteau made his grand entrance June 11, 1910, in Saint-André-de-Cubzac, France. Cousteau was a sickly child, who the doctors told not to participate in any strenuous activity. He learned to swim at age 4 and soon developed a love for the sea as well as developing a mechanical aptitude (“Jacques Cousteau biography - life,” n.d.).
Stalin, Mussolini, and Hitler came to power in different ways, but they all managed to come into power showing their intelligence and strength. Benito Mussolini was reluctantly invited by Victor Emmanuel III to form a cabinet; his cabinet was full of fascists. He was legally granted power but started to become a one sided dictator instead of
A shocking number of 40 million people were executed during Joseph Stalin’s reign of Soviet Russia between the years 1924 to 1953. Stalin, the leader of the Soviet Union, plays an important role in George Orwell’s novel 1984. Orwell’s novel depicts a totalitarian government that controls the lives of the people in Oceania by supplying false propaganda and monitoring their everyday life. As a matter of fact, Orwell writes his novel based on the events that occurred in Soviet Russia during the reign of Joseph Stalin. The author includes similar aspects to that of Soviet Russia in his novel to warn his audience the dangers of a totalitarian state. George Orwell’s dystopian society illustrates the negative effects that a totalitarian government
Almost everyone knows what a monster Adolf Hitler was, but most people do not know that one of the great ally leader of World War II, Joseph Stalin, had committed even greater atrocities than Hitler. Joseph Stalin was a ruthless and yet diligent dictator of the Soviet Union, whose rise to power influenced a multitude of major events in his country’s history. Due to Stalin’s impactful reign, he made the Soviet Union become a global superpower, underwent difficult hardships such as the Great Famine in the Soviet Union, and after his death, caused the Soviet Union to go through a process known as de-Stalinization.
Stalin like Hitler “used propaganda, censorship, and terror to force his will on the Soviet people. Government newspapers glorified work and Stalin himself. Secret police spied on citizens, and anyone who refused to praise Stalin and the state faced severe punishment, even death” (“The Soviet”, n.d.).
Love is the foundation and the weakness of a totalitarian regime. For a stable totalitarian society, love between two individuals is eliminated because only a relationship between the person and the party and a love for its leader can exist. The totalitarian society depicted throughout the Orwell’s novel 1984 has created a concept of an Orwellian society. Stalin’s Soviet state can be considered Orwellian because it draws close parallels to the imaginary world of Oceania in 1984. During the twentieth century, Soviet Russia lived under Stalin’s brutal and oppressive governments, which was necessary for Stalin to retain power. In both cases, brutality and oppression led to an absence of relationships and love. This love was directed towards
During World War II, Romanian leaders main concern was to avoid being overrun by the Communist army, or the Red Army. Unfortunately for them, the Red Army invaded and took over Bucharest, the capitol of Romania, in late August of 1944 (Turnock, Latham and Hitchins). This marked the beginning of Communist Romania. The foundation of a dictatorial administration was laid from 1948 to1960. During the 1960s, the
Slavenka Drakulic lived during the heart of communism in Eastern Europe during the twentieth century. She wrote a book called How We Survived Communism and Even Laughed to describe what communism was like and how life changed after communism ended. Her book is very effective in analyzing communism and its effects because it tells what life was like during communism and how it even still affected people afterwards. The long-lasting effects compare to some of those that the Jewish people faced after liberation, and they were never able to quite get over the effects of communism even though it was over. This story hits some of the areas that historians might not be able to completely figure out because it gives exact thoughts about how bad communism was from actual people.
“..The prince should, as I have already suggested, determine to avoid anything which will make him hated and despised.” (Machiavelli 102). Nicolae did not take this advice, nor anyone else’s for that matter. He continued to make life miserable for the people until he was despised by everyone. In 1987, thousands of working men mobbed the Communist Party headquarters in Brasov (“Nicolae Ceausescu Biography”). From that point, people came to fear Nicolae less, and hate him more. Until one day, on Christmas Day, there was another mob. This time however, the people were helped by the army. “His defence lies in being well armed and having good allies.” (Machiavelli 103). Unfortunately, Nicolae had become so despised that he had no allies or army
The cold war is a period marked by global fear and anxiety. The western world was terrified of losing their way of life however the Hungarians had already lost theirs. Whereas the rest of the world was paranoid and fearful of the consequences of physical confrontation, the Hungarians were repressed to the point where they risked their lives to get their way of life back and to resurrect their culture. The Hungarians were contextually irritated, as the soviets had used their political power to copy the Hungarian teams training tactics.
This paper will discuss how Stalin’s background helped build the qualities of a ruthless leader and how he displayed them
“Death is the solution to all problems. No man - no problem.” This is a direct quote from one of the most notorious men in history, Joseph Stalin. Stalin was the leader of the Soviet Union from the mid 1920’s until his death. The period in which he ruled over the Soviet Union was known as the Reign of Terror because he was a malicious leader who was ready to do anything to maintain the level of power he achieved. He will forever be remembered as a cold blooded and heartless leader, who took the lives of millions without remorse. This research paper will cover this notorious and deceitful dictator and his early life, rise to power, his reign of terror, and the aftermath of his actions.
Romania came across many problems post-communism, which many experts claim is due to their history. Romania experienced the most repressive society during their totalitarian communist regime’s years. As Daniel Brett said, “The culture of mistrust among both individuals and social groups predates communism; it was exploited by communism and continues to be exploited by those who fear the emergence of a genuinely autonomous civil society..” (392). The country faced problems with corruption from post communist policy makers. In 2006, to combat corrupt politicians with ties to communism, new legislation was passed that opened up parliamentarians’ communist-era secret service files to pubic scrutiny. As Brett states, “…the real impetus