How does a totalitarian government differ from most authoritarian governments
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It is more extreme and rigid. ... The army led a rebellion against the government.
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C. It is more extreme and rigid.
Explanation:
- Totalitarianism is a form of government that seeks to have full control of its citizens' lives. It has a strong central law, which aims to regulate and govern all facets of a person's life through coercion and persecution. It does not allow individual freedom. Examples, Italy under Benito Mussolini , the USSR under Joseph Stalin, Germany under Adolf Hitler, and China under Mao Zedong.
- Authoritarian government ( such as military rule, personal rule, or single-party rule, dictatorship) is characterised by highly concentrated and centralised power maintained through political repression, excluding potential challengers, restrictions on interest groups' activities, rejects civic participation, no respect for individual's freedom and rights. Examples, Ethiopia under Haile Selassie
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