• sodium_nitride [any, any]@hexbear.net
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    25 days ago

    I am using the definition “is this person serving at the highest office there with a legal electoral mandate from the people?”

    Which is frankly an idiotic definition of “dictator”, but it suffices to critique this infographic from its own liberal logic, as in “you didn’t even get the basic googlable facts correct”

    The “real” (one that I think is most useful) definition of dictator is one who has the power of being able to use dictat (executive order). That is of course, the literal origin of the term from the roman republics, where “dictator” was an official position, that you were appointed to and could serve for a maximum of 1 year and was only used in times of emergencies/wars. It’s kind of funny how the liberal understanding of the term is in many ways the literal opposite of the actual historical position that inspired it.

    A “Dictator” as I see it is someone rules above collective leadership (most modern presidents are dictators) a and “dictatorship” is a government that can makes major decisions without referendum (“liberal democracies” are basically 100% of the time dictatorships of the bourgeoise).

    • spoons [they/them, it/its]@hexbear.net
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      26 days ago

      I knew about the origin of the word, just didn’t match context of his the word is used now, so didn’t seem especially relevant.

      That last bit is useful and appreciated. I’m just very used to the term carrying a different negative connotation (ie, not related to the bourgeoise), so the framing felt odd without additional context for myself. Ty!

      • TreadOnMe [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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        25 days ago

        The context of the way the word is used now is purposely vague and vibes-based. It is functionally useless in political science discussion that way other than ‘leader of the designated enemy’.

      • sodium_nitride [any, any]@hexbear.net
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        25 days ago

        That last bit is useful and appreciated. I’m just very used to the term carrying a different negative connotation (ie, not related to the bourgeoise), so the framing felt odd without additional context for myself. Ty!

        I just noticed a spelling error. I said that dictatorships rule with referendum, whereas they actually rule without referendum. I hope I didn’t cause any confusion.