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the strongest mineral is the diamond, actually the strongest mineral is the quartz and the strongest rock is diamond
there is no strongest rubber
water clone is the strongest
walnut is the hardest and strongest kind of wood
Strongest = validissimus There are several possible choices for strongest -the context is all-important.
Nationalism does not always constitute a military ideology although it does it is very often an integral part of an military ideology. Nationalism, if accepted as the belief that the nation is the most important block of human community and that the advancement of that nation above others is a commendable goal, could create support amongst the populace for militarization. However to conclude that nationalism constitutes a military ideology would be to oversimplify the complex and multi-faceted nature of ideology itself. The existence of nationalism does not necessarily dictate the existence of a military ideology. For example, Japan has an extremely strong sense of nationalism supported by groupism; however due to historical context, cultural implication, strength of economic markets, and other countless unidentifiable factors Japan does not show the characteristics of military ideology. Rather, it would be more accurate to state that nationalism is often used as the self-affirmation and source of righteousness in a military ideology.
Liberalism and Nationalism
the elements are a group with a 'national' identity... a character (leader) An ideology the Will to act on that ideology
nationalism
Conservatism
His political ideology was :Nationalism, Sun Yat-sen also known as Sun Yixian believed in dying for his country.
A mix of Nationalism, Socialism and Social-Darwinism + the idea of a superior caucasian race.
A mix of Nationalism, Socialism and Social-Darwinism + the idea of a superior caucasian race.
Socialism (economics) and Communitarianism (culture). The ideology in the book was called "Nationalism", which has little to do with the actual real-world definition of nationalism and patriotism.
Nationalism
Nationalism
Yes, Stalin did believe in nationalism, but his version of nationalism was based on Soviet nationalism rather than specific ethnic or cultural nationalism. He propagated the idea of a united Soviet people, promoting loyalty to the Soviet state and its ideology. This was in line with his goal of creating a strong and centralized Soviet Union.