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Post by Schwarzwald Magnus on May 6, 2021 4:58:57 GMT
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Post by Ass_E9 on May 6, 2021 6:22:00 GMT
In time, he may develop words more Polly-syllabic.
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Post by politicidal on May 6, 2021 13:35:21 GMT
In time, he may develop words more Polly-syllabic. 
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Post by gameboy on May 6, 2021 14:54:52 GMT
I can't understand a word he says.
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Post by ebony on May 6, 2021 15:05:28 GMT
I hear "Gurpreet."
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Post by truecristian on May 6, 2021 17:13:39 GMT
Europe was overrun by a wave of totalitarian regimes between the decades of 1920 and 1940, motivated by a distrust of liberal democracy and economic liberalism, which, from being considered the foundation for the progress in the nineteenth century, was later regarded as responsible for the outbreak of World War I and the economic crisis that followed, which reached its climax with the collapse of stock exchange in New York, in 1929. The Italian Fascism and German Nazism stood out among these regimes, respectively as the founder and the image of success of the totalitarian right-wing, which influenced part of Latin America, including the "Estado Novo" of Getúlio Vargas. The present thesis explores the use of architecture by such dictators as one of the most effective propaganda in the construction and propagation of the image of strength that the regime wished to convey, both national and internationally. The main style used for this propaganda was Tardo- classicism, which was seen as the perfect way to communicate the totalitarian government's power. In Brazil, there was no predominance of modernist architecture for the representation of the Vargas State (1930 – 1945) – instead, the regime's image was not associated with an unique architectural style by internationally renowned architects, as this semiotic analysis of the buildings can confirm.
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Post by autumn on May 8, 2021 21:12:03 GMT
That is a very happy, healthy little bird.
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