"The dystopian vision of the German-Jewish philosopher [and Holocaust survivor] Hannah Arendt [1906 - 1975], [in a later edition of her book, 'The Origins of Totalitarianism (1951)', which included her work, 'Ideology and Terror: A novel form of government'] loomed at society's horizon: the emergence of a new totalitarianism, no longer l…
"The dystopian vision of the German-Jewish philosopher [and Holocaust survivor] Hannah Arendt [1906 - 1975], [in a later edition of her book, 'The Origins of Totalitarianism (1951)', which included her work, 'Ideology and Terror: A novel form of government'] loomed at society's horizon: the emergence of a new totalitarianism, no longer led by flamboyant 'mob leaders' such as Joseph Stalin or Adolf Hitler but by dull bureaucrats and technocrats." -- Mattias Desmet, in his book 'The Psychology of Totalitarianism (2022)'
"The dystopian vision of the German-Jewish philosopher [and Holocaust survivor] Hannah Arendt [1906 - 1975], [in a later edition of her book, 'The Origins of Totalitarianism (1951)', which included her work, 'Ideology and Terror: A novel form of government'] loomed at society's horizon: the emergence of a new totalitarianism, no longer led by flamboyant 'mob leaders' such as Joseph Stalin or Adolf Hitler but by dull bureaucrats and technocrats." -- Mattias Desmet, in his book 'The Psychology of Totalitarianism (2022)'
https://mattiasdesmet.substack.com/