| Black people The term black people usually refers to a racial group of humans with a dark brown skin color, but it has also been used to categorise a number of diverse populations into one common group. Some definitions of the term include only people of relatively recent Sub Saharan African descent (see African diaspora). Black_people
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| Wage slavery Wage slavery refers to a situation where a person is dependent for a livelihood on the wages earned, especially if the dependency is total and immediate. The term is used to draw an analogy between slavery and wage labor. Some uses of the term may refer only to situations where workers are paid unreasonably low wages (e.g. Wage_slavery
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| Crestone, Colorado Crestone,_Colorado
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| Totalitarian democracy Totalitarian democracy is a term made famous by Israeli historian J. L. Talmon to refer to a system of government in which lawfully elected representatives maintain the integrity of a nation state whose citizens, while granted the right to vote, have little or no participation in the decision-making process of the government. The phrase had previously been used by Bertrand de Jouvenel and E.H. Carr. Totalitarian_democracy
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| Battle of Thermopylae Battle_of_Thermopylae
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| Smilodon Smilodon (), sometimes called sabre-toothed cat, is an extinct genus of large machairodontine saber-toothed cats that lived between approximately 2.5 million to 10,000 years ago in North and South America. They are called "sabre-toothed" for the extreme length of their maxillary canines. Smilodon
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| Colorado College Colorado_College
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| Civil Rights Act of 1964 Civil_Rights_Act_of_1964
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| Beauvais Beauvais is a town and commune and capital of the Oise department in northern France. Population (1999)Paris. Beauvais
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| Helen Hunt Jackson Helen Maria Hunt Jackson (October 18, 1830 – August 12, 1885) was an American writer best known as the author of Ramona, a novel about the ill treatment of Native Americans in southern California. Helen_Hunt_Jackson
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| Academic term academic term is a division of an academic year, the time during which a school, college or university holds classes. These divisions may be called 'terms', 'semesters', 'quarters', or 'trimesters', depending on the institution and the country.In most northern hemisphere countries an academic year begins with the start of autumn and ends the following summer. Academic_term
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| Yellow socialism Yellow socialism has two meanings. It is primarily a system of government devised by Pierre Biétry in 1904, that offers the working classes a contrasting alternative to "red socialism" (Marxism). It was prominent in the early twentieth century prior to World War I, competing with Marxism for the minds of the workers. After this point, this movement became absorbed into fascism, and the previously developed Austrian national socialism which from 1920 developed into Nazism. Yellow_socialism
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| Messianic democracy Messianic democracy is a neologism originally used by Jacob Talmon is his book The Origins of Totalitarian Democracy (1951) to describe the "democracy by force" doctrines of Jean-Jacques Rousseau and its philosophical descendants, as an effective tyranny that demotes democratic principle to rhetorical use only. Messianic_democracy
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| De Grasse De_Grasse
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| Timeline of the African-American Civil Rights Movement See also Encyclopedia Britannica's Guide to Black History for an international view.This is a timeline of the African-American Civil Rights Movement. Timeline_of_the_African-American_Civil_Rights_Movement
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| Stephen Scott Stephen Scott (b. Corvallis, Oregon, 1944) is an American composer best known for his development of the bowed piano (borrowed from C. Curtis-Smith, who invented the technique in 1972), which involves a grand piano being played by an ensemble of ten musicians who utilize lengths of horsehair, nylon filament, and other utensils to bow the strings of the piano, creating an orchestra-like sound. Stephen_Scott
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| Mountainous Republic of the Northern Caucasus The Mountainous Republic of the Northern Caucasus (MRNC; also known as the Mountain Republic or the Republic of the Mountaineers) (1917–1920) was a shortlived state situated in the Northern Caucasus. It included most of the territory of the former Terek Oblast and Dagestan Oblast of the Russian Empire, which now form the republics of Chechnya, Ingushetia, North Ossetia-Alania, Kabardino-Balkaria, Dagestan and part of Stavropol Krai of the Russian Federation. Mountainous_Republic_of_the_Northern_Caucasus
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| Ghiyathu'd-Din Ghiyathu'd-Din bin (ibn, ben) Rashid'ud-Din Fad‘lu'llah (died 1336) was Ilkhanate politician, and was the son of Rashid al-Din, a scientist and historian who was born to a Jewish family in Hamadan but converted to Islam while serving under the Ilkhans.He was the mayor of the Ilkhanate palace, when the era of the sultan Abu Sa'id. And he was a patron of literature.He was murdered because of the struggle of successor. Ghiyathu'd-Din
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| Dead external links/404/b Wikipedia:Dead_external_links/404/b
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| Fascism and ideology There are numerous debates concerning fascism and ideology. The position of fascism on the political spectrum is a point of contention. Fascism_and_ideology
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