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Political government Concordance

Concordance status: generated from processed OCR/PDF text. Treat these as source-location aids until each passage is checked against the scan.

27 hits

Total text matches across processed Steinmetz sections.

1 sources

Sources containing at least one matched alias.

6 sections

Chapters, lectures, sections, or report divisions with matches.

Political government, political-government

SourceHitsSections
America and the New Epoch276
SectionSourceHitsWorkbenchLocation
Chapter 12: Evolution: Political GovernmentAmerica and the New Epoch13Workbenchlines 5328-5797
Chapter 17: ConclusionAmerica and the New Epoch5Workbenchlines 7568-8027
Chapter 14: Evolution: Inhibitory PowerAmerica and the New Epoch3Workbenchlines 6233-6597
Chapter 8: America in the PastAmerica and the New Epoch2Workbenchlines 3741-4267
Chapter 10: Public and Private CorporationsAmerica and the New Epoch2Workbenchlines 4716-5059
Chapter 13: Evolution: Industrial GovernmentAmerica and the New Epoch2Workbenchlines 5798-6232
Chapter 12: Evolution: Political Government - 13 hit(s)

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XII evolution: political government OUR nation has been fairly prosperous and successful thus far, in spite of our previous and present method of dealing with social, in- dustrial, and political problems, which is no method at all, but mere muddling. However ...
Chapter 17: Conclusion - 5 hit(s)

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... the corporations — just as the millions of the German Social Democracy were by the social legislation attached to the nation and ready for its defense — with this accomplished, quickly the political power would shift and the political government, instead of outlawing and fighting corporate success and business, would be brought into co-operation with the industrial corporation, and from thereon the progress toward democratic co-operative industrial or- ganization would b ...
Chapter 14: Evolution: Inhibitory Power - 3 hit(s)

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... the whole, and encour- ages initiative and individualistic development as important factors of industrial progress, and especially it has solved the problem of filling the offices with competent and qualified men. Neither the political Government nor any other organization has these characteristics, and it therefore appears the natural and most logical step that the executive and administrative Gov- ernment of our nation in the co-operative era 177 AMERICA AND THE ...
Chapter 8: America in the Past - 2 hit(s)

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... wer, free to devote their time to administration, literature, art, and science, highly civilized and superior intellectually to the uncouth farmers and sailors of the Northern States, thereby for generations in control of the political government of the entire nation. Below them was a mass of human beasts of burden, slave laborers, as a rule well kept and taken care of, just as, and for the same reason that, we take care of our cattle now, and therefore as a ...
Chapter 10: Public and Private Corporations - 2 hit(s)

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... e for a considerable number of years, and from these reports come in which are not always favorable, and claims have been made regarding some commission governments that they are more inefficient and unsatisfactory than the political government which they replaced, and some communities have 134 PUBLIC AND PRIVATE CORPORATIONS abandoned commission government and gone back to the old form of government. The question then arises whether the economic success of the ...
Chapter 13: Evolution: Industrial Government - 2 hit(s)

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XIII evolution: industrial government HIE large industrial corporation is to-day by far the most efficient organization, in spite of the inefficiency forced upon it by the political Government. It is still very crude and imperfect in many respects, and especially it is still greatly deficient in the social relations within the organi- zation and toward the general public. If an efficient co-operative government is ...