Not really an answer to your question, but many would argue that the term “authoritarian” in its modern connotation is practically useless. What I mean is that there is no single definition of the term which is specific enough to be applied and understood in the context of a specific country, political system, etc. While certain academic disciplines attempt to agree on specific definitions, the reality is that most colloquial usage of the term is solely to demonize nations or ideologies without meaningful critique. Here’s one of many articles on the subject, which I think gives a decent overview: https://www.peoplesline.org/p/authoritarian-is-an-analytically
linuxoveruser
- 0 Posts
- 8 Comments
linuxoveruser@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•openSUSE’s Agama Installer Lands with Enhanced Web UI
321·1 year agoThe purpose of having a web-based user interface is to enable remote installation using a web-browser, which I imagine could be a pretty common use-case for server installation. Since a web-based interface is necessary for remote installation, it makes sense to use the same interface locally instead of having two independent interfaces.
Nix is probably the best way to get all of those things set up without shipping a whole distro, but there will be a bit of a learning curve. If you’d like something a bit easier to set up for development (still based on Nix), I’d recommend devenv.sh.
linuxoveruser@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Debian is Ditching X (Twitter) Citing These Reasons
8·1 year agoMaybe Discourse? The mobile website is pretty good and there are also a number of third-party mobile apps.
I really like immutable distros, and am currently using NixOS. I feel like despite still being relatively obscure, NixOS is a bit of an outlier since it has more packages than any other distro and is (so far) the only distro I’ve used that has never broken. There is a steep learning curve, and I certainly wouldn’t recommend it for non programmers, but it is something truly different than all mainstream Linux distros while being extremely reliable.
linuxoveruser@lemmy.mlto
Technology@lemmy.ml•How China Built Tech Prowess: Chemistry Classes and Research Labs
6·2 years agoIn the US, students protesting the Vietnam war directly led to the end of free public education in California. Generally, the wealthy seem to fear an “overeducated” working class that is overly conscious of both world affairs and their own class position. Charging high tuition (and granting legacy admission, etc.) guarantee that the wealthy make up the majority of those who end up going though college.
linuxoveruser@lemmy.mlto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Looking for a self hosted alternative to FlickrEnglish
4·2 years agoCheck out Lychee. It’s designed for (semi) public photo galleries more like Flickr

What I think you are getting at with your question is that even in the way it is colloquially applied (“evil regime” / repression / lack of rights), the term authoritarianism is applied unequally. Actions that would be described as evil or authoritarian in somewhere like China are brushed off or ignored when they apply to so-called Western liberal democracies like the UK. To that I would absolutely agree, and I think that observation further speaks to the uselessness of the term in constructive dialogue.