... autarchy in every country of the world, and eventually to an autarchy in the many staples of life that should flow from really cheap energy. • WILL TECHNOLOGY REPLACE SOCIAL ENGINEERING? I hope these examples suggest how social problems ...
... autarchy," which they use to denigrate the notion off local self-reliance. Yeah, they say it's bad. What "autarchy" means is people in some area saying, "Look, we'd like our lives to be like this, not like you guys tell us." Take Japan ...
... Autarchy in the economic sense and autarchy in the political sense are both beyond realization in the modern world. In the second place, “excessive” interference with self-determination may come from sources other than the former ...
... autarchy — of economic self-sufficiency which, he believed, could alone give reality to political and ideological independence. Since then national autarchy has become clearly obsolete. Not even De- Gaulle dreams of reversing European ...
... autarchy were not reconcilable with the Rotary International character. The life of the clubs became more difficult as pressure from the fascist regime increased in intensity. On December 20, 1938, at Milan, in a meeting suffused with ...
... autarchy and has more recently gone into the question as to what extent may Germany be expected to meet her wartime requirements of aviation gasoline through the production of substitute fuels. There is no gainsaying that, with the ...
... autarchy is impossible. Even if it were feasible for the EURATOM countries to build a private and exclusive nuclear industry without outside help, they are specifically pledged by their treaty to ensure that EURATOM engages in the ...
... autarchy of the Five- Year Plan would be ended. I arrived in Paris, I remember, at a time of real — if unrealistic — hope. In that summer of 1933 Paris was alive with a conspiratorial indignation, frenzied beyond anything I had imagined ...
... autarchy under Russia's direction" or a continent "sunk in a state of anarchy." Prime Minister Alcide de Gasperi of Italy described himself as "a citizen of any destitute country in the world" and asked a pathetic question: "How long ...
... autarchy;" their imagination was fired by visions of Germany being transformed into an immense continental power and rendered impregnable against the seapower of England; their cupidity was whetted by the promise of panregionalism in ...