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Do not fill this in!{{MessageBox/Stub}} {{MessageBox/Art Improvement}}{{Ideology |themecolor=#AC0636 |textcolor=#FFFFFF |title=[[File:Fabian.png]] '''Fabian Socialism''' |image=FabianSocialismSimplified.png |caption="Money and credit are as much human contrivances as bicycles, and as liable to expansion and modification as any other sort of prevalent but imperfect machine." |aliases= [[File:Fabian.png]] Fabianism<br> [[File:Fabian.png]] Fabian Society<br> [[File:OldLabour.png]] Old Labour<br> [[File:ClementAttlee.png]] Attleeism<br> [[File:SocDarw.png]] Socialist Darwinism<br> [[File:LeftDarwinist.png]] Left-Social Darwinism [[File:LeftSocDarwin.png]]<br> [[File:WelfDarw.png]] Literal Social Darwinism [[File:SocDarw.png]]<br> [[File:Luxem.png]]/{{Alias|ML.png|Marxism-Leninism|Fabie "socialism"}}<br> {{Alias|Orth.png|Orthodox Theocracy|Fabian Roundtable Elites (by Jay Dyer)}} |alignments=[[File:CentreAuthLeft.png|link=:Category:Centrists]] [[:Category:Centrists|{{Color|#C0C0C0|'''Center-'''}}]][[:Category:Authoritarian Left|{{Color|#F9BABA|'''AuthLeft'''}}]]<br> [[File:Cultcenter.png|link=:Category:Cultural Center]] [[:Category:Cultural Center|{{Color|#9D22B2|'''Culturally'''}} {{Color|#8BC34A|'''Variable'''}}]]<br> {{Info|Socialists}}<br> {{Info|Georgists}}<br> {{Info|Corporatists}}<br> {{Info|Welfarists}}<br> |influences= [[File:Bism.png]] [[Bismarckism]]<br> [[File:BritishEmpire.png]] [[Imperialism|British Imperialism]]<br> [[File:Ethsoc.png]] [[Liberal Socialism|Ethical Socialism]]<br> [[File:Eugen.png]] [[Eugenicism]] (Except for [[File:HGW.png]] H. G. Wells)<br> [[File:Humanismpix.png]] {{PHB|Humanism}}<br> [[File:Radlib.png]] [[Radicalism]]<br> [[File:Res Publica.png]] [[Roman Republicanism]]<br> [[File:Socauth.png]] [[Social Authoritarianism]]<br> [[File:Darwinist.png]] [[Social Darwinism]] (Disowned later)<br> [[File:Socgeo.png]] [[Social Georgism]]<br> [[File:SocialistCorporatism.png]] [[Corporatism|Socialist Corporatism]]<br> [[File:Technocracy.png]] [[Technocracy]] |school = |personal = [[File:Community.png]] '''Olivettism''' {{Collapse| *[[File:Antifash2.png]] [[Anti-Fascism]] *[[File:AntiParti.png]] Anti-Particracy *[[File:European Federalism.png]] [[European Federalism]] *[[File:Fed.png]] [[Federalism]] *[[File:Humanismpix.png]] {{PHB|Humanism}} *[[File:Indust.png]] [[Industrialism]] *[[File:Leftcorp.png]] [[Corporatocracy|Left-Corporatocracy]] *[[File:Liberalsoc.png]] [[Liberal Socialism]] *[[File:Local.png]] [[Localism]] *[[File:SocialCommun.png]] [[Communitarianism|Social Communitarianism]] *[[File:Socdem.png]] [[Social Democracy]] *[[File:SocialistCorporatism.png]] [[Corporatism|Socialist Corporatism]] *[[File:SocTechLib.png]] [[Technoliberalism|Socialist Technoliberalism]] *[[File:Utsoc.png]] [[Utopian Socialism]] *[[File:Waldensian.png]] [[Protestant Theocracy|Waldensianism]] }}<br> [[File:Shaw.png]] '''Shawism''' {{Collapse| *[[File:AntiAnarchy.png]] {{PHB|Anti-Anarchism}} *[[File:CapAnti_Clerical.png]] [[Secularism|Anti-Clericalism]] *[[File:Antiimp.png]] {{PCBA|Anti-Imperialism}} *[[File:AntiMil.png]] Anti-Militarism *[[File:AntiRacism.png]] {{PCBA|Anti-Racism}} *[[File:Antthe.png]] {{PCBA|Anti-Theism|Anti-Religion}} *[[File:Antivaccine.png]] [[Neoluddism|Anti-Vaccination]]<ref>Against smallpox.</ref> *[[File:BourgSoc.png]] [[Reactionary Socialism|Bourgeois Socialism]] (Accused)<ref>[https://www.marxists.org/archive/caudwell/1938/studies/ch01.htm George Bernard Shaw: A Study of the Bourgeois Superman]</ref> *[[File:Contrarianism-Icon.png]] [[Contrarianism]] *[[File:Demsocstar.png]] [[Democratic Socialism]] *[[File:Ecosoc.png]] [[Eco-Socialism]] *[[File:Ethsoc.png]] [[Liberal Socialism|Ethical Socialism]] *[[File:Eugen.png]] [[Eugenicism]] *[[File:Gradualism.png]] [[Reformist Marxism|Gradualism]] *[[File:Humanismpix.png]] {{PHB|Humanism}} *[[File:Internat.png]] [[Internationalism]] *[[File:Ormarxf.png]] [[Marxism]] (Initially) *[[File:Nietzsche.png]] {{PHB|Nietzscheanism}} *[[File:NonMarxSoc.png]] [[Utopian Socialism|Non-Marxist Socialism]] (Later on) *[[File:Pac.png]] {{PCBA|Pacifism}} *[[File:Totalitarian.png]] [[Totalitarianism]] (Accused)<ref>[https://link.springer.com/book/10.1057/9781137330208 Bernard Shaw and Totalitarianism: Longing for Utopia]</ref> *[[File:Suffragette.png]] [[Feminism|Women's Suffrage]] *'''Sympathetic''' **[[File:MichaelCollins.png]] [[Authoritarian Capitalism|Collinsism]] **[[File:SocialistFash.png]] [[Fascism|Fascist Socialism]] **[[File:Nazi.png]] [[Nazism]] **[[File:Stalin.png]] [[Marxism-Leninism|Stalinism]] }}<br> [[File:HGW.png]] '''Wellsism''' {{Collapse| *[[File:Anti-Catholic.png]] Anti-Catholicism *[[File:CapAnti_Clerical.png]] [[Secularism|Anti-Clericalism]] *[[File:Antifash2.png]] [[Anti-Fascism]] *[[File:Antiimp.png]] {{PCBA|Anti-Imperialism}} (Debatably) *[[File:Anti-Marx.png]] Anti-Marxism *[[File:Anti-Semitic.png]] Anti-Semitism *[[File:Anti-Stalin.png]] Anti-Stalinism *[[File:Benevolent_Whitesup.png]] [[White Nationalism|Benevolent White Nationalism]] (Debatably)<ref>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Political_views_of_H._G._Wells#Race</ref> *[[File:Cermon.png]] [[Ceremonial Monarchism]] *[[File:Civlibert.png]] [[Civil Libertarianism]] (Later on) *[[File:EdvardBenes.png]] [[Ethnonationalism|Benešism]] *[[File:Demsocstar.png]] [[Democratic Socialism]] *[[File:Ethsoc.png]] [[Liberal Socialism|Ethical Socialism]] *[[File:Humanismpix.png]] {{PHB|Humanism}} *[[File:Internat.png]] [[Internationalism]] *[[File:NonMarxSoc.png]] [[Utopian Socialism|Non-Marxist Socialism]] *[[File:Pac.png]] Pacifism (Mostly) *[[File:Bernst.png]] [[Reformist Marxism]] *[[File:Republicanismpix.png]] [[Republicanism]] *[[File:Honk.png]] [[Satirism]] *[[File:Techsoc.png]] [[Socialism|Techno-Socialism]] *[[File:WelfChauvin.png]] [[Welfare Chauvinism]] *[[File:Suffragette.png]] [[Feminism|Women's Suffrage]] *[[File:Xenophobia.png]] Xenophobia *'''Historically:''' **[[File:World Federalism2.png]] [[World Federalism]] }} |influenced= [[File:ClementAttlee.png]] [[Social Democracy|Attleeism]]<br> [[File:Nehru.png]] [[Esoteric Socialism|Besantism]] (Formerly)<br> [[File:Nicola Bombacci.png]] [[Fascism|Bombaccism]]<br> [[File:Chesterton.png]] [[Distributism|Chestertonism]] (Disowned)<br> [[File:BrotherOfItaly.png]] [[Progressive Conservatism|Giulism]]<br> [[File:Guildsoc.png]] [[Guild Socialism]]<br> [[File:Keynes.png]] [[Keynesian School|John Maynard Keynesism]]<br> [[File:PAP(Singapore).png]] [[Authoritarian Capitalism|Lee Kuan Yew Thought]] (Formerly)<br> |examples= *[[File:Cball-UK.png]] [[Ceremonial Monarchism|the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland]] [[Liberal Socialism|under the leadership of Old Labour]] [[File:OldLabour.png]] (1924, 1929-1931, 1945-1951, 1964-1970) |song= |likes= [[File:reform.png]] [[Reformism]]<br> [[File:eugen.png]] [[Eugenicism]] (Mostly) |dislikes= [[File:RevSoc.png]] [[Socialism|Revolutionary Socialism]] |theorists= [[File:Cball-Commonwealth.png]] '''Commonwealth Realm''' {{Collapse| *[[File:Nehru.png]] [[Esoteric Socialism|Annie Besant]] (1847-1933, formerly) [[File:Cball-UK.png]] United Kingdom *[[File:Shaw.png]] [[Liberal Socialism|George Bernard Shaw]] (1856-1950) [[File:Cball-UK.png]] {{PBW|UKball|UK}} *[[File:HGW.png]] [[Democratic Socialism|Herbert George Wells]] (1866-1946) [[File:Cball-UK.png]] {{PBW|UKball|UK}} *[[File:BertrandRussel.png]] [[Liberal Socialism|Bertrand Russel]] (1872-1970) [[File:Cball-UK.png]] {{PBW|UKball|UK}} *[[File:ClementAttlee.png]] [[Social Democracy|Clement Atlee]] (1883-1967) [[File:Cball-UK.png]] {{PBW|UKball|UK}} *[[File:Keynes.png]] [[Keynesian School|John Meynard Keynes]] (1883-1946) [[File:Cball-UK.png]] {{PBW|UKball|UK}} *[[File:GDHCole.png]] [[Guild Socialism|G. D. H. Cole]] (1889-1959) [[File:Cball-UK.png]] {{PBW|UKball|UK}} }}<br> [[File:World.png]] '''Elsewhere''' {{Collapse| *[[File:Christsocfem.png]] [[Religious Feminism|Frances Willard]] (1839-1898) [[File:Cball-US.png]] {{PBW|USAball|USA}} *[[File:Nicola_Bombacci.png]] [[Fascism|Nicola Bombacci]] (1879-1945) [[File:Cball-Italy.png]] {{PBW|Italyball|Italy}} *[[File:Community.png]] [[Communitarianism|Adriano Olivetti]] (1901-1960) [[File:Cball-Italy.png]] {{PBW|Italyball|Italy}} *[[File:LKY.png]] [[Authoritarian Capitalism|Lee Kuan Yew]] (1923-2015, formerly) [[File:Cball-Singapore.png]] Singapore }} }} {{Quote| quote="We ought to tackle the Jewish question by admitting the right of States to make eugenic experiments by weeding out any strains that they think undesirable, but insisting that they should do it as humanely as they can afford to, and not shock civilization by such misdemeanors as the expulsion and robbery of Einstein." |speaker=[[File:Shaw.png]] [[Liberal Socialism|George Bernard Shaw]] }} '''Fabian Socialism''', or simply '''Fabianism''', is a mildly authoritarian left socialist ideology which refers to the ideology of the Fabian Society, specifically the policies it advocated during the early 1900s which sought to reduce poverty through the use of eugenics. ==History== Fabian socialism emerged in the late 19th century in the United Kingdom as a response to the social and economic upheavals of the Industrial Revolution. The movement was formally established in 1884 with the founding of the Fabian Society, a group of intellectuals, writers, and activists committed to promoting gradual social reform rather than revolutionary change. Its founders included prominent figures such as George Bernard Shaw, Sidney Webb, Beatrice Webb, and Havelock Ellis, who sought to influence public policy through research, debate, and advocacy. The Fabians were distinctive for their belief in incremental reform. Rejecting the revolutionary methods of Marxist socialism, they advocated for a measured, rational approach to achieving social justice, emphasizing education, legislative action, and the dissemination of ideas. They promoted policies such as public ownership of key industries, progressive taxation, social welfare programs, and labor rights, often using detailed studies and pamphlets to advance their arguments. Throughout the early 20th century, the Fabian Society played a key role in shaping the development of the British Labour Party, providing intellectual foundations and policy proposals that informed its platform. The Fabians were influential in promoting social reforms including the establishment of old-age pensions, labor protections, and the expansion of public services. Their approach combined a commitment to socialism with pragmatic engagement with existing political institutions, aiming to achieve long-term structural change without destabilizing society. In the postwar period, Fabian socialism continued to impact British politics, particularly during the expansion of the welfare state under the Labour governments of the mid-20th century. The Fabian Society remained active in public discourse, producing research, reports, and policy recommendations on issues ranging from economic planning to education and public health. Internationally, Fabian principles influenced other social democratic movements, contributing to the broader adoption of gradualist, reform-oriented approaches to socialism in Europe and beyond. ==Beliefs== Fabianism believed that certain people have certain genetically fixed qualities which created greater inequality, so eugenics should be mandated to reduce these inequalities while rejecting self-fulfilment as the goal of a socialist society. The basic belief of Fabians is that the transformation from capitalism to socialism is a [[File:Gradualism.png]] gradual and inevitable transformation process. They saw that the expansion of British democratic constitutionalism and the development of labor organizations were enough to promote necessary social reforms. Therefore, they rejected Lenin's views on class struggle and fierce revolution, and advocated studying social reality and using democratic, scientific and moderate means to solve problems through elections and voting. and emphasizes returning power to the hands of the intellectual elite through education. This also contrasts with the radical individualism of economic [[File:Eugen.png]] [[Eugenicism]]. === [[File:Shaw.png]] '''Shawism''' === George Bernard Shaw (1856–1950) was an Irish playwright, critic, and political activist whose career blended literary satire with persistent engagement in socialist politics. Born in Dublin, Shaw grew up in a financially unstable Protestant middle-class household. In 1876 he moved to London, where he initially struggled as a writer and journalist before gradually establishing himself as a public intellectual. During the 1880s Shaw joined the Fabian Society, a reformist socialist group advocating gradual social transformation through democratic institutions rather than revolutionary upheaval. His involvement with the Fabians placed him within the tradition of [[File:Demsocstar.png]]'''democratic socialism''' and [[File:Ethsoc.png]]'''ethical socialism''', both of which sought social equality through policy reform, education, and state intervention rather than violent revolution. Shaw’s political thought developed alongside his literary career. His plays including Man and Superman, Major Barbara, and Pygmalion, often explored class inequality, moral hypocrisy, and the contradictions of capitalist society. Through satire and dialogue, Shaw criticized imperial expansion, militarism, and religious authority, reflecting his strong [[File:Antiimp.png]]'''anti-imperialist''', [[File:AntiMil.png]]'''anti-militarist''', and [[File:CapAnti_Clerical.png]]'''anti-clerical''' outlook. He frequently attacked organized religion itself, seeing it as a barrier to rational social progress. At the same time he advocated [[File:Humanismpix.png]]'''humanism''' and [[File:Internat.png]]'''internationalism''', arguing that political systems should prioritize universal human welfare rather than narrow national or sectarian interests. His political activism also included support for [[File:Suffragette.png]]'''women’s suffrage''' and outspoken opposition to racial discrimination, placing him among early twentieth-century socialist voices supporting [[File:AntiRacism.png]]'''anti-racism''' and gender equality. In his early intellectual development Shaw showed interest in the theories of Karl Marx, studying [[File:Ormarxf.png]]Marxist political economy during the late nineteenth century. Over time, however, he distanced himself from orthodox Marxism. Shaw rejected the idea that socialism would arise through violent class revolution. Instead he defended [[File:Gradualism.png]]'''gradualism''', the Fabian strategy of introducing socialist policies through democratic reforms and public education. This shift placed him within the tradition of [[File:NonMarxSoc.png]]'''non-Marxist socialism''', which preserved socialist goals while abandoning revolutionary Marxist methods. Critics sometimes described this position as [[File:BourgSoc.png]]'''bourgeois socialism''', arguing that Shaw’s approach reflected middle-class reformism rather than proletarian revolution. Shaw’s writings also displayed strong philosophical influences. His admiration for [[File:Nietzsche.png]]Friedrich Nietzsche shaped aspects of his thinking about individual creativity, moral transformation, and social evolution. While Shaw rejected Nietzsche’s aristocratic politics, he adopted the idea that humanity could evolve culturally and intellectually into higher forms of civilization. This evolutionary optimism also led Shaw to express controversial interest in [[File:Eugen.png]]'''eugenics''', which he believed could improve public health and social conditions through rational planning. These views reflected a broader early twentieth-century intellectual climate in which eugenic theories were widely debated among both conservatives and reformers. Shaw’s political reputation was complicated by his contrarian temperament. He frequently expressed provocative or deliberately paradoxical opinions in public debates. This tendency led to criticism when he made controversial comments about authoritarian regimes during the interwar period. Shaw visited the Soviet Union in the 1930s and spoke positively about aspects of its economic planning, which some critics interpreted as sympathy for the rule of [[File:Stalin.png]]Joseph Stalin. Similarly, his willingness to discuss certain policies of regimes such as [[File:SocialistFash.png]]Benito Mussolini or [[File:Nazi.png]]Adolf Hitler in analytical terms led critics to accuse him of being sympathetic to fascism or authoritarian socialism. Shaw himself insisted that these comments reflected curiosity about social experiments rather than endorsement, though the remarks contributed to long-lasting controversy around his political views. Throughout his life Shaw also advocated [[File:Pac.png]]'''pacifism''', particularly in his criticism of the destructive effects of modern warfare. After witnessing the devastation of World War I, he intensified his attacks on militarism and nationalist propaganda. His political essays argued that war benefited ruling elites while harming ordinary citizens, reinforcing his broader socialist critique of imperial and capitalist power structures. Despite these controversies, Shaw remained a central figure in British intellectual life for more than half a century. Awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1925, he combined literary success with constant engagement in political debate. His work promoted a form of socially conscious reformism grounded in democratic socialism, humanitarian ethics, and satirical criticism of established institutions. Through his plays, essays, and activism, Shaw helped shape early twentieth-century discussions about social welfare, political reform, and the moral responsibilities of modern states. === [[File:HGW.png]] '''Wellsism''' === H. G. Wells (1866–1946) was an English novelist, journalist, and political thinker whose career blended literary innovation with ambitious social commentary. Born in Bromley, Wells came from a lower-middle-class background and experienced financial instability during his youth, working as an apprentice draper before receiving a scholarship to study science at the Royal College of Science under the biologist T. H. Huxley. This scientific education deeply influenced his worldview. During the 1890s he rose to fame through speculative fiction such as The Time Machine, The War of the Worlds, and The Invisible Man. These works combined scientific imagination with social criticism, reflecting Wells’s belief that technological change would reshape civilization and require new political and ethical frameworks. During the early twentieth century Wells became heavily involved in political debates about socialism and global governance. He associated with the Fabian Society but soon clashed with its gradualist leadership, especially George Bernard Shaw and Sidney Webb. Wells argued that socialism required more energetic transformation of society rather than purely incremental reform. His political writing—particularly books such as A Modern Utopia and The Open Conspiracy—outlined a vision of technologically guided social planning that scholars often describe as [[File:Techsoc.png]]'''technological socialism'''. In this vision, scientific expertise and rational administration would replace chaotic market competition while maintaining individual liberties and democratic governance. Wells’s socialism differed sharply from orthodox Marxism. Although he initially engaged with Marxist ideas and occasionally expressed sympathy for [[File:Bernst.png]]reformist interpretations of them, he rejected strict economic determinism and class revolution. His writings instead advocated [[File:Ethsoc.png]]'''ethical socialism''', a moral and humanitarian approach focused on improving human welfare through education, social planning, and democratic reform. This perspective placed him within the tradition of [[File:NonMarxSoc.png]]'''non-Marxist socialism''' and [[File:Demsocstar.png]]'''democratic socialism''', emphasizing social equality while rejecting authoritarian methods. Wells remained strongly critical of both the Soviet system and the leadership of Joseph Stalin, making him a vocal critic of [[File:Anti-Stalin.png]]Stalinism despite his interest in socialist modernization. His political outlook also contained strong commitments to [[File:Humanismpix.png]]'''humanism''' and [[File:Internat.png]]'''internationalism'''. Wells believed that nationalism and imperial rivalry threatened global stability. As a result, he became one of the most prominent early advocates of [[File:World_Federalism2.png]]'''world federalism''', proposing a unified planetary government that would prevent war and coordinate economic development. This idea appeared frequently in his essays and speculative fiction. His [[File:Pac.png]]pacifism, especially after the devastation of World War I, reflected his belief that modern industrial warfare made traditional national politics dangerously obsolete. Although he supported Allied resistance against fascism during World War II, he remained broadly skeptical of militarism and consistently opposed fascist political movements in Europe. Wells’s political writings also addressed social reform within Britain. He supported [[File:Suffragette.png]]'''women’s suffrage''', civil liberties, and educational reform, later moving closer to a [[File:Civlibert.png]]'''civil libertarian''' perspective that emphasized freedom of speech and individual rights alongside social welfare. His views on the British constitutional system evolved over time. Early in his career he tolerated the existence of the monarchy in a symbolic role, effectively supporting a form of [[File:Cermon.png]]'''ceremonial monarchism''', though he later expressed sympathy for [[File:Republicanismpix.png]]republican alternatives. His broader political orientation favored democratic institutions combined with extensive social programs, placing him within the intellectual lineage of modern welfare-state thinking. At the same time, Wells’s record contained contradictions that later scholars have debated. Some of his writings expressed anxieties about immigration and social decline that critics interpret as forms of [[File:Xenophobia.png]]'''xenophobia''' or [[File:WelfChauvin.png]]'''welfare chauvinism''', where social benefits were imagined primarily for national populations. Certain remarks about race and civilization have been interpreted as reflecting elements of paternalistic or hierarchical thinking, sometimes described by historians as a form of “[[File:Benevolent_Whitesup.png]]benevolent” racial nationalism typical of early twentieth-century liberal imperial discourse. His comments about religious institutions were also sharply critical; Wells frequently attacked organized religion, especially the authority of the Catholic Church and the broader influence of clergy in public life, reflecting strong [[File:CapAnti_Clerical.png]]'''anti-clerical''' and [[File:Anti-Catholic.png]]'''anti-Catholic''' tendencies. Wells’s [[File:Honk.png]]satirical writing style shaped much of his political influence. Through essays, novels, and public commentary he mocked rigid ideological dogma and exposed social hypocrisy. Works such as The Outline of History attempted to reinterpret world history through a scientific and evolutionary lens, reinforcing his belief that human society was progressing toward a more unified global civilization. By the later years of his life he had become an influential public intellectual whose ideas about technology, global governance, and social planning influenced debates about international institutions and the future of the welfare state. Although his views often shifted during his long career, Wells consistently pursued the idea that modern society required rational organization guided by science, democracy, and humanitarian ethics. His combination of speculative fiction and political theory made him one of the most distinctive voices in twentieth-century discussions about socialism, technological progress, and global political order. ==How to Draw== #Draw a ball #Add the eyes You're done! {{Flag|FabianSocialism.png}} ==Relationships== ===Friends=== *[[File:Ethsoc.png]] [[Liberal Socialism|Ethical Socialism]] - For the greater good of all mankind! *[[File:Sewersoc.png]] [[Sewer Socialism]] - My American variant. *[[File:ClementAttlee.png]] [[Social Democracy|Attleeism]] - The closest we got to taking over the world! *[[File:Res Publica.png]] [[Roman Republicanism]] - I named my movement after Fabius. *[[File:Utsoc.png]] [[Utopian Socialism]] - I am a socialist, but not Marxist. *[[File:Bernst.png]] [[Reformist Marxism]] - Though this one isn't bad. *[[File:Guildsoc.png]] [[Guild Socialism]] - Guilds can gradually take over the economy, no revolution necessary. *[[File:Technocracy.png]] [[Technocracy]] - Maybe you can be a tool to gradually move towards socialism. *[[File:Nicola Bombacci.png]] [[Fascism|Bombaccism]] - Interesting man, and "fascist socialization" seems to take influence from me. ===Frenemies=== *[[File:Eugen.png]] [[Eugenicism]] & [[File:Darwinist.png]] [[Social Darwinism]] - Everything I ever wanted was for the greater good, and all you care about is yourself! <s>The eugenics are pretty based tho.</s> *[[File:Bism.png]] [[Bismarckism]] - Based economics but I oppose the German Empire. *[[File:PAP(Singapore).png]] [[Authoritarian Capitalism|Lee Kuan Yew Thought]] - You used me to gain power, but then purged me afterwards. *[[File:Nehru.png]] [[Esoteric Socialism|Besantism]] - Why did you leave my movement? *[[File:Corptism.png]] [[Corporatism]] - Not a socialist but my economic theories often lead here. *[[File:Prog-u.png]] [[Progressivism]] - Good view of history but puritanism is the best path to socialism, abundance invites hedonism preserving capitalism. *[[File:Socdem.png]] [[Social Democracy]] - I don't really like going further than you but you also wrote a strategy about abandoning me for Labour! ===Enemies=== *[[File:Clib.png]] [[Classical Liberalism]] - Capitalist anti-eugenicist who keeps opposing my ideology. *[[File:MacDonald.png]] [[Machiavellianism|MacDonaldism]] - Damn traitor who betrayed my principles for his selfish gain. *[[File:Synd.png]] [[Syndicalism]] - Pratically a bolshevik, so violent and aggressive. *[[File:Lpop.png]] [[Left-Wing Populism]] - Bolshevik tactics, we need to be more elegant and refined. *[[File:Orthlen.png]] [[Leninism]] - Literal Bolshevik. ==Further Info== ===Wikipedia=== *[[w:Fabian Society|Fabian Society]] *[[w:Social Darwinism#Fabianism|Fabianism]] ==Gallery== ===Portrait=== <gallery> </gallery> ====Alternative designs==== <gallery> Fabian_flag.svg|Legacy flag design </gallery> ==Navigation== {{Navbox/Authleft}} {{Navbox/Socialists}} [[zh:费边社会主义]] [[Category:English]] [[Category:Culturally Left]] [[Category:Democratic]] Summary: Please note that all contributions to Polcompball Wiki may be edited, altered, or removed by other contributors. 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