Answer:
- beginning a war with the neighboring country
- being impeached by her/his country's congressional body
- declaring a national holiday to celebrate her/his ascent to power
Explanation:
A dictatorship is an authoritarian form of government, characterized by a single leader or group of leaders without a weak party or party, little mass mobilization and limited political pluralism. According to other definitions, democracies are regimes in which "those who govern are selected through competitive elections"; therefore, dictatorships are not "democracies." With the advent of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, dictatorships and constitutional democracies emerged as the two main forms of world government, gradually eliminating monarchies, one of the traditional forms of government extended in that time. Typically, in a dictatorial regime, the country's leader is identified with the title of dictator. A common aspect that characterizes dictators is to take advantage of their strong personality, generally suppressing the freedom of expression and the discourse of the masses, to maintain political and social supremacy and stability. Dictatorship and totalitarian societies generally employ political propaganda to diminish the influence of advocates of alternative government systems.