The Rant-Unseen Cracks?

2 months ago
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Natural disasters, such as hurricanes, earthquakes, and floods, can expose the flaws of modern liberalism, which is characterized by faith in progress, individual autonomy, rational governance, and global connectivity. These disasters often defy predictions, overwhelm infrastructure, and demonstrate the limits of human dominion over the environment. The state often imposes drastic measures, suspending individual liberties and highlighting a deeper conflict. The liberal state, designed to be slow, deliberative, and consensus-driven, can feel anathema to disasters, leading to delayed responses and a crisis of legitimacy. Liberalism has championed globalization, fostering interconnected economies, supply chains, and communication networks. However, natural disasters expose the extreme fragility of these systems, as localized events can cause global shortages, economic disruption, and communication blackouts. This over-reliance on complex, just-in-time global systems sacrifices local resilience for global efficiency, leaving communities exposed and dependent on distant aid. Modern liberal governance relies heavily on bureaucracy, expert panels, and reasoned deliberation to formulate policy and manage crises.

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