When Are Restrictions on Liberty Good? - [Political Philosophy]

2 years ago
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When can legitimate restrictions be placed upon liberty? When is a dictatorship a better guarantor of a people's quality of life than a democracy?

I've been doing a lot of thinking into dictatorships lately, and begin to see it more and more as an inevitability in the West's near future. Societal division, moral drift, and governmental and societal institutions which no longer serve their original mandates all are obvious portents of doom for a liberal society.

What fills the void in power vacuums tends to be, at first, the simplest and most crude forms of government, i.e authoritarians. Given what is at least a strong possibility (I contend a certainty, but I'll be modest here) of the introduction of an era of autocrats in the West, I see a striking lack of forethought into the subject.

As such, I've begun work on a novel political theory into the nature of dictatorships; an attempt to predict what sorts of outcomes we can expect if autocrats are to take power. I will be turning this work into a full length scripted and edited documentary on my political theory of dictatorship, as well as my predictions for the upcoming American Dictatorship. Subscribe to see that when it comes.

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