Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Sat Sep 09, 2023 9:09 pm
FlashDangerpants wrote: ↑Sat Sep 09, 2023 8:52 pm
So all in all I'm wondering if your take on Liberalism isn't a bit skewed, because little old neoliberal me is probably a much better example of old school liberalism than that church warden could ever be.
Liberalism or Libertarianism?
I am not sure that it is. A Liberal ideal seemed to have included common-sense views about many things and seemed to me generally more conservative (socially).
How do you explain the social radicalism of today or the “undermining of foundation” as I might label it?
I do not read you as old-school liberal. But I admit to the possibility of seeing through “darkened glass”.
We seem to have found a slight flaw with your legendary scholarship. I mean the Liberals (aka the Whigs) who,
inspired by the biggest beast of Classical Liberalism, advanced the cause of free trade in opposition to the
mercantilism common in that era (and which in modern times has been revived by Trump).
These are the liberals who fought against the
Corn Laws - tarrifs in the 18th/19th century that protected British farmers against cheap American imported corn but did so at the expense of the poor who could not afford bread. These Liberals are also the ones who introduced the notion of a private sphere of action in which neither the state nor society at general could intervene so long as no harm was being done.
Some were socially conservative up to a point, particulalry
Edmund Burke who can truly be said to have straddled both the Conservative and Liberal movements in his day. But the true Liberals were more in line with Mill who wrote in
On Liberty about "experiments in living" which pretty much means you get to choose how you live your life (and pursue happiness etc) without anyone having any right to apply social pressure, let alone state intervention.
None of this shoulkd be taken to imply Henry Q style libertarianism.