Quote:
Originally Posted by onwebcam
"Societies do not usually lose their freedom at a blow. They give it up bit by bit, letting themselves be tied down with an infinity of little knots. As rules and regulations increase, their range of actions is gradually compressed. Their options slowly lessen.
Without noticing the change, they become wards of state. They imagine themselves still free, but in a thousand and one ways, their choices are limited and guided by the authorities.
And always, there are what seem to be sensible reasons for letting their
autonomy be peeled away - “safety”, “health”, “social justice”, “equal
opportunity.”
It is easy to become accustomed to docility. That is why eternal vigilance is the price of liberty. Not because liberty is easy to shatter, but, because it can be softened and dismantled with the acquiescence of the very men and women from whom it is being stolen."
Jeff Jacoby, columnist,
Boston Post
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seems that philosophical observations such as these have very little if any value on anything. they reveal no real *revelation* and nothing ever comes out of them.
pretty much everybody knows shit erodes over time, this is just a fancy way of saying societies erode too. duh. and it's been proven over time &time again, pied piping these sorts of revelations does not promote any change whatsoever.
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