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George Peretz KC's avatar

I’m sure you’re aware of this, but from a UK perspective, this argument pretty much exactly matches arguments by thinkers in the Labour Party tradition for the claim that social democratic interventions by the state - the welfare state, state provision of public services such as health, economic regulation - increase rather than decrease freedom, at least for the vast majority (cf RH Tawney’s remark that “freedom for the pike is death to the minnow”). Indeed, many UK Conservative Party politicians in the “One Nation” tradition (or their Christian Democrat equivalents across the Channel, more visibly influenced by Catholic social thought) would traditionally have agreed with the thrust of that too.

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Charles E. Smith's avatar

Great article. Generally on this topic, I've always thought that in US Locke's opening segment of section 22 of the Second Treatise (Chap. 4: "Slavery")--"to be free from any superior power on earth, and not to be under the will or legislative authority of men but to be ruled only by the law of nature"--is far more popular and often cited versus his statement later in the same section: "Freedom then is not what Sir Robert Filmer tells us, namely a liberty for everyone to do what he wants, live as he pleases, and not be tied by any laws. Rather, ·freedom is one of two things·. •Freedom of nature is being under no restraint except the law of nature. •Freedom of men under government is having a standing rule to live by, common to everyone in the society in question, and made by the legislative power that has been set up in it; a liberty to follow one’s own will in anything that isn’t forbidden by the rule . . . "

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