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Freedom is fair
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Freedom is fair
Over at Lib Dem Voice Stephen Tall has a short piece on Our Glorious Leader's increasing positioning the Lib Dems as the party of "fairness" in the run up to the General Election. He concludes that:
Nick’s stated aim – as detailed in his The Liberal Moment pamphlet last autumn – is for the party to replace Labour as the major opposition to the Tories. In which case it makes good, strategic sense to pitch the Lib Dems’ tent squarely on the territory – fairness – traditionally associated with Labour.
Perhaps the reason it has been associated with Labour is that it is possibly the most vacuous, subjective, politically hijacked notion one can think of. Just what on earth is "fairness"? It is a licence for politicians to make subjective judgments about which constituency to pour favours into at any one time.
Is it in the remotest sense "fair" for a bare majority to decide what is fair and then impose it on a substantial minority (that's if you can even assume that in any sense a majority has ever agreed with the winning party's notion of what's fair)?
Let's face it, democracy itself is not fair, enabling as it does the 51% to push around the 49% for a while till the positions are reversed next time around, or whenever. Not for nothing has it been described as two wolves and a sheep voting on what's for dinner.
Throughout human history, the story of the state is one that has at all times been "more fair" to one group than to another - that is, indeed, how those that rely on plebiscites to get into power actually win. And in fact the only way one group or another can be exploited is if there is an entity with some kind of constitutional mandate to enforce the will of some on the many in support of the would-be exploiter: in other words, a state. As Kevin Carson writes, the difference between (actually existing, exploitative...) capitalism and the free (and fair) market is state intervention.
But perhaps most importantly, the biggest issue I have with what Stephen writes above, is that it does not, in any way, follow that in order to realise some ambition to "replace Labour as the major opposition to the Tories" we need to camp on hitherto Labour territory. Not at all. In fact I do not want to be associated in the slightest with those who thought that the lying, authoritarian, interventionist, profligate, thieving, warmongering, scum bags who have "run" this country (as in "into the ground") for a decade were even on the right camp site. Not for a minute.
If we cannot find a way of putting across that freedom is first and foremost about fairness, that the latter follows the former, then we are lost, and, frankly, an embarrassment to the name and the history of the liberal movement. So please, if there is to be "change" this year, let it be the sort of change that can explain freedom, promote freedom. Fairness will follow if that is done properly.
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Comments
The Tories also try to claim fairness. I recall they tried to sell the poll tax based upon its 'fairness'. I'm sure their anti-supermarket campaigns will be based around fairness too - and many more campaigns in the future.
Yeah - it really does seem to me to be the most vague, easily modified or hijacked notion.
Not for nothing has it [democracy] been described as two wolves and a sheep voting on what's for dinner.
Oh, not that tired old metaphor again. It makes no sense - because in nature, predators don't outnumber prey. (And that's as true of the human world as of the metaphorical meadows.) But of course "democracy is fifty sheep and one wolf voting on what's for dinner" doesn't have the scary element, does it? Sure, the wolf's not gonna be happy. But he's not going to be eaten, either.
I don't know what to say. To think it is intended as anything other than a bit of artistic allegory is the rather silly thing, I'd say!
In any case, I think it works better than you give it credit for. Because the actual result of the way democracy works is indeed that the bare majority get to predate on the minority however large if that's their decision. As you say, in the real world of free human interactions, predators would not tend to outnumber their prey.
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