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Cavalary: The bottom doesn't have to mean no government, it means guaranteed individual (social) freedom. You may have a government that takes on that role, to stop those aiming to restrict the freedoms of others. Otherwise, anarchy quickly leads to might is right and the result past that point depends entirely on what the mightiest wants.
And, indeed, that is why i have a problem with annarchists. However, scales are meant to go to the extremes, no matter how unrealistic that may be. To guarantee ultimate personal freedom, there cannot be government. Even the one you describe would include at least some restrictions on what freesome are, where they begin, and where they end. That's supposedly the goal of the US government, for example.
So bottom-left would be a situation where the government fully controls the economy and guarantees maximum freedom in people's personal lives. Bottom-right would be a situation where a government guarantees maximum freedom in both those aspects, though yes, I definitely share the view that economic freedom goes counter to social freedom, likely feeling much more strongly about it than you, so it's on those who advocate for it to explain how it would work.
I noticed they actually don't. The manifestations never actually seem to exist. It's like the dog that chases a car, but doesn't know what to do when the car stops.
As for the top, top-left is, well, North Korea, don't need to look to the past. As for top-right, nearly all modern governments are in that quadrant, and the actual top-right corner is likely the wet dream of some conservatives...
Just in the same way that economic freedom and social freedom cannot co-exist at 100%, the same is the case for economic freedom at 100% and social freedom at 0% (one would think this would be more readily obvious, though). "Sure, I can start my dildo business, but actually having a dildo is illegal, so I have to run the business and make a product without having the freedom of successfully producing a product at any moment)."
Well, yeah, Political Compass does make a point of the Overton window shifting far to the right and that positions that are now seen as far left in truth barely touch on the real left, or are even just centrist, which is entirely true, so they may try to nudge it back a bit with their assessments. Would personally place Trump rather where they placed Biden in the 2020 US chart, with Biden moved accordingly, maintaining that pretty small distance between them, which seems about right.
To be honest, i think Biden is to the right of Trump, but that's a whole other kettle of fish. The bigger picture, i think, is that our "information silos" have skewed our perceptions of the overton window quite a bit. In contrast to your assement, i find it strange that "communism" and "socialism" have both been publicly promoted policies by individuals all the sudden, indicating we've most certainly shifted UP and to the LEFT, whereas an annarcho-capitalist like Stefan Molyneux isn't permitted a voice by the powers that be, where as we have a Sanders staffers here saying some fairly odd things (at about
4:10, a sanders staffer implies the window has shifted to the left). I think we can both agree, though, that the conversations has shifted up quite a bit.
Ha, "in theory" being the key term there. Problem is that it doesn't, so you end up with these positions.
Precisely. Government tends to be tone deaf like the video game publishers.
Yep, but as I said above, that doesn't mean you can't have a society in the bottom-left. It might not work on a large unified scale and need communities that are in large part segregated, so those with conflicting views won't need to deal with each other, but if each would be able to choose which community to live in, why not?
Here's the annarchist problem all over again. I've had the same issue with ann-caps: sure, segregate, establish a body to protect one community from the other, and now you have, although mcuh smaller than we have now, a government. How long until it grows large? By this point, you've already destroyed your absolute position. If you fail to set up a government, how are you going to prevent communities from forming that have absolutely no interest in your social freedom that want to organize and take over the other communities? I mean, sure, in reality that wouldn't be something that happens in 5 minutes, but give it a year or two at most.
I keep wondering why do tyrants feel they need to control the personal lives of their subjects. Control the economy, control politics to the extent of not allowing others to rise to power, absolutely, needed to get any major long-term project done anyway, but the society otherwise? That serves the ego and, far more so, the insecurity and paranoia of said tyrants, and may well bring their downfall, when actually using that control to give people more individual freedoms in all other aspects of their lives would make them much more content and unlikely to rebel.
I don't know where this quote came from, and while it's not absolutely accurate, it's certainly a step in the right direction towards understanding: "Everything in life is about sex, except sex, which is about power." The issue is, human beings like to rule others given the opportunity. And who is most anxious to get into that position of power than someone who has the hubris to believe they both can and should?
In terms of threat, keeping close watch on the handful making up the ruler's innermost circle would tend to be the relevant aspect, not the rest of society...
The french would like to have a word with you. Though, I would agree most other times.
Always saw Marx as an economic theorist, personally, not relevant to other aspects. Though I guess this comes from the fact that I see the whole concept of the Left as an economic issue, with other terms applying to other axes. But, back to Marx, remember an article once saying that his writings remain as relevant today as they were when they were written in spelling out what's wrong with the world's economic system, and as useless in providing good ways to fix it. Describes my take on the classical Left, and why for a lack of a better term I call myself a futuristic leftist.
Yaeh, i'd like to see some better ideas from the left than what i've been seeing. I think people need to get as far away from Marx as possible. Criticizing a system doesn't take nearly as much thought as making one that works. That's why i like Dr. Peterson's take on things.
I couldn't get the test on the other site to work. Wouldn't let me move the sliders on my browser (not sure why). The other tests on the site worked (hey, apparently i'm asexual!). As for that scale, i think it could use a bit more thought, too. The trolly names aside, the conclusions don't imply much extreams on the extremes. I think we would do far better to improve questions for the 2d first. Though, to be clear, i think only one particular scale is ultimately the most important: authoritarian vs freedom. No matter the axes, an excessive amount of authoritarianism means you're a serf, but too little means you're scrambling in an all-out free-for-all while waiting for someone else to come in and change the game. Perhaps a better outlook would be to ask ourselves, too, how much these scales overlap: for is not political freedom and personal freedom very much tied to one another, and is not economic the same?