From the Feuilletons

Comments on the article: In Today's Feuilletons

23/07/2007

 
Cassandra
(6 comments)
registered on 13/02/2007
The Safety of Totalitarianism
Quote:
"There's something missing in Germany: anti-totalitarian consciousness. We've had anti-communism, we've had anti-fascism on command, but we've had no clear-sighted anti-totalitarianism. While totalitarian regimes have existed on both German soils, there is no fully-developed sensitivity for the threat to freedom."
I posit that Sofsky's "sensitivity for the threat to freedom" comes with the Enlightenment's philosophy of Libertarianism, that was - at heart - an Anglo-Saxon project. It brought with it the blessings and accomplishments of human autonomy, the individual as operative unit, limited government, free market and a laissez faire attitude towards economy, and all what comes with reason and the right of free enquiry: technology, mechanization, and the scientific method. Germany, upon shedding feudalism - instead of embracing Libertarianism, became home to the collectivist Counter-Enlightenment movement as started by Rousseau; thereafter - to its later chagrin - it adopted from that collectivist movement, both its political branches: Right Collectivism, National Socialism, and after its defeat, Left Collectivism, Communism.
>>>>> http://millennium-notes.blogspot.com/2007/08/safety-of-totalitarianism.html >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Created on 01/08/2007 | Reviewed on 02/08/2007
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