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Freedom

Freedom's just another word for nothing left to lose,
Nothing, that's all that bobby left for me [82]

One of the core values of our form of democracy is freedom also described as 'liberty'. Soldiers are inspired to kill in its defence, politicians and revolutionaries post it on their banners. But one person's freedom or liberty is often another's constraint, cost or annoyance.

Freedom of speech can mean freedom to incite violence to engage in abuse or otherwise to give offence. Freedom of action could imply the freedom to injure or to put others to risk or to impose costs on others. What is this 'freedom' that we hold so dear?

Philosophers tell us there are three different concepts implicit in popular enunciations of 'liberty' and it is often convenient for politicians to confuse these when lauding 'our hard won freedoms' or 'liberté, égalité, fraternité'.

The meaning given to liberté by some demagogues (as it came to be used in 'the terror' that followed the French Revolution and by some socialist movements) is sinister, this is the so-called 'liberty' to realise one's full potential according to some ideal (to be a valued citizen, a good person, a Christian, a champion swimmer, to be educated). This is sometimes called positive liberty (or constructive liberty) and is of course just another word for 'slavery' to someone else's ideal.

The normal meaning in our society is termed 'negative liberty', the liberty not to have boundaries set, to be generally unconstrained, for example to come and go at will, to make our choices (but still within some framework).

The third meaning has come to be called 'republican liberty' (after the Roman republic) this is 'true liberty' where there is no external constraining principle.

 

free to hit

 

For example with negative liberty your parents might allow you to express any opinion or your employer might allow you to eat at work but with 'republican liberty' no other person has the power to decide if you can or not.

You are free to resign from your job and, if an adult, to leave home but you are not truly free. Any employer you go to will impose rules and protocols and any place you choose to live will also have rules written or not. Simply walking down the street you are expected to obey the laws of the State and to behave according to the normal social conventions.

Thus your freedom is always constrained to one degree or another and the freedoms we have are indeed hard won. These should not be given up lightly. Freedom of opinion and belief, freedom from the imposition of the beliefs of others, sexual freedom (with informed consent), freedom to express one's views, freedom from unnecessary physical constraint, freedom to die when you wish all need to be defended.

We would want to say that a religious group that believes that early abortion or even contraception is murder or that human cell lines are in some way sacred, on the grounds of divine insight, has every right to hold and expound their beliefs (but no right to impose those beliefs on anyone else).

But what if their belief goes further to believing that children should not be immunised or that they should be denied any medical intervention if ill? And what if they believe children should be severely beaten or enslaved or cared for by people who have been denied any normal sexual outlet? Should Society impose limits on their freedoms and actions?

Again we come back to the principle that we need to evolve these rules as we go and be prepared to select that which works in this time and place. We should not be resorting to divine authority or philosophies from the distant past to determine what is right here and now.

 

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Travel

Canada and the United States - Part1

 

 

In July and August 2023 Wendy and I travelled to the United States again after a six-year gap. Back in 2007 we visited the east coast and west coast and in 2017 we visited 'the middle bits', travelling down from Chicago via Memphis to New Orleans then west across Texas, New Mexico, Nevada and California on our way home.

So, this time we went north from Los Angeles to Seattle, Washington, and then into Canada. From Vancouver we travelled by car, over the Rockies, then flew east to Toronto where we hired a car to travel to Ottawa and Montreal. Our next flight was all the way down to Miami, Florida, then to Fort Lauderdale, where we joined a western Caribbean cruise.  At the end of the cruise, we flew all the way back up to Boston.

Seems crazy but that was the most economical option.  From Boston we hired another car to drive, down the coast, to New York. After New York we flew to Salt Lake City then on to Los Angeles, before returning to OZ.

As usual, save for a couple of hotels and the cars, Wendy did all the booking.

Breakfast in the Qantas lounge on our way to Seattle
Wendy likes to use two devices at once

Read more: Canada and the United States - Part1

Fiction, Recollections & News

ChatGPT and The Craft

As another test of ChatGPT I asked it: "in 2 thousand words, to write a fiction about a modern-day witch who uses chemistry and female charms to enslave her familiars". This is one of the motifs in my novella: The Craft (along with: the great famine; world government; cyber security and overarching artificial intelligence).

Rather alarmingly, two of five ChatGPT offerings, each taking around 22 seconds to generate, came quite close to the sub-plot, although I'm not keen on the style or moralistic endings.  Here they are:

Read more: ChatGPT and The Craft

Opinions and Philosophy

Overthrow and the 'Arab Spring'

 

 

Back in April 2007 I was in Washington DC and wandered into a bookshop for a coffee.  On display was Stephen Kinzer's  National Best Seller: Overthrow: America's Century of Regime Change from Hawaii to Iraq.  So I bought it to read, before bed and on the plane. 

It is a heavily researched and work; very well described by the New York Times as: "A detailed passionate and convincing book... with the pace and grip of a good thriller."  And like a good thriller it was hard to put down.  I can recommend it.

Read more: Overthrow and the 'Arab Spring'

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