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Saturday, October 15, 2016

The Concept of Liberalism

Liberalism has failed to achieve true equality. I believe that liberalism is a victim of its own sparing and semipolitical history and systems. The idea of equality and liberalism has led to the inequalities of gender, race and class. Liberalism has in the end produced inequality.\nLiberalism first became a translucent political movement during the senesce of Enlightenment, when it became popular among philosophers and economists in the Hesperian world. Liberalism rejected the notions, common at the time, of hereditary privilege, state religion. slope philosopher John Locke is often ascribe with founding liberalism as a distinct philosophical tradition. Locke argued that individu entirelyy man has a inborn right to life, liberty, and property, and according to the accessible contract, governments must not aggrieve these rights. Liberals opposed traditional conservatism and sought to replace an below the belt government with representative res cosmosa and the rule of law.\nLiberalism is essentially a political viewpoint or ideology associated with strong patronize for a broad recitation of civil liberties including: freedom of expression, ghostly toleration, and widespread popular exponentiation in the political process, and for the lift of protectionist legal restrictions inhibiting the operation of a capitalist free mart economy. The term has come to hear an ideology with similar views on civil liberties and personal freedom issues but now documentation a much stronger aim for government in regularisation and manipulating the private economy and providing public support for the economically and socially disadvantaged. In its purest form, it is not for the collective to decide what is good for all under liberalism; on the contrary, it is up to the individual to decide what is top hat for themselves and for what they need. Liberalism has three distinct cores: the righteous core, the political core and the economic core. It is the m oral core, more than anything else, which k...

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