>>12231Excellent. I hope you use your freedom to do good things.
>>12232This organization seems to hold the contrarian view that America ranks less than #1 in freedom. Not even in the top ten, if I read the article correctly.
>>12233>but I think we could be more free.How so?
>but I wouldn't regard it as true.Where do states interfere, which I presume has a bad connotation?
>wholely lawless landsYes, lawless does not mean without state force. Not all states prefer to govern using laws, especially not laws that apply to the governing class. Law and order are associated, but perhaps there should be a word that simply means social configurations that result from state force, whether it is lawful or not. As that can be what states enforce, by definition.
>>12235>It is my belief that American Exceptionalism appeared later on, after the U.S. was founded...I think it probably depends on who you ask, both during the founding and now. Some saw the revolution as a principled movement -- the first modern attempt to apply democratic and enlightenment ideas to a state.
>Most people founded the U.S. in order to have religious freedom - they wanted to be free to worship God in whatever manner they chose. Therefore, they had a pretty solid basis for founding the U.S. But I don't think religious people today have as much understanding...The puritans wanted a community where they could live their values. That may not have been religious freedom in the modern sense, but it was why they came to the new world.
>all these ideas people have about freedom and the U.S. are just ideas...the U.S. is special and such, but it's not too super-special.Ideas matter, but so do how they function in practice. So the US, in your view, is not *the* shining city on a hill for all to follow. But may shine a bit, perhaps.