Pattern-chaser wrote: ↑March 17th, 2025, 6:05 am
Pattern-chaser wrote: ↑March 16th, 2025, 10:01 amI think a successful nation is one that provides welfare and wellbeing to its citizens.
Fried Egg wrote: ↑March 17th, 2025, 5:51 am
That is a metric that is very biased towards a statist/socialist way of thinking.
Perhaps it is. It is certainly not incompatible with "a statist/socialist way of thinking".
It is not merely
compatible with statist/socialist ways of thinking, it is a direct
offshoot of it. It suggests that a state cannot be deemed successful unless it is the state
itself that directly provides the welfare and wellbeing to it's citizens. A state that merely facilitates the
conditions that lead to these things being provided would be judged as a "failed" state by your definition.
Fried Egg wrote: ↑March 17th, 2025, 5:51 am
I would modify it to something like this: A successful nation is one that provides the best environment that allows it's people's welfare and wellbeing to flourish. At least this is a more politically neutral and doesn't pre-suppose that it has to be the state that directly provides these things.
That is a metric that is very biased towards a Libertarian/Individualist way of thinking.
Not at all because nowhere in my definition does it stipulate exactly what the limits of the state should be. It creates the conditions necessary for welfare and wellbeing to flourish but it does not necessarily provide those things directly.
The balance between the state and the individual is basic to any human society. If the state provides nothing to its citizens, it has no raison d'etre, no reason to exist. If the state goes too far, then it has betrayed those it serves. Balance. Middle Path.
Well, indeed. I'm not an anarchist so I agree that the state needs to do something for it's people. Of course, the devil is in the details and we would no doubt argue exactly where to draw the line. But surely, you would agree that the state should only be a provider of welfare as a last resort? If some form of government managed to create such ideal conditions that it didn't need to provide welfare to it's people, that would be better?
One thing I do want to add though is that I think
individualism is often mischaracterised as being opposed to society or collective action. For instance, one might be opposed to state sponsored welfare programmes for helping the poor, while not opposed to voluntarily funded organisations helping the poor. In other words, just because one might be opposed to the state directly providing something, does not mean that one is opposed to that thing being provided at all.