▲ | pqtyw 4 days ago | ||||||||||||||||
I don't, you don't either, quite a few people in North Korea might view it differently. My point is what methods do you use to "instil civic virtue"? How do you define it? And most importantly how do you prevent people from diverging from them? Historically totalitarian societies were often quite good at instilling any kind of "virtue" you wanted. Free and democratic societies generally tend to struggle with the "instilling" part. (Of course to be fair there a few success stories (to an extent) like France) | |||||||||||||||||
▲ | esafak 3 days ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
Education, and the fostering of independent civil society, which is something you don't see in authoritarian societies. The virtues you want to instill in a democratic society, contrasted with authoritarian ones, are truth vs. propaganda, accountability vs. loyalty, and courage vs. obedience. I think you are leaning too hard into moral relativism. The differences between free- and authoritarian societies are plain to see. | |||||||||||||||||
|