bozorgmehr
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- Joined
- Dec 13, 2008
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I know it may sound like a silly question. But I think it's a dead serious issue for all of us to think about. It seems like everybody says they want freedom. From communists, to Islamists, to Monarchists, to MEK and everything in between, everybody is fighting for freedom!!! We've been fighting for it since before the constitutional revolution. Fighting for freedom against the British and Russian encroachment, fighting for freedom against internal repression and lack of accountability, fighting for freedom from American interference, fighting for the freedom to wear hejab, fighting for freedom not to wear the hejab, fighting for freedom against monarchical tyranny, fighting for freedom against religious tyranny, and on and on and on.... And yet today, we are still unable to practice and express some of the most basic and inherent human actions and thoughts in Iran?
What are your views on freedom? Is human inherently free? Should he be? Is there such a thing as absolute freedom? If so, how is it exercised? If not, what are the constraints? And who/what should decide the confines of freedom? If we go by the argument that we all want freedom, is it possible to agree on a definition of relative freedom that incorporates as much freedom as possible? Or should the reverse be true?
What do you think?
What are your views on freedom? Is human inherently free? Should he be? Is there such a thing as absolute freedom? If so, how is it exercised? If not, what are the constraints? And who/what should decide the confines of freedom? If we go by the argument that we all want freedom, is it possible to agree on a definition of relative freedom that incorporates as much freedom as possible? Or should the reverse be true?
What do you think?