This is a brilliantly executed take-down of a poisonous ideology...
Everyone should read this. — Baden
This essay argues that radical individualism is less a coherent political philosophy than a theatrical pose that conceals its reliance on collective institutions, rationalizes inequality and rebrands domination as personal freedom. By examining its philosophical roots and public champions we expose a paradox at its core: the celebration of liberty through authoritarian means.
We focus on three figures: Elon Musk, Donald Trump and Jordan Peterson. — Moliere
There it is, right there: the hard kernel of contradiction. What is property? The concept doesn't exist in nature; it's a social convention, underpinned and guaranteed by Law, that giant edifice maintained at public expense, and which functions only so long as a large majority of the population is not free of its constraints. If property were acquired through individual effort and voluntary exchanges, the profits and losses* should not be heritable. Every infant should start life in equal swaddling, perhaps under the care of robots or professional nannies, so that they have a "level playing field", where no person or group is in a position to manipulate the rules.The political and cultural individualism of Musk, Trump and Peterson follows a script rooted in Nozick’s Entitlement Theory. In Anarchy, State and Utopia Nozick defends a minimal state limited to protecting property and voluntary exchange.... — Moliere
Yet no holders of inherited wealth (and its considerable dividends) seems eager to embrace the doctrine of restitution to enslaved Africans or displaced Natives.Property is treated as legitimate unless clearly stolen. — Moliere
Not even robots to thank for raising him to adulthood; he just growed out of the sidewalk and started a business.The ideal individual needs nothing, owes nothing and answers to no one. — Moliere
As a not-so-great actor said in opposition to government poverty relief programs:Our support systems can either reflect justice and reciprocity or leave people behind. Radical individualism refuses to face this reality. It offers not freedom but a denial of the human condition. — Moliere
I've been on food stamps and welfare. Anybody help me out? No. No. They gave me hope, and they gave me encouragement, and they gave me a vision. That came from my education.
Craig T. Nelson
I hope all authors are being patient. There's a whole world of reading in this event. It's only the 4th. — Amity
This reflects the classic liberal view of negative liberty, as defined by Isaiah Berlin: freedom from external constraint or coercion. The ideal subject is left alone to pursue personal goals. But this idea, though rhetorically powerful, proves conceptually and practically inadequate. — Moliere
This essay argues that radical individualism is less a coherent political philosophy than a theatrical pose that conceals its reliance on collective institutions, rationalizes inequality and rebrands domination as personal freedom. — Moliere
Though differing in style and domain all present the image of a self-legitimating individual opposed to collective authority. — Moliere
At its heart lies a contradiction between rejecting institutions in theory and relying on them in practice. — Moliere
In the world shaped by these figures, from techno-utopianism to populist grievance to self-help transcendence, the individual is imagined as sovereign, institutions as suspect and freedom as a solitary conquest. — Moliere
===============================================================================The object of this Essay is to assert one very simple principle, as entitled to govern absolutely the dealings of society with the individual in the way of compulsion and control, whether the means used be physical force in the form of legal penalties, or the moral coercion of public opinion. That principle is, that the sole end for which mankind are warranted, individually or collectively, in interfering with the liberty of action of any of their number, is self-protection. That the only purpose for which power can be rightfully exercised over any member of a civilized community, against his will, is to prevent harm to others. … In the part which merely concerns himself, his independence is, of right, absolute. Over himself, over his own body and mind, the individual is sovereign.
What makes this paradox politically dangerous is not just its incoherence but its corrosive effect on democratic norms and public solidarity — Moliere
[emphasis added]3.3 The Ideological Mask of Radical Individualism
Radical individualism often presents itself as ideologically neutral. It does not claim a tradition or worldview but instead appeals to what seems natural, original or self-evident. It invokes intuition, common sense or the sanctity of the individual as if these were beyond history or politics. But this appearance of neutrality is itself ideological. It hides assumptions about power, value and order behind a language of purity and noninterference. By ideology, we mean both the structural misrepresentation of power relations, as in Marx, and the subtle production of subjectivity through discourse and normativity, as explored by Foucault and Butler. — Moliere
See embedded clip (00.31).The businessman told the inquiry wind farms were inefficient, could not operate without big subsides, "killed massive amounts of wildlife" and would damage tourism.
When challenged to provide statistical evidence for his arguments, Mr Trump told the committee in April: "I am the evidence", adding: "I am considered a world-class expert in tourism, so when you say, 'where is the expert and where is the evidence', I'm the evidence." — BBC News
Donald Trump has made a fresh call for the North Sea to be opened up to more oil drilling and for an end to "unsightly" windfarms.
The US President, a long-term critic of renewable energy, claimed there was "a century of drilling left" in Scottish waters and called for the UK Government to incentivise more production.
Trump recently signed the first stage of a UK-US trade deal with Keir Starmer, which reduces tariffs on certain exports.
In a social media post, the President said: "Our negotiated deal with the United Kingdom is working out well for all.
Embedded video - see 01.34 of 02.49 clip.It’s “the revolution of common sense,” President Donald Trump announced in his second inaugural address.
And so it is. The latest installment of that assertion came in his Jan. 30, 2025, press conference about the Potomac plane crash. When asked how he had concluded that diversity policies were responsible for a crash that was still under investigation, Trump responded, “Because I have common sense, OK?”
— The Conversation
It methodically dismantles a mindset that, though many of us intuitively see as incoherent and unsupportable, continues to be a dominant force in modern life. — Baden
Real freedom is not the absence of others. It is the presence of shared conditions in which dignity, voice and action become possible. It is built not in retreat but in relationship. If we continue to treat liberty as a solitary performance rather than a shared foundation, we will not only mistake inequality for merit but we will also hollow out democracy itself. The Authoritarian Liberty Paradox is not just an intellectual contradiction; it is a political danger. One we must name clearly and confront together. — Moliere
But this leads to what might be called the Great Contradiction of contemporary moral life. On the one hand, we believe in the right of people to pursue their own versions of happiness; on the other hand, the fact that something is freely chosen does not make it good, worthy, or right. If we all have the right to our own personal morality, then "the right to choose freely" easily degenerates into "If it's freely chosen, then it's all right."
Individual rights are essential for a free society. However, they are insufficient for a free and moral society. As free citizens, we need to rethink our commitment to a narrow conception of moral life. There is more to moral life than our claims to our rights. A moral society cannot sustain itself without the absence of a quest toward some shared sense of virtue, goodness, caring, and so forth. To become a truly moral society, we must seek to identify, negotiate, and coordinate the values and virtues that define how we should act, who we should be, and how we should live. — Is Radical Individualism Destroying Our Moral Compass - Psychology Today
But we, as political agents and moral interlocutors, can resist the spectacle and demand something better: institutions worthy of trust, freedom grounded in solidarity and agency rooted in interdependence. — Moliere
You obviously know nothing about nature. Most organisms are territorial.What is property? The concept doesn't exist in nature; — Vera Mont
Your focus is biased. There are plenty on the left that are just as self-centered and manipulative. It has nothing to do with political ideology.We focus on three figures: Elon Musk, Donald Trump and Jordan Peterson. — Moliere
I find it very hard to believe that Musk, Trump and Peterson reject institutions in theory, as each of them clearly depend on institutions for their livelihoods. — RussellA
All over the news over the last six months.There is only a paradox when the paper describes Musk, Trump and Peterson as holding opinions that they in fact don't hold, such as the dismantling of democracy. Where is the evidence that this is something they have promoted? — RussellA
It seems to me that Musk and Trump have created their own institutions. Do institutions inherently endow individuals with fortune, power and fame? Which ones do and which ones don't typically have much to do with one's political persuasions but with favoritism and nepotism.That's pretty much the point. Institutions brought them fortune, power and fame and they're busily attacking and tearing down those institutions, in order to deprive other people of the protection they offer. — Vera Mont
I hope all authors are being patient. There's a whole world of reading in this event. It's only the 4th.
— Amity
Agreed. I'm having to do some slow, careful work here, but it's worth every minute. — Vera Mont
That's pretty much the point. Institutions brought them fortune, power and fame and they're busily attacking and tearing down those institutions, in order to deprive other people of the protection they offer. — Vera Mont
You might be surprised.You obviously know nothing about nature. — Harry Hindu
Most sentient organisms. Grass, not so much, although it can be 'invade' the artificial domains of mankind.Most organisms are territorial.
Of course it has nothing to do with ideology: they believe in nothing but self-enrichment, self-aggrandizement. They just proclaim that it is in order to get people to obey them. I agree that Peterson was an inappropriate inclusion. So, could you please name two of the contemporary examples from the American left who are equal to them in self-centered manipulativism?Your focus is biased. There are plenty on the left that are just as self-centered and manipulative. It has nothing to do with political ideology. — Harry Hindu
Institutions inherently allow individuals to do what their fellow men on a level playing field would not.Do institutions inherently endow individuals with fortune, power and fame? — Harry Hindu
Trump created the monetary system that let him receive $400 million without contest or effort, and the legal system that protected him from the victims of his various flim-flam operations. Then he went on to invent network television, the US electoral system, racism and sexism.It seems to me that Musk and Trump have created their own institutions. — Harry Hindu
I am sure that most would agree that the individual is sovereign and institutions are suspect. Institutions were created for the benefit of the individual. The individual is not there for the benefit of the Institution.
That's pretty much the point. Institutions brought them fortune, power and fame and they're busily attacking and tearing down those institutions, in order to deprive other people of the protection they offer. — Vera Mont
What is property? The concept doesn't exist in nature; — Vera Mont
Most sentient organisms. Grass, not so much, although it can be 'invade' the artificial domains of mankind. — Vera Mont
But it is like a nation using it's might to protect it's territory. Why wouldn't the same concept hold true for individuals too?Defending one's home, feeding grounds and cache of winter supplies against rivals and enemies is not much like holding the deed to an estate - or ten estates - stocks and bank accounts, a vault full of fur coats, pictures and diamonds to which the government is expected to guarantee your absolute right, including the maintenance of legal institutions in which to squabble with one's mate over them. — Vera Mont
Of course it has nothing to do with ideology: they believe in nothing but self-enrichment, self-aggrandizement. They just proclaim that it is in order to get people to obey them. I agree that Peterson was an inappropriate inclusion. So, could you please name two of the contemporary examples from the American left who are equal to them in self-centered manipulativism? — Vera Mont
Not always. Competition is what allows a level playing field, not using government to artificially prop up one group or another, or one institution or another.Institutions inherently allow individuals to do what their fellow men on a level playing field would not. — Vera Mont
That's pretty much the point. Institutions brought them fortune, power and fame and they're busily attacking and tearing down those institutions, in order to deprive other people of the protection they offer.
'Property' no. Animals compete and fight for things they need and want; they have no 'right' to them. But, according to libertarians,I other words the concept does exist in nature. — Harry Hindu
Other animals have concept of 'state' and 'contract'.the state is presumed coercive unless confined to protecting contracts and property. — Moliere
You mean, if I build a wigwam on a Mar A Lago putting green, it's mine as long as I can successfully fight off anyindividual who tries to take it from me?Mankind is a natural outcome of natural processes. Everything humans do is natural for them, which includes staking one's territory. — Harry Hindu
Because of the law. Guys who are stronger and better armed than the millionnaire still aren't allowed to take his stuff.But it is like a nation using it's might to protect it's territory. Why wouldn't the same concept hold true for individuals too? — Harry Hindu
Of those people, only the last mentioned is on the political left.Nancy Pelosi, the Clintons and all those that kept Biden's condition from the American people as well as those that manipulated the Democratic primary in 2016 sidelining Bernie Sanders. — Harry Hindu
I think maybe people have reasons beyond labels for supporting a political party. Don't you? I do: it's their policies and track record.The only reason one would continue to support one side or the other would be because of some emotional investment they have in supporting the party. — Harry Hindu
I thought, having resulted from nature, humans couldn't do anything artificially.Competition is what allows a level playing field, not using government to artificially prop up one group or another, or one institution or another. — Harry Hindu
And you're quite sure that rhetoric is sincere, in light of the acts?On their view, they are saving those institutions. That's pretty clear from the rhetoric. — Count Timothy von Icarus
An interesting thing is that if you look at hit pieces on Peterson, the things he is being criticized for (e.g. obscurantistism) are precisely the things that made him a successful academic and could easily make him a "brilliant theorist" if he held more orthodoxly (in the context of the academy) left wing positions. — Count Timothy von Icarus
And you're quite sure that rhetoric is sincere, in light of the acts? — Vera Mont
The essay starts with a straw man fallacy (an argument that misrepresents an opponent's position and then attacks it). — RussellA
I think the article misses how appeals to pre-modern tradition also figure into this though. The crowd around Trump really likes their ancient Rome memes. So does Musk. There is "Red Caesarism," etc. These elements tend to be far more communitarian, and are openly critical of libertarianism, and even sometimes critical of capitalism. Tariffs are and a push for autotarky are actually not out of line with this way of thinking. This is a tension within the Right that is out in the open, not something that is ignored.
Movements like Generation Identity in Europe are in some ways more grounded in national epics like the Nibelungenlied, the Poetic Edda, the Iliad, and ancient political theory than in modern liberalism/libertarian ideology. More Beowulf, less Ayn Rand. Certainly, they rely heavily on these sources for aesthetics, and these are romantic movements where aesthetics is given a very important role (e.g., a film like 300 might have more currency than many political dissertations).
It is certainly true that these movements often cannot abandon certain classical liberal precepts, and that this arguably makes them incoherent, or at the very least opens them up to grifters and abuse. But I do think there is more there than simple opportunism. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Which is just to say maybe that this internal contradiction actually seems to me to be more of an open civil war in the Right (also one that tends to pit the young communitarian traditionalists against the older individualistic liberals), and these figures, being broadly popular, are just nexus points for this conflict. — Count Timothy von Icarus
3.3 The Ideological Mask of Radical Individualism — Moliere
2.2 Liberty Through Coercion
Trump’s trade war illustrates liberty asserted through force. Tariffs and trade barriers, classic interventions, are reframed as tools of sovereignty and pride. That self-described libertarians embrace them shows how flexible freedom becomes. What matters is not principle but the actor. Coercion becomes liberty if used by the right person. Hierarchy is acceptable if it matches their ideals. — Moliere
3.5 The Social is Not a Trap
A core premise of radical individualism is that social structures constrain freedom. Institutions are seen as cages, norms as impositions and collective life as a threat to autonomy. The sovereign individual is imagined as most free when most detached. But this view reverses the truth. The social world does not obstruct freedom. It enables it. — Moliere
3.5.3 The Myth of the Outside
Radical individualism suggests there is an outside to society where true autonomy lives. But no such space exists. Even the most independent person depends on shared language, inherited norms, tools and the labour of others. The dream of pure autonomy feeds on the very structures it denies.
Musk relies on public infrastructure and scientific tradition. Trump’s populism runs on legal and bureaucratic tools.Peterson’s critiques emerge from academic and media networks. The self-made man is always socially produced.
This denial of interdependence has political effects. It breeds isolation and mistrust. Solidarity becomes suspect. Institutions lose legitimacy and are easier to dismantle. What replaces them is often private and unaccountable power disguised as liberty. — Moliere
In the United States, according to some historians and political scholars, the administration of Republican Pres. Donald Trump (2017–21) also displayed some aspects of authoritarian populism. Among them were conspiracy mongering, racism toward African Americans and nonwhite immigrants, distrust of democratic institutions among Trump’s core supporters, and the subservient position of the national Republican Party. Perhaps the most powerful indicator of the existence of authoritarian populism under Trump was his incitement of a mob of his supporters to storm the U.S. Capitol to overturn his defeat in the 2020 presidential election (see United States Capitol attack of 2021). — Britannica - Populism
US President Donald Trump has attracted criticism from some Catholics after posting an AI-generated image of himself as the Pope.
The picture, which was shared by official White House social media accounts, comes as Catholics mourn the death of Pope Francis, who died on 21 April, and prepare to choose the next pontiff.
The New York State Catholic Conference accused Trump of mocking the faith. The post comes days after he joked to media: "I'd like to be Pope." — BBC - Trump's AI Image of himself as Pope
What we need is a different conception of freedom. One that acknowledges our interdependence, values solidarity and invests in the public institutions that enable each of us to act meaningfully in the world. This is not a call for collectivist uniformity or authoritarian oversight. It is a call for participatory, responsive and just institutions. In other words, more democracy everywhere that recognize the individual not as an island but as a node in a shared and fragile network of life...
When radical individualism is taken at face value, the result isn’t a flourishing of liberty but the quiet dismantling of its conditions: public goods erode, solidarities fray and those most in need are told their suffering is a personal failure, not a systemic injustice. It breeds cynicism toward democracy and opens the door for authoritarian figures to redefine freedom as obedience to themselves. What begins as a philosophy of personal sovereignty ends in the normalisation of power without accountability. — Moliere
There is no Aeneas without the Trojans and future Romans. He is an exceptional individual. A hero. The son of a god. Yet his desires are continually subservient to the needs of the whole, and shaped by the destiny of the whole. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Real freedom is not the absence of others. It is the presence of shared conditions in which dignity, voice and action become possible. It is built not in retreat but in relationship. If we continue to treat liberty as a solitary performance rather than a shared foundation, we will not only mistake inequality for merit but we will also hollow out democracy itself. The Authoritarian Liberty Paradox is not just an intellectual contradiction; it is a political danger. One we must name clearly and confront together.
This is, for instance, not what one gets even looking at the old heroic epics. There is no Aeneas without the Trojans and future Romans. He is an exceptional individual. A hero. The son of a god. Yet his desires are continually subservient to the needs of the whole, and shaped by the destiny of the whole. Without the whole, he wouldn't be a hero.
I would question the figures being focused on to some degree, because I think it obscures how the issues raised here are topics of open debate within the Right. These aren't really intellectuals we would expect to have coherent platforms. Two of the figures have had quite public struggles with drug addiction and difficulties coping with wealth and fame, of the sort that obviously tends to lead to incoherence. They also interact heavily through social media, and I have found that social media tends to make even otherwise quite sensible figures say very silly things on a regular basis. — Count Timothy von Icarus
The Authoritarian Liberty Paradox: A Study in Contradictions and Nonsense
This essay argues that radical individualism is less a coherent political philosophy than a theatrical pose that conceals its reliance on collective institutions, rationalizes inequality and rebrands domination as personal freedom. By examining its philosophical roots and public champions we expose a paradox at its core: the celebration of liberty through authoritarian means.
We focus on three figures: Elon Musk, Donald Trump and Jordan Peterson. Though differing in style and domain all present the image of a self-legitimating individual opposed to collective authority. Yet each depends on immense institutional power. Musk benefits from public subsidies and corporate scale, Trump commands state machinery and nationalist rhetoric, Peterson draws authority from platforms and institutional critique. — Moliere
4. No One Is an Island, Not Even A Libertarian
Radical individualism offers a seductive vision. It promises a world without interference, where each person is the sole author of their fate, untouched by history, insulated from obligation and immune to the needs of others. It is, at first glance, a philosophy of dignity and moral clarity. A defence of the self against the claims of society.
But it is also, fundamentally, a myth. And more dangerously, a myth that rationalizes inequality, conceals power and undermines the very conditions of freedom it claims to protect. — Moliere
The presidential portrait, which has been displayed in the Colorado capitol since 2019, was created by Colorado Springs artist Sarah A Boardman, known for her work on portraits of several US presidents, including Barack Obama and George W Bush.
"The artist also did President Obama, and he looks wonderful, but the one on me is truly the worst," Mr Trump said."She must have lost her talent as she got older."
Ms Boardman told The Denver Post in 2019 that it was important to her that both men look apolitical because the gallery of presidents is about the story of the nation and not one president.
"In today's environment it's all very up-front, but in another five, 10, 15 years he will be another president on the wall," she said.
"And he needs to look neutral." — Trump calls for removal of portrait - ABC News
'Common sense' validates common nonsense. Not knowing is all right with them. In fact, they'll go out of their way to avoid knowing tings: they're happy to turn off all but one source of 'news', forbid courses in school or keep their children out of school altogether, ban books - or burn them, right alongside the elitist eggheads what rote them - and shout down anyone who tries to explain why something is good or bad for them.I've been thinking about the political use of 'common sense'. Its appeal to the common people. Individuals who know what they know and are happy with that. What they know is what is best for them. — Amity
Give me a break. The left was willing to accept money from Trump and accept Musk's electric vehicles until they decided to run for president as a Republican and supported a Republican president. The outrage is selective.Even the middle-ground Clintons and Pelosi are nowhere near equal in self-service to Trump and Musk. — Vera Mont
...which is a gross misunderstanding of what it means to be a libertarian. How easily one forgets that the state is made of up elitist individuals that have made their own contracts among themselves and write the laws to serve themselves. They maintain their control through favoritism and nepotism.'Property' no. Animals compete and fight for things they need and want; they have no 'right' to them. But, according to libertarians,
the state is presumed coercive unless confined to protecting contracts and property.
— Moliere
Other animals have concept of 'state' and 'contract'. — Vera Mont
Sure. That's why nations sign alliance agreements - contracts to protect the territorial integrity of other nations. There is nothing unnatural about individuals seeking alliances with other like-minded individuals or groups. The thinks treats everyone as a greedy criminal in that we need to control everyone's behavior when the reality is that most people respect each other and laws are really only needed for the select few who aren't happy unless they're telling other people how to live their lives. The right is no different. Both extremes love their Big Brother.Because of the law. Guys who are stronger and better armed than the millionnaire still aren't allowed to take his stuff. — Vera Mont
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