Liberalism, progressivism and collectivism are not synonymous terms.
Collectivism is no longer your enemy. This is a battle that has been fought and won. Collectivism lost.
The -isms that are around today are entirely different.
Equality of opportunity is entirely different from equality of outcome. It seems to me you are quixotically tilting at windmills.
The world outside the United States, as well as some of your fellows, find these obsessions inward-looking. Things have moved on. There's a financial crisis or two, maybe a recession to worry about, climate change to argue about, science to advance, the widening gap between rich and poor to worry at. Mises, Hayek and Ayn Rand are dead.
Patrick
The fact is, those are synonymous terms. Early twentieth century progressivism began in earnest with Woodrow Wilson. His philosophy was that individualism must be subordinated to the 'common good' or the 'greater good of society', i.e. collectivism. His label of progressivism does not later the fact that philosophically, they are the same. Liberalism today is the chameleon concealing itself under a different name based on the same philosophy when progressivism was recognized be the American public for what it truly is and resoundingly rejected.
America was founded on the principles of individual rights and freedom. The defined purpose of government in the Founding Fathers' terms was to protect those rights. The rights recognized by the founders are directly counter to the government vision of Wilson and progressives [like Teddy Roosevelt, Franklin Roosevelt, Lyndon Johnson, et al]. In essence, his progressive/liberal philosophy is anti-American based on the fact that the philosophy is diametrically opposed to the founding philosophy of America.
If you know your history of America, you know that the progressive income tax was created under Wilson's administration. You would also know that Teddy Roosevelt was a strong proponent of the inheritance [or estate or death] tax. The fact is, both of these taxes are right out of the Communist Manifesto under the portion where Marx and Engels lay out their methodology for converting any society to Communism. Likewise, the propaganda used to advocate for them is class warfare, which is yet another Marxist idea based on unequal distribution of wealth which is the inevitable result of freedom.
Both of these anti-American taxation systems have been used incessantly to fund the wealth redistribution ideas of progressive/liberals/collectivists since that time by ever increasing degrees. They are perpetuated and used to support the fallacy that the purpose of government is social engineering or social evolution as directed by the collectivists who advocate for such ideas.
If you recall, both Hillary and King Hussein called themselves progressives during the campaign, Hillary even being specific as to "early 20th century progressive".
One of the tenets of this ideology is that the purpose of government is social engineering based on the thoughtful knowledge of the political elite whose duty it is to manage the great unwashed masses who are in their enlightened opinion like children who need control and direction.
This idea is the foundation of the Obama administration. He's just another in a long line of statists who area still pursuing the conversion of America to communism or some variant of collectivism since there is no truly clear, definitive meaning of any particular strain of these diseases.
Since FDR in particular, America has been moving steadily toward collectivism primarily under the rule of the Democrats but facing little opposition from Republicans and that mostly in degree, not in substance or principle.
The most blatant examples are Social Security, government welfare, MediCare, MedicAid, FDIC, FSLIC, etc.
So collectivism has not lost: on the contrary, it continues to make inroads in America as we speak with Chairman MaObama being the most virulent proponent yet.
George Bush did his bit as an FDR socialist to add to it with his idiotic prescription drug program, more socialistic/communistic government stealing the wealth of one American for the benefit of another.
While von Mises, Hayek and Rand may be dead, the truths they spoke remain as true now as when spoken. If one were to apply your implied suggestion that their deaths necessarily negated the value of their ideas, then one could just as reasonably conclude that since Abraham Lincoln is dead, his idea that slavery was evil and should be abolished died with him and thus slavery today is once again valid. Such reasoning is the epitome of the fallacious.
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