A new social character, the libertarian-authoritarian personality, is emerging in modern Western societies, seen as a dark by-product of late modernity. Figures like Klaus Schwab and Spike Cohen have expressed concerns about the libertarian movement, describing it as an anti-System force aiming to reduce government influence in private lives. Schwab specifically sees libertarians as a threat to the achievements of society. This has sparked a debate about the role of libertarianism in the current socio-political landscape.
"We have this anti-system movement .. which is called Libertarianism, which means to tear down everything which creates some kind of influence of government into private lives." – Klaus Schwab https://t.co/u4ejYmjmwF
Klaus Schwab rails against those who are “anti-system”, claiming that Libertarians are a threat to “everything we’ve worked for” 😮 https://t.co/EkWt1dP3qO
"There is of course an anti-System which is called Libertarianism, which means to tear down everything which creates some kind of influence of government into private lives." You're damn right we do. And we're going to win. https://t.co/DdU6SH9L4P
"There is an anti-System which is called Libertarianism, which means to tear down everything which creates some kind of influence of government into private lives." You're damn right we do. And we're going to win. https://t.co/DdU6SH9L4P
A new social character is emerging in modern Western societies: the libertarian-authoritarian personality – a dark by-product of late modernity. @onachtwey and @CAmlinger explain ⬇️ https://t.co/BTvlkd6ONc