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'''Technoliberalism,''' or '''TechLib''' is a [[File:Centrist-yellow.png]] [[:Category:Centrists|centrist]] ideology leaning on the libertarian right quadrant. They believe in the ideals of liberty, self-awareness, individuality, decentralization and responsibility while developing technologies that is available to the general public and the five core interests of technoliberalism such as construction of government, environmentalism, economics, education and science and civil liberties. | '''Technoliberalism,''' or '''TechLib''' is a [[File:Centrist-yellow.png]] [[:Category:Centrists|centrist]] ideology leaning on the libertarian right quadrant. They believe in the ideals of liberty, self-awareness, individuality, decentralization and responsibility while developing technologies that is available to the general public and the five core interests of technoliberalism such as construction of government, environmentalism, economics, education and science and civil liberties. | ||
== History == | == History == | ||
In the book ''Technoliberalism and the End of Participatory Culture in the United States'', Adam Fish describes technoliberalism as the belief that network technologies reduce the contradictions of a society that nurtures both the free market of [[File:Clib.png]] [[Classical Liberalism|economic liberalism]] and the social welfare of [[File:Soclib.png]] [[Social Liberalism]].<ref>Fish, Adam. 2017. Technoliberalism and the End of Participatory Culture. Palgrave Macmillan. </ref> Thus, technoliberalism has some connections with [[File:Neoliberal-icon.png]] [[Neoliberalism]]. | |||
At the heart of the philosophy of technoliberalism as a belief and movement is "a predominant belief in technology, a suspicion of traditional modernist institutions, and the belief that the cumulative consequences of individual involvement in technology will generate social benefits."<ref>Horst, Heather and Miller, Daniel (eds.) "Digital Anthropology" 2012. Accessed 7 February 2014.</ref> The main beliefs of this ideology correspond to five main interests: Construction of the Government, education and science, economics, [[File:Envi.png]] [[Environmentalism|environment]] and [[File:Civlibert.png]] [[Civil Libertarianism|civil liberties]]. They include: | |||
*Protecting the freedom of individuals while preserving the freedom of others. | |||
*Free markets with strict rules. | |||
*Fair taxation, especially for big companies. | |||
*Protecting planet by strictly regulating the damage to the environment. | |||
*The power of small and medium businesses. | |||
*Freedom of speech and communication technologies. | |||
*Emphasis on technological advances, not on the status quo. | |||
== Personality and Behaviour == | == Personality and Behaviour == |
Revision as of 16:56, 9 April 2021
Technoliberalism, or TechLib is a centrist ideology leaning on the libertarian right quadrant. They believe in the ideals of liberty, self-awareness, individuality, decentralization and responsibility while developing technologies that is available to the general public and the five core interests of technoliberalism such as construction of government, environmentalism, economics, education and science and civil liberties.
History
In the book Technoliberalism and the End of Participatory Culture in the United States, Adam Fish describes technoliberalism as the belief that network technologies reduce the contradictions of a society that nurtures both the free market of economic liberalism and the social welfare of Social Liberalism.[1] Thus, technoliberalism has some connections with Neoliberalism.
At the heart of the philosophy of technoliberalism as a belief and movement is "a predominant belief in technology, a suspicion of traditional modernist institutions, and the belief that the cumulative consequences of individual involvement in technology will generate social benefits."[2] The main beliefs of this ideology correspond to five main interests: Construction of the Government, education and science, economics, environment and civil liberties. They include:
- Protecting the freedom of individuals while preserving the freedom of others.
- Free markets with strict rules.
- Fair taxation, especially for big companies.
- Protecting planet by strictly regulating the damage to the environment.
- The power of small and medium businesses.
- Freedom of speech and communication technologies.
- Emphasis on technological advances, not on the status quo.
Personality and Behaviour
How to Draw
Like Technocracy, TechLib is simple to draw.
- Draw a ball.
- Draw a yin yang symbol in light grey (#bfbfbf) and dark midnight blue (#003366).
- Draw in the eyes.
You're done!Template:Flag-color
Relations
Friends
- Liberalism - Human rights is a necessity for the world.
- Capitalism - Free markets should in fact, spread across all corners around the world.
Frenemies
- Technocracy - I do like his sentiment of being intelligent, but why do you argue with me for supporting liberal ideas? Isn't how this world should run?
Enemies
- Anarcho-Primitivism - Civilization is important for the being. If there isn't any civilization, it will be chaos, allowing anyone to do what they desire. For the technological scale, it is too low, making life primitive and harder to live, as well as a shorter lifespan. These 2 characteristics of yours make life much harder as we know it.
- Socialism - Please stop protesting. If you want a raise next week, you need to stop protesting and do your science experiments.
- Conservative Socialism - You're not actually democratic, socialism just makes things not-so democratic. I hope you understand what I said.
Further Information
Articles
- Five theses on technoliberalism and the networked public sphere
- The Surrogate Effect: Technoliberalism and Whiteness in a “Post” Labor Era
- Technoliberalism and the End of Participatory Culture in the United States (Article about the book)
Literature
Wikipedia
Gallery
Liberals - Liberté, Égalité, Fraternité | |
Main | Classical Liberalism • Social Liberalism • Big Tent Liberalism • Third Way • Liberalism • Liberal Conservatism • Ordo-Liberalism • Radical Liberalism |
---|---|
Regional | Cardosoism • Bidenism • Sarneyism • Obamaism • Clintonism ( Hillaryism) |
Self-Inserts | FreePCB Reformism • Brazilian Liberalism • DECBism |