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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 are available to the general public and the five core interests of technoliberalism such as the 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 Classical Liberalism and the social welfare of Social Liberalism.[1]

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:

Personality and Behaviour

How to Draw

Symbol of Technoliberalism

Like Technocracy, TechLib is simple to draw.

  1. Draw a ball.
  2. Draw a yin-yang symbol in light grey and dark midnight blue.
  3. Draw in the eyes.

You're done!

Color Name HEX RGB
Light Grey #BFBFBF 191, 191, 191
Dark midnight blue #003366 0, 51, 102


Relations

Friends

  • Liberalism - My dad taught me that human rights need to be protected at all costs.
  • E-Democracy - We need to increase popular participation through technology.
  • Capitalism - Best economic model. (Don't get mad at my regulations please, they're necessary!)
  • Technogaianism & Green Liberalism - We need to protect our planet by any means necessary while developing technology and protecting our rights.
  • Civil Libertarianism - Protecting the individual's freedom while respecting others, I like that!
  • Regulationism - Fair regulation and fair taxation are necessary. (But not too much!)
  • Social Capitalism & Ordo-Liberalism - Freiburg School is ultrabased.
  • Eco-Capitalism - Wonderful! Just needs some more regulation and it'd be perfect.
  • Scientocracy - We must listen to scientists at all times.
  • Social Liberalism - Fellow liberal who supports fairly regulated capitalism. Great guy.
  • Social Libertarianism - We have quite a lot in common! (You could say Yang supports both of us...)
  • Piratism - Defending civil liberties with an emphasis on internet rights? That's quite based not gonna lie.
  • Nordic Model - Eesti can into Nordic!

Frenemies

  • Technocracy - I do like his sentiment of being intelligent, but why do you argue with me for supporting liberal ideas? Isn't it how this world should be run?
  • Francoism - You like science and merit too, but you are too authoritarian.
  • Classical Liberalism - Ok but you're a minarchist obsessive. Still better than Misestard.
  • Lowellism - Some pretty based policies but you're a Right-Libertarian Neo-Nazi.
  • Democratic Socialism - I like that you also advocate for democracy and regulation, but socialism takes things way too far left. And I prefer STEM power over worker power anyway.
  • Socialist Transhumanism - Transhumanism is based, but socialism is cringe.

Enemies

Further Information

Articles

Literature

Wikipedia

Notes

  1. Fish, Adam. 2017. Technoliberalism and the End of Participatory Culture. Palgrave Macmillan.
  2. Horst, Heather and Miller, Daniel (eds.) "Digital Anthropology" 2012. Accessed 7 February 2014.

Gallery

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