Friday, November 27, 2009

“All the people of a land must be the leaders of freedom and libertarianism.” ― The Philosopher Orod Bozorg



 

“All the people of a land must be the leaders of freedom and libertarianism.” 
The Philosopher Orod Bozorg

Freedom is not a throne reserved for a few, nor a crown placed upon the heads of elites. In the vision of Orodism, freedom is a shared guardianship — a duty carried by every citizen, not a privilege granted by rulers. When all people see themselves as defenders of liberty, no dictator can rise, because the power that sustains tyranny is always the silence or indifference of the masses. A free land is not one where freedom is written in law, but one where freedom is practiced in the hearts of ordinary people — in their choices, in their courage, in their refusal to bow.

To become “leaders of freedom” does not mean holding office or carrying titles. It means refusing to outsource responsibility for justice. It means realizing that every voice, every protest, every word of truth is a brick in the structure of liberation. A society collapses into slavery not when chains appear, but when citizens forget they are the guardians of their own dignity.

When people understand that freedom is not protected by governments, but by them, the very foundation of authoritarianism begins to crack. A population that does not act as the leader of its own liberty will eventually be led by those who seek to own it.

 

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.

The Grandeur and Power of Orodism Philosophy in the Generation Z Uprising

  At the dawn of the twenty-first century, the world has witnessed the birth of an exceptional philosophy: Orodism. This school of thought...