@realcaseyrollins What?
You're referring to a governmental institution, an organization that constrains freedom, and projecting this freedom constraining organization as the free world... That doesn't make sense.
@realcaseyrollins Well that's not particularly true either.
By some measures the US doesn't even crack the top 10.
No, domestic policy in the US is definitely not focused on freedom, everything from tax policy through drug restrictions through monitoring of communications in the US point the other direction.
@volkris #Australia? #Canada?? 🤣
This list is garbage if they're putting authoritarian semi-fascist countries like those at the top of their list...good grief man...
@realcaseyrollins sure, the US is the most free, as long as you ignore all of the analysis saying it's not the most free, then it absolutely is!
You're begging the question to try to support your predetermined conclusions.
Or, on the other hand, specifically what in their calculation did they get wrong? Show me the math where they went astray?
Don't just reject their conclusion because it doesn't match your opinions.
My other reaction is, if you think those countries are so off course, well I'm not disputing that, but it is cause for maybe some consideration for how the US ends up being even worse than those examples.
Yeah, the US has serious issues with restricting freedom of speech. We shouldn't paper over that.
Australia and Canada might have troubling headlines where they restrict speech, but that only means the US needs to deal with its own headlines of cracking down on speech it doesn't like.
We won't improve to be better than them if we don't recognize that we have that improvement to make.
@volkris I recognize that the #USA has issues with freedom, and doesn't seem to be doing any better in that respect. I push back against things like the anti #BDS laws. But I don't believe we restrict speech, just as an example, more than #Australia or #Canada.