For Commentary
How each value shapes worldview, rhetoric, and political instinct.
Mastery demands that political power be earned through demonstrated competence, not inherited, purchased, or performed.
<p>The Mastery orientation understands politics as a domain that should reward skill, preparation, and disciplined execution. It views the political order as legitimate to the extent that it elevates competent actors and penalizes incompetence, regardless of ideology. Government is understood as a craft with standards, and political authority carries weight only when backed by genuine expertise and sustained effort. The individual's relationship to the state is transactional in the best sense: the citizen develops capacity, and the state provides a framework in which that capacity can be deployed effectively.</p><p>This value is skeptical of both populist enthusiasm and aristocratic entitlement, because neither demonstrates earned competence. It gravitates toward technocratic governance, meritocratic selection processes, and institutional designs that filter for ability. It is not opposed to hierarchy but insists that hierarchy reflect actual differences in skill and knowledge rather than social connection or inherited status. Political rhetoric that substitutes charisma for substance triggers deep distrust.</p><p>At its core, the Mastery worldview holds that political problems are solvable through rigorous analysis and disciplined implementation, and that most political failure is a failure of competence rather than values. This can make it impatient with the inherently messy, compromising nature of democratic deliberation, where the best-informed position does not always prevail.</p>
Primary Orientation: Mastery gravitates toward centrist technocracy and meritocratic liberalism, though it appears on the right as respect for market-tested competence and on the left as faith in evidence-based policymaking and credentialed expertise. It is uncomfortable with ideological purity on either side, viewing it as a substitute for genuine understanding.
Institutional Relationship: Mastery respects institutions that maintain high standards and resist dilution, such as professional licensing bodies, elite universities, and independent regulatory agencies. It supports institutional reform when institutions have become credentialist without being genuinely competence-selecting, but it opposes populist attacks on expertise itself.
Internal Tensions: Mastery contains a fundamental tension between its commitment to competence and its relationship to democracy: if the most competent should govern, what happens when the majority prefers the less competent option? It also struggles with the question of who certifies competence, since credentialing systems can themselves become captured by incumbents who use standards to exclude rather than to elevate.
Appeals: Politicians appeal to Mastery through demonstrations of command over policy detail, data-driven argumentation, and professional credentials. The appeal is often negative: showing that an opponent is incompetent or unprepared is more activating for this value than promising transformation. Think-tank white papers, detailed policy plans, and demonstrated subject-matter expertise function as proof of worthiness.
Platonic political philosophy: Plato's Republic argues that governance should be entrusted to philosopher-kings whose souls have been trained through rigorous dialectic. This vision of politics as a domain requiring specialized knowledge and disciplined preparation is the earliest systematic expression of the Mastery value in political thought.
Confucian meritocracy: The Confucian tradition, particularly as expressed through the imperial examination system, holds that political authority should be distributed according to demonstrated learning and moral cultivation. This represents the most sustained historical experiment in institutionalizing Mastery as a governing principle.
Pragmatism (Dewey, James): American pragmatism treats political questions as practical problems requiring experimental intelligence and disciplined inquiry. Dewey's emphasis on education, scientific method, and continuous improvement in democratic life reflects Mastery's conviction that political competence can be cultivated and institutionally supported.
Education Policy: Mastery favors rigorous academic standards, standardized assessment, tracking by ability, and investment in teacher quality. It supports both public and charter schools that demonstrate measurable results and opposes policies that lower standards in the name of inclusion without maintaining alternative pathways to demonstrated competence.
Civil Service and Government Reform: Mastery strongly supports merit-based hiring, competitive examination for public service positions, and protection of professional civil servants from political patronage. It views the spoils system and political appointments of unqualified loyalists as a fundamental corruption of governance.
Economic Policy: Mastery tends toward market mechanisms that reward productive skill and innovation, with support for public investment in human capital development. It favors apprenticeship programs, vocational training, and R&D funding while being skeptical of both corporate welfare and redistributive programs disconnected from skill development.
Healthcare Policy: Mastery supports evidence-based medicine, rigorous licensing standards for practitioners, and health systems designed by public health experts rather than by legislative negotiation. It is frustrated by the influence of lobbying and ideology on questions it views as fundamentally technical.
Foreign Policy and Defense: Mastery supports professional military leadership insulated from political interference, intelligence agencies staffed by genuine experts, and diplomatic corps selected through competitive examination. It opposes the appointment of ambassadors based on campaign donations and military leadership chosen for political loyalty.
Cross-Spectrum: On the left, Mastery appears as trust in credentialed expertise, evidence-based policymaking, and the authority of scientific consensus on issues like climate change and public health. On the right, it appears as respect for market-tested competence, skepticism of government programs run by people who have never worked in the private sector, and insistence that military and security decisions be made by experienced professionals rather than political appointees.
Shadow: Authoritarian regimes routinely invoke competence to justify the suppression of dissent, arguing that expert governance requires insulation from the messiness of public opinion. The Chinese Communist Party's emphasis on technocratic competence within one-party rule is the most significant contemporary example. Demagogues exploit Mastery in reverse by attacking credentialed experts as an out-of-touch elite, positioning ignorance as authenticity.
Integrity demands that political actors be bound by the same moral standards they impose on others, and that no amount of political expedience justifies dishonesty.
<p>The Integrity orientation understands politics as fundamentally a moral enterprise in which the character of leaders and the honesty of institutions matter more than policy outcomes. It holds that a political system's legitimacy rests on the trustworthiness of its actors and the consistency between their stated principles and their conduct. When politicians lie, when institutions cover up wrongdoing, when the powerful exempt themselves from the rules they enforce on others, the political order loses its claim to authority regardless of how effective it might otherwise be.</p><p>This value is deeply suspicious of political pragmatism that treats truth as negotiable and character as irrelevant to governance. It holds that the means of political action are not separable from its ends: a just society cannot be built through dishonest methods, and a leader who achieves good outcomes through deception has corrupted the very thing they claim to protect. The individual's relationship to the state is one of mutual accountability: the citizen owes honest engagement, and the state owes transparent governance.</p><p>At its most demanding, Integrity insists that political actors accept the costs of principled behavior even when compromise would be more effective. It produces political figures who are admired for their character but sometimes criticized for their inflexibility, and it creates a persistent tension between moral consistency and political effectiveness that it refuses to resolve in favor of expediency.</p>
Primary Orientation: Integrity appears across the spectrum as a meta-value that evaluates political conduct rather than prescribing policy content. On the right, it manifests as constitutionalism, originalism, and insistence on rule of law. On the left, it appears as demands for governmental transparency, anti-corruption advocacy, and whistleblower protection. Both sides claim it; the disagreement is over which actors and institutions are actually honest.
Institutional Relationship: Integrity supports institutions that enforce accountability: independent judiciaries, inspectors general, free press, ethics commissions. It is reformist toward institutions that have become self-serving or corrupt but conservative toward the institutional structures themselves, because it recognizes that stable rules and transparent processes are prerequisites for honest governance.
Internal Tensions: Integrity creates a persistent tension between moral consistency and political effectiveness: the most principled position is often the least politically viable, and refusing to compromise can mean losing the capacity to achieve any good at all. It also generates conflict between personal integrity and institutional loyalty, as the honest actor within a corrupt institution must decide whether loyalty to colleagues or fidelity to truth takes precedence.
Appeals: Politicians appeal to Integrity through personal narrative emphasizing sacrifice for principle, through demonstrations of consistency between past statements and current positions, and through the language of accountability, transparency, and 'standing up for what's right.' The most effective appeal is often negative: exposing an opponent's hypocrisy, broken promises, or hidden conflicts of interest.
Kantian deontology: Kant's categorical imperative demands that moral agents act only according to principles they could will to be universal law, and that they never treat persons merely as means. This framework provides the philosophical backbone for Integrity's insistence that political conduct must conform to universal moral standards regardless of consequences.
Classical republicanism (Cicero, Machiavelli's Discourses): The republican tradition holds that political virtue, including honesty, self-restraint, and dedication to the common good, is the essential foundation of free government. Cicero's De Officiis argues that moral integrity and political effectiveness are ultimately inseparable, a claim that remains central to the Integrity value's political expression.
Confucian virtue ethics: Confucian political philosophy holds that the moral character of rulers determines the health of society, captured in the concept of the 'rectification of names' where political language must correspond to political reality. The Analerta's insistence that good governance begins with the leader's personal integrity directly parallels this value's political claims.
Government Ethics and Transparency: Integrity is the driving force behind financial disclosure requirements for public officials, conflict-of-interest regulations, lobbying restrictions, and freedom-of-information laws. It supports robust inspector-general systems and independent ethics commissions with enforcement power, and it resists any weakening of these mechanisms in the name of efficiency or executive prerogative.
Criminal Justice: Integrity demands equal application of the law regardless of wealth, status, or political connection. It supports prosecutorial accountability, opposes qualified immunity when it shields genuine misconduct, and insists that law enforcement agencies be subject to the same standards of honesty they enforce on citizens. It is especially concerned with prosecutorial misconduct and evidence fabrication.
Electoral Reform: Integrity supports campaign finance transparency, anti-gerrymandering measures, and election security protocols as mechanisms for ensuring that the democratic process reflects genuine public will rather than manufactured outcomes. It opposes both voter suppression and voter fraud with equal conviction, because both corrupt the integrity of democratic expression.
Foreign Policy: Integrity demands consistency between a nation's stated values and its foreign policy conduct. It opposes alliances of convenience with authoritarian regimes while claiming to promote democracy, secret foreign interventions that contradict public commitments, and the use of diplomatic language designed to obscure rather than communicate.
Media and Information Policy: Integrity supports press freedom as essential to governmental accountability while also insisting on journalistic standards of accuracy and correction. It is troubled by both government censorship and media institutions that have abandoned standards of factual rigor, viewing both as corruptions that undermine the public's capacity for informed self-governance.
Cross-Spectrum: On the right, Integrity appears as constitutionalism, strict constructionism, and insistence that government officials obey the law as written rather than as they wish it were. On the left, it appears as anti-corruption advocacy, whistleblower protection, and the demand that powerful institutions be transparent and accountable. Both sides accuse the other of hypocrisy, which is itself a testament to how universally this value is claimed.
Shadow: Demagogues exploit Integrity by positioning themselves as the only honest actor in a corrupt system, using anti-corruption rhetoric to consolidate power and eliminate rivals. Viktor Orban and other authoritarian populists have used anti-corruption campaigns to dismantle independent institutions, replacing actual accountability with personal loyalty disguised as moral clarity.
Security demands that the political order protect what has been built before it pursues what might be gained.
<p>The Security orientation understands politics as primarily a protective function: the state exists to safeguard the conditions under which individuals and families can maintain stability, accumulate resources, and plan for the future with reasonable confidence. It views political upheaval, whether from the left or the right, as inherently costly and potentially ruinous, and it judges political systems by their capacity to provide predictable conditions rather than by their capacity to inspire or transform.</p><p>This value's relationship to institutions is fundamentally conservative in the dispositional rather than ideological sense: it favors what has been tested over what is proposed, not because the existing order is perfect but because the costs of disruption are real and unevenly distributed. Those with the least margin for error bear the greatest burden when systems fail, a fact that Security never forgets. It supports the welfare state insofar as the welfare state functions as social insurance, and it supports free markets insofar as markets generate the prosperity that makes security possible.</p><p>At its core, the Security worldview holds that political wisdom begins with the recognition of fragility. Civilizations are more easily destroyed than built, savings are more easily lost than accumulated, and social trust is more easily shattered than repaired. Political actors who treat existing arrangements as expendable in pursuit of ideological goals are, from this perspective, gambling with other people's stability.</p>
Primary Orientation: Security gravitates toward fiscal conservatism and cautious incrementalism across the spectrum. On the right, it appears as defense of property rights, low inflation, and stable institutions. On the left, it appears as support for social safety nets, labor protections, and financial regulation. Both expressions share the premise that political and economic stability is a precondition for human flourishing.
Institutional Relationship: Security is the most institutionally conservative of all values: it supports existing institutions not because they are ideal but because they are known quantities whose failure modes are understood. It opposes revolutionary change and favors incremental reform, and it becomes deeply anxious when institutional norms are violated even by actors pursuing goals it supports.
Internal Tensions: Security contains a tension between the stability it seeks to protect and the change that is sometimes necessary to maintain that stability in a shifting world. It also generates conflict between individual security (protecting one's own resources and position) and collective security (contributing to shared systems of protection that may require sacrifice from those who are currently secure).
Appeals: Politicians appeal to Security through language emphasizing protection, stability, and preparedness. Phrases like 'protecting your way of life,' 'keeping what you've earned,' and 'ensuring a secure future for your children' activate this value. The emotional register is reassurance: the effective appeal makes the voter feel that their accumulated stability will be preserved and that the candidate understands what is at stake.
Hobbesian social contract theory: Hobbes argued that the fundamental purpose of political authority is to deliver security from the 'war of all against all' that characterizes the state of nature. His claim that subjects rationally surrender liberty in exchange for protection remains the most uncompromising philosophical statement of Security as the primary political value.
Burkean conservatism: Burke's Reflections on the Revolution in France argues that political institutions embody accumulated wisdom that reformers destroy at their peril. His defense of inherited institutions, gradual reform, and the 'partnership between the living, the dead, and those yet to be born' expresses Security's conviction that stability is a precondition for all other political goods.
Ordoliberalism: The German ordoliberal school, associated with Walter Eucken and Wilhelm Ropke, argued that free markets require a strong state framework to prevent monopoly, maintain price stability, and ensure that competition serves social order rather than undermining it. This tradition directly influenced the social market economy and represents Security's most sophisticated engagement with market economics.
Economic Policy: Security prioritizes low inflation, stable currency, fiscal responsibility, and the protection of savings and pensions. It supports central bank independence, opposes deficit spending that threatens long-term fiscal stability, and favors regulations that prevent financial system collapse. It is more concerned with preventing catastrophic downside risk than with maximizing growth.
National Defense: Security supports robust military capability and alliance systems as deterrents against external threats. It favors predictable, sustained defense spending over reactive surges and opposes adventurist foreign policy that creates new enemies. It is more concerned with maintaining deterrence than with projecting power.
Social Insurance: Security supports social safety nets understood as insurance mechanisms: unemployment insurance, Social Security, disability benefits, and catastrophic health coverage. These are not viewed as redistribution but as collective risk management. The internal logic is that a society that allows its members to face ruin from events beyond their control generates the insecurity and desperation that destabilize political order.
Immigration Policy: Security approaches immigration through the lens of social stability and labor market impact, favoring orderly legal processes, enforcement of existing laws, and integration programs over both open borders and mass deportation. The concern is not cultural but structural: rapid demographic change without institutional adaptation creates unpredictability.
Housing and Urban Policy: Security favors policies that promote stable homeownership, protect renters from arbitrary eviction, and prevent housing market volatility. It supports zoning regulations that maintain neighborhood stability while opposing speculative development that displaces established communities. The home is understood as the fundamental unit of security.
Cross-Spectrum: On the right, Security appears as defense of property rights, fiscal conservatism, strong national defense, and skepticism of rapid social change. On the left, it appears as defense of social safety nets, financial regulation, labor protections, and resistance to the insecurities generated by unrestrained market capitalism. Both sides are protecting stability; they disagree about what threatens it most.
Shadow: Authoritarian regimes universally invoke security to justify the suppression of civil liberties, the expansion of surveillance, and the elimination of political opposition. The rhetoric of 'national security' has been used to justify everything from Japanese American internment to mass surveillance programs. Fear-based politics deliberately amplifies threats to existing stability to make citizens willing to surrender freedoms they would otherwise defend.
Peace holds that the political order's highest function is to reduce suffering, resolve conflict without violence, and create the conditions for human beings to live without fear.
<p>The Peace orientation understands politics as an arena that is inherently prone to conflict, coercion, and suffering, and it evaluates political systems by their capacity to minimize these harms. Where other values ask what the state should achieve, Peace asks what the state should stop doing and what violence it should prevent. It holds that the default condition of political life is too much aggression, too much punishment, and too much willingness to impose suffering in pursuit of abstract goals.</p><p>This value is profoundly suspicious of political enthusiasm, especially the kind that demonizes opponents and mobilizes anger. It recognizes that most political violence is committed by people who believe they are serving justice, and it insists that the desire to punish is rarely as righteous as it feels. The individual's relationship to the state is shaped by an awareness that government possesses the ultimate monopoly on legitimate violence, and that this power must be exercised with maximum restraint.</p><p>At its most politically engaged, Peace does not advocate withdrawal from politics but rather a particular orientation within it: toward diplomacy over confrontation, restorative over punitive justice, de-escalation over dominance, and the patient work of building understanding across lines of division. It is not naive about the existence of genuine threats but insists that the reflexive resort to force, both domestically and internationally, creates more problems than it solves.</p>
Primary Orientation: Peace gravitates toward dovish positions across the spectrum: anti-war conservatism, pacifist progressivism, and libertarian non-interventionism all express this value. It is most uncomfortable with hawkish nationalism on the right and revolutionary militancy on the left, both of which accept violence as a legitimate political tool.
Institutional Relationship: Peace supports institutions designed to manage conflict without violence: international courts, mediation services, diplomatic corps, and restorative justice programs. It is reformist toward institutions that rely on coercion, including police departments, prisons, and military establishments, seeking to reduce their scope and transform their methods.
Internal Tensions: Peace contains a fundamental tension between the desire to avoid violence and the recognition that some injustices persist precisely because no one is willing to use force to end them. It also struggles with the question of whether peace is merely the absence of violence or requires the presence of justice, since an unjust peace that silences the oppressed may perpetuate more suffering than the conflict that would disrupt it.
Appeals: Politicians appeal to Peace through language emphasizing healing, reconciliation, and the human costs of conflict. Imagery of children, families, and communities affected by violence is especially activating. The effective appeal acknowledges the difficulty of restraint while presenting it as strength rather than weakness. Barack Obama's Nobel Peace Prize acceptance speech, which wrestled with the tension between peace and necessary force, exemplifies sophisticated engagement with this value.
Pacifism (Quaker, Gandhian, Buddhist): The pacifist tradition holds that violence is never justified as a political means, regardless of the ends it serves. Gandhi's satyagraha, Quaker peace testimony, and Buddhist concepts of ahimsa all argue that nonviolent resistance is not merely a strategy but a moral imperative rooted in the fundamental dignity and interconnection of all persons.
Just war theory (Augustine, Aquinas, Walzer): Just war theory, while not pacifist, expresses Peace's commitment to constraining political violence through moral criteria. By requiring that wars meet tests of just cause, proportionality, discrimination between combatants and noncombatants, and last resort, it insists that even necessary violence must be bounded by ethical reasoning.
Feminist peace theory (Ruddick, Elshtain): Feminist peace theory argues that the connection between masculinity and militarism is not natural but constructed, and that centering care, relationality, and maternal thinking in political life would fundamentally reorient the state's relationship to violence. Sara Ruddick's 'Maternal Thinking' argues that the practice of caring for vulnerable life generates a distinctive and politically valuable orientation toward peace.
Foreign Policy and Defense: Peace favors diplomatic engagement, multilateral institutions, arms reduction, and strict criteria for military intervention. It opposes preemptive war, regime change operations, and arms sales to authoritarian governments. It supports robust funding for the State Department, USAID, and international mediation bodies, and it argues that military spending beyond genuine defense needs diverts resources from human security.
Criminal Justice: Peace supports restorative justice programs, alternatives to incarceration for nonviolent offenses, de-escalation training for police, and the abolition or strict limitation of capital punishment. The internal logic is that punitive justice systems perpetuate cycles of violence and that genuine public safety is better served by addressing root causes of crime than by escalating the state's capacity for punishment.
Environmental Policy: Peace approaches environmental policy through the lens of harm reduction and intergenerational responsibility. It supports conservation, sustainable development, and international environmental agreements as mechanisms for preventing the resource conflicts and displacement that environmental degradation generates. It views ecological destruction as a form of slow violence against vulnerable populations.
Drug Policy: Peace favors decriminalization and public health approaches to drug use over punitive enforcement. It opposes the war on drugs as a policy that has generated mass incarceration, militarized policing, and international violence while failing to reduce drug use. It supports harm reduction programs, treatment access, and the regulation of substances as alternatives to prohibition.
Immigration Policy: Peace favors humanitarian approaches to immigration, including asylum protections, family reunification, and the humane treatment of undocumented persons. It opposes family separation, detention of asylum seekers, and militarized border enforcement, viewing these as forms of state violence that cause suffering disproportionate to any legitimate policy purpose.
Cross-Spectrum: On the left, Peace appears as anti-war activism, support for international institutions, and restorative justice. On the right, it appears as non-interventionist foreign policy, skepticism of nation-building, and opposition to the militarization of domestic policing. Libertarians and progressive pacifists often find unexpected common ground in opposing military adventurism and the surveillance state.
Shadow: Authoritarian regimes invoke 'peace and stability' to justify the suppression of dissent, arguing that protest is a form of social disruption that threatens public tranquility. China's rhetoric of 'harmonious society' and Russia's framing of opposition movements as threats to stability both exploit the Peace value to delegitimize political resistance. The desire for peace can be weaponized to silence those whose suffering would otherwise demand a response.
Achievement demands that political systems reward those who produce, compete, and win, and that the state neither guarantee outcomes nor punish success.
<p>The Achievement orientation understands politics through the lens of competition, opportunity, and earned reward. It views the political order as legitimate to the extent that it creates conditions in which talent, effort, and ambition can find their natural level. The state's role is to maintain the playing field, enforce the rules of competition, and protect the fruits of success from confiscation or redistribution that would destroy the incentive structure on which productive societies depend.</p><p>This value is impatient with political frameworks that emphasize structural constraint over individual agency. While it does not deny the existence of disadvantage, it believes that political systems organized around victimhood rather than opportunity produce dependency, mediocrity, and resentment. It is drawn to political leaders who have themselves achieved visible success and who speak the language of aspiration rather than grievance.</p><p>At its core, the Achievement worldview holds that human beings are motivated by the possibility of distinction and reward, and that political systems which suppress this motivation, whether through egalitarian ideology or bureaucratic regulation, impoverish everyone by destroying the engine of progress. It recognizes that competition produces losers as well as winners but views this as a necessary cost of a system that generates wealth, innovation, and human excellence.</p>
Primary Orientation: Achievement gravitates toward free-market liberalism, entrepreneurial conservatism, and meritocratic capitalism. On the right, it appears as opposition to taxation, regulation, and redistribution. On the left, it appears as support for equal opportunity, affirmative action as a leveling mechanism, and investment in education as a pathway to competitive success. Both expressions share the premise that achievement matters and should be rewarded.
Institutional Relationship: Achievement respects institutions that facilitate competition and recognize merit: competitive markets, standardized testing, patent systems, and awards structures. It is hostile to institutions that protect mediocrity, including monopolies, tenure systems perceived as shielding incompetence, and regulatory structures that favor incumbents over innovators.
Internal Tensions: Achievement contains a tension between its commitment to competition and the tendency of winners to use their gains to rig future competitions in their favor. It also struggles with the relationship between individual achievement and collective infrastructure: the achiever succeeds in part because of public investments in education, transportation, research, and rule of law, creating an obligation to the collective that pure individualism cannot acknowledge.
Appeals: Politicians appeal to Achievement through personal success narratives, economic growth data, and the promise of expanded opportunity. The American Dream is the rhetorical master-frame: the assertion that anyone who works hard enough can succeed. The emotional register combines aspiration with competitive pride, and the most effective appeals make voters feel that their own efforts will be recognized and rewarded.
Classical liberalism (Locke, Smith, Mill): Classical liberalism argues that individuals have a natural right to the fruits of their labor and that free markets, protected by the rule of law, are the best mechanism for channeling ambition into productive achievement. Adam Smith's argument that individual pursuit of self-interest generates collective prosperity provides the economic foundation for Achievement's political claims.
Nietzschean perfectionism: Nietzsche's critique of egalitarian morality and his celebration of the 'will to power' as the drive toward self-overcoming and excellence provides the philosophical backbone for Achievement's more radical claim: that great societies are measured by the heights their most exceptional members reach, not by the comfort of their average citizens.
American pragmatism and self-reliance (Emerson, James): Emerson's doctrine of self-reliance and William James's emphasis on the 'strenuous life' of active engagement with the world express Achievement's distinctly American philosophical roots. This tradition holds that the individual who strives, risks, and achieves is the moral exemplar of democratic society.
Tax Policy: Achievement opposes progressive taxation beyond moderate levels, capital gains taxes, estate taxes, and any tax structure that penalizes success. The internal logic is that taxation of achievement reduces the incentive to produce and transfers resources from those who have demonstrated the ability to deploy them productively to a government that has not.
Education Policy: Achievement supports competitive educational systems: school choice, gifted programs, merit-based scholarships, and standardized testing. It favors educational structures that identify and develop talent rather than structures oriented primarily toward equalization. It supports vocational pathways as legitimate achievement tracks alongside academic ones.
Labor and Employment Policy: Achievement favors flexible labor markets, at-will employment, performance-based compensation, and limited labor regulation. It opposes minimum wage laws, mandatory benefits, and union power to the extent that these mechanisms protect underperformance and constrain the ability of employers and employees to negotiate freely based on productive contribution.
Intellectual Property: Achievement supports strong intellectual property protections as necessary to reward innovation and creative production. The internal logic is that without the ability to capture the economic value of inventions and ideas, the incentive to create is destroyed and society loses the productive output of its most innovative members.
Welfare and Social Policy: Achievement supports temporary, conditional assistance programs with work requirements and time limits, and opposes open-ended entitlements that create dependency. It favors policies that remove barriers to participation in the economy, such as childcare subsidies and job training, over policies that provide income without requiring productive engagement.
Cross-Spectrum: On the right, Achievement appears as free-market capitalism, opposition to redistribution, and celebration of entrepreneurial success. On the left, it appears as meritocratic progressivism, emphasis on educational opportunity for disadvantaged groups, and the demand that structural barriers be removed so that achievement reflects genuine talent rather than inherited advantage. Both claim to support merit; they disagree about what obstructs it.
Shadow: Plutocratic interests routinely wrap privilege in meritocratic language, claiming that wealth reflects productive contribution when it often reflects inherited advantage, rent-seeking, or regulatory capture. The Gilded Age robber barons used Achievement rhetoric to oppose labor protections, and contemporary billionaires use it to oppose taxation, framing the preservation of extreme wealth as the defense of productive incentives.
Courage demands that political actors risk their positions, their safety, and their reputations to do what is right rather than what is safe.
<p>The Courage orientation understands politics as a domain that inherently demands risk-taking: the willingness to speak unpopular truths, to challenge entrenched power, and to act on conviction when the outcome is uncertain. It views political safety-seeking, the careful calculation of what can be said without cost, as a betrayal of the public trust. Leaders who trim their positions to match polls, who avoid difficult votes, and who sacrifice principle for re-election have, from this perspective, failed the most basic test of political office.</p><p>This value prizes independence over loyalty and boldness over caution. It is drawn to political mavericks, dissidents, and whistle-blowers who break with their own side when conscience demands it. It has little patience for partisan discipline and views the demand for party unity as a mechanism for suppressing honest disagreement. The individual's relationship to political authority is defined by the willingness to resist it when it is wrong, regardless of the personal consequences.</p><p>At its most politically demanding, Courage insists that freedom is not a condition to be enjoyed but a practice to be enacted: it exists only when people are willing to exercise it at cost. A society in which everyone calculates the safe position before speaking has already lost its freedom, even if no formal censorship exists. Courage is what prevents the gap between formal liberty and practical liberty from becoming unbridgeable.</p>
Primary Orientation: Courage appears across the entire political spectrum as a meta-virtue: it is the willingness to take politically dangerous positions regardless of their content. On the right, it appears as defiance of progressive consensus, resistance to regulatory overreach, and the defense of unpopular positions. On the left, it appears as willingness to challenge corporate power, to speak against popular prejudice, and to risk arrest for civil disobedience.
Institutional Relationship: Courage is ambivalent toward institutions: it respects institutional courage, such as judicial independence and press freedom, but it also recognizes that institutions tend toward self-preservation and conformity. It supports whistleblower protections, judicial independence, and press shield laws as institutional mechanisms for enabling individual courage.
Internal Tensions: Courage contains a tension between the individual's right to bold action and the collective consequences of that action: the courageous dissident may inspire a movement, but the courageous provocateur may trigger a backlash that harms the very cause they claim to serve. It also struggles with the distinction between genuine courage, which requires accepting personal risk, and performative courage, which cultivates the appearance of boldness while minimizing actual cost.
Appeals: Politicians appeal to Courage through narratives of personal risk-taking, defiance of establishment expectations, and willingness to 'tell it like it is.' The maverick frame is powerful: the candidate who breaks with their own party, who says things that are true but uncomfortable, who has been punished for their honesty. John McCain's political brand and Volodymyr Zelensky's wartime leadership both activated this value through different registers.
Existentialism (Kierkegaard, Sartre, Camus): Existentialism holds that authentic human existence requires the willingness to act in the face of uncertainty, absurdity, and risk. Sartre's insistence that we are 'condemned to be free' and Camus's argument that the only serious philosophical question is whether to continue living both express the Courage value's conviction that freedom is meaningless without the willingness to exercise it at cost.
Classical republican virtue theory (Machiavelli, Arendt): The republican tradition, particularly in Machiavelli's Discourses and Arendt's writings on political action, holds that courage is the fundamental political virtue because politics requires appearing before others and acting in the public realm where outcomes are unpredictable. Arendt's concept of 'natality,' the capacity to begin something new, is inherently courageous because the new is by definition risky.
Thoreavian civil disobedience: Thoreau's 'On the Duty of Civil Disobedience' argues that the individual conscience has not only the right but the obligation to resist unjust law, and that obedience to unjust authority is a greater moral failure than the disruption caused by resistance. This tradition provides the philosophical foundation for political courage understood as the willingness to break rules that violate one's principles.
Civil Liberties: Courage drives support for expansive free speech protections, press freedom, protest rights, and protection for whistleblowers and dissidents. The internal logic is that the right to challenge power is the foundation of all other rights, and that any restriction on political expression, however well-intentioned, threatens the conditions under which courage can be exercised.
Foreign Policy: Courage in foreign policy opposes both isolationist withdrawal and hawkish aggression, favoring instead the willingness to take unpopular diplomatic positions, to challenge allied governments over human rights, and to resist the domestic political pressure to match adversaries' provocations. It supports asylum for political dissidents and opposition to authoritarian allies.
Electoral and Political Reform: Courage supports reforms that reduce the political cost of principled action: open primaries that free legislators from ideological litmus tests, ranked-choice voting that reduces the spoiler effect, and campaign finance reform that reduces donors' leverage over elected officials. The internal logic is that structural reforms can create conditions in which political courage becomes more possible.
Government Transparency: Courage supports robust whistleblower protection laws, declassification of government secrets after reasonable periods, and the protection of journalists who publish leaked information. It opposes the use of classification systems to hide embarrassing or illegal government conduct rather than to protect genuine security interests.
Criminal Justice: Courage supports reforms that require political risk: ending mass incarceration, reforming police practices, and challenging prosecutorial overreach. It recognizes that criminal justice reform is consistently popular in polls but politically dangerous in practice, because opponents can always frame reform as being 'soft on crime.' Courage insists on pursuing the right policy despite this vulnerability.
Cross-Spectrum: On the left, Courage appears as civil disobedience, whistleblowing, and the willingness to challenge corporate power and systemic racism. On the right, it appears as defiance of political correctness, willingness to advocate unpopular positions on immigration or national security, and resistance to what is perceived as progressive institutional capture. Both sides celebrate their own courage and dismiss the other's as either recklessness or performance.
Shadow: Demagogues exploit Courage by framing their own power-seeking as defiance of a corrupt establishment. Donald Trump's political brand was built on the claim of courage against political correctness and establishment opposition, turning controversy itself into evidence of boldness. This exploitation works because genuine political courage and narcissistic provocation can produce identical surface behaviors, making them difficult to distinguish in real time.
Growth demands that political systems create the conditions for human development, adaptation, and renewal rather than preserving static arrangements.
<p>The Growth orientation understands politics as a domain that must accommodate and facilitate change. It views the political order as legitimate to the extent that it enables individuals and societies to learn, adapt, and develop new capacities in response to changing circumstances. Static institutions, fixed ideologies, and political arrangements designed to preserve existing power distributions are, from this perspective, obstacles to the flourishing that political systems should enable.</p><p>This value is drawn to experimental governance, pilot programs, iterative policymaking, and political frameworks that build in mechanisms for learning and self-correction. It is more interested in whether a political system can adapt to new information than in whether it adheres to established principles. It views political failure not as disgrace but as data, and it is more troubled by systems that cannot learn from mistakes than by systems that make them.</p><p>At its core, the Growth worldview holds that human potential is the most valuable political resource and that the primary function of government is to invest in, protect, and expand this potential. Education, scientific research, public health, and infrastructure are not costs to be minimized but investments in the capacity for future development. A society that stops growing, intellectually, technologically, and morally, is a society in decline regardless of its current prosperity.</p>
Primary Orientation: Growth gravitates toward progressive liberalism and development-oriented centrism. On the left, it appears as support for public education, scientific research, and investment in human capital. On the right, it appears as support for innovation-friendly deregulation, entrepreneurial culture, and creative destruction as the engine of economic renewal. Both expressions share the conviction that stagnation is the primary political danger.
Institutional Relationship: Growth is reformist rather than either conservative or revolutionary: it values institutions that can adapt and evolve, and it opposes both institutional rigidity and the wholesale destruction of institutional knowledge. It supports sunset clauses, regular policy review, and institutional designs that build in mechanisms for experimentation and course correction.
Internal Tensions: Growth contains a tension between its commitment to development and the recognition that not all growth is beneficial: environmental degradation, cultural homogenization, and the destruction of traditional knowledge are all forms of growth. It also struggles with the time horizon problem: investments in human development often take decades to produce visible returns, making them politically vulnerable to short-term thinking.
Appeals: Politicians appeal to Growth through optimistic, forward-looking language: investment in the future, expanding opportunity, unleashing potential, building tomorrow. Obama's 'Yes We Can' and Kennedy's 'New Frontier' both activated this value. The emotional register is hope and possibility rather than fear or grievance, and the most effective appeals make voters feel that the best is ahead rather than behind.
Dewey's progressive pragmatism: Dewey argued that democracy is not merely a form of government but a way of life organized around shared inquiry, mutual education, and the experimental resolution of social problems. His vision of politics as collective problem-solving through intelligent experimentation is the most fully developed philosophical expression of Growth as a political value.
Capabilities approach (Sen, Nussbaum): Amartya Sen's and Martha Nussbaum's capabilities approach argues that the purpose of political and economic systems is to expand the range of things people can do and be. This framework shifts the measure of political success from GDP or utility to the actual development of human capacities, making Growth central to the evaluation of political institutions.
German Idealism and Bildung (Hegel, Humboldt): The German tradition of Bildung holds that the highest purpose of social institutions is the full development of each individual's capacities. Humboldt's argument that the state's role is to create conditions for self-cultivation, and Hegel's understanding of history as the progressive development of freedom, both express Growth's philosophical ambitions at their most systematic.
Education Policy: Growth places education at the center of political life, supporting universal access to quality education from early childhood through adult continuing education. It favors experiential and inquiry-based learning, investment in teacher development, and educational systems designed to cultivate critical thinking and adaptability rather than mere credentialing.
Science and Research Policy: Growth supports robust public funding for basic research, scientific institutions insulated from political interference, and policies that facilitate the translation of scientific discovery into social benefit. It opposes the politicization of scientific findings and supports the independence of research universities and national laboratories.
Economic Development: Growth favors investment in infrastructure, workforce development, and innovation ecosystems over austerity-oriented fiscal policy. It supports industrial policy that identifies and nurtures emerging sectors, and it views public investment in research and development as the foundation of long-term economic vitality.
Environmental Policy: Growth approaches environmental challenges through the lens of innovation and adaptation rather than restriction alone. It supports investment in clean energy technology, sustainable development practices, and the redesign of economic systems to account for ecological costs. It views environmental sustainability as a growth challenge rather than a growth constraint.
Immigration Policy: Growth views immigration as a source of human capital, cultural dynamism, and economic vitality. It supports policies that attract talented immigrants, facilitate integration, and enable newcomers to contribute their skills to the receiving society. The internal logic is that human potential does not respect national borders, and that growth-oriented societies benefit from diverse perspectives.
Cross-Spectrum: On the left, Growth appears as investment in public education, scientific research, and social programs designed to develop human potential. On the right, it appears as support for entrepreneurial innovation, deregulation of emerging industries, and the creative destruction that enables economic renewal. Both sides value growth; they disagree about whether the engine of development is public investment or private enterprise.
Shadow: Authoritarian regimes frequently invoke development and modernization to justify the suppression of dissent and the displacement of traditional communities. China's development model, which has lifted hundreds of millions from poverty while crushing political opposition, represents the most consequential contemporary exploitation of Growth rhetoric. 'Growth' and 'development' can become legitimating frames for any exercise of state power that produces measurable economic output.
Meaning demands that political life serve purposes beyond material security and power, and that societies organize themselves around something worth believing in.
<p>The Meaning orientation understands politics as an arena that must address the human need for purpose, significance, and moral coherence. It holds that political systems which satisfy material needs while leaving the question of meaning unanswered are inherently unstable, because human beings who lack a sense of purpose will seek it in destructive forms: ideological fanaticism, conspiratorial thinking, nationalism, or nihilistic withdrawal. The political order has a stake in the conditions under which people find their lives meaningful.</p><p>This value does not demand that the state itself provide meaning, which would be theocracy or totalitarianism, but rather that political arrangements create the conditions under which individuals and communities can pursue meaning freely. This includes the protection of religious freedom, the support of cultural and educational institutions, the preservation of traditions and sacred spaces, and the resistance to economic and political forces that reduce human life to consumption and production.</p><p>At its most politically engaged, Meaning insists that the deepest political crises are crises of meaning: that the rise of extremism, the decline of civic engagement, and the epidemic of despair in affluent societies reflect a failure not of policy but of purpose. It calls for a politics that takes seriously the question of what a good society is for, not only what it provides.</p>
Primary Orientation: Meaning appears across the spectrum in distinctive forms. On the right, it manifests as defense of religious tradition, national identity, and the moral frameworks that give life coherence. On the left, it appears as the search for meaning through social justice, environmental stewardship, and the creation of a society organized around higher purposes than profit. Both expressions reject the reduction of political life to material calculation.
Institutional Relationship: Meaning supports institutions that preserve and transmit purpose: religious institutions, universities understood as sites of intellectual and moral formation, cultural institutions, and constitutional traditions that embody founding ideals. It is critical of institutions that have lost their sense of mission and become merely self-perpetuating, and it supports institutional reform that reconnects organizations to their founding purposes.
Internal Tensions: Meaning contains a fundamental tension between the desire for transcendent purpose and the danger of political absolutism: the more intensely politics is experienced as meaningful, the harder it becomes to tolerate opposition, because opponents are not merely wrong but opposed to the good itself. It also struggles with pluralism, since the claim that society needs shared meaning sits uneasily with the reality of irreducible diversity in what people find meaningful.
Appeals: Politicians appeal to Meaning through invocations of national purpose, civilizational mission, and the call to serve something greater than self-interest. Kennedy's 'Ask not what your country can do for you' and Reagan's 'city on a hill' both activated this value. Religious language, even in secular contexts, resonates powerfully because it connects political action to transcendent purpose.
Existentialism (Kierkegaard, Heidegger, Frankl): Existential philosophy argues that the question of meaning is the central human question and that no political or economic arrangement can answer it for the individual. Frankl's logotherapy, developed in the death camps, holds that the will to meaning is the primary motivational force in human life and that meaning can be found even in suffering, a claim with profound political implications for how societies handle crisis and loss.
Communitarianism (MacIntyre, Taylor, Sandel): Communitarian philosophy argues that meaningful human life requires embeddedness in particular communities, traditions, and moral frameworks that liberalism's emphasis on individual autonomy tends to erode. MacIntyre's After Virtue argues that modern liberal societies have lost the shared moral vocabulary necessary for meaningful political discourse, producing a politics of mere preference rather than genuine moral reasoning.
Political theology (Schmitt, Voegelin, Milbank): Political theology examines the religious roots of political concepts and the ways in which secular politics retains theological structures. Voegelin's argument that totalitarianism represents the 'immanentization of the eschaton,' the attempt to create meaning through political action that should be sought in transcendence, captures the danger of Meaning when it becomes politically absolutist.
Religious Freedom and Church-State Relations: Meaning supports robust religious freedom protections, including accommodation of religious practice in public life, while opposing both theocratic establishment and aggressive secularism that treats religion as a purely private matter. The internal logic is that religious communities are among the most important meaning-generating institutions, and that a political order that marginalizes them impoverishes the society's capacity for purpose.
Education Policy: Meaning supports education that cultivates intellectual depth, moral seriousness, and the capacity for reflection rather than education oriented exclusively toward workforce preparation. It favors liberal arts education, philosophical and ethical literacy, and engagement with the great intellectual and spiritual traditions of human civilization.
Cultural Policy: Meaning supports public investment in cultural institutions, including museums, libraries, public media, and arts funding, on the grounds that these institutions sustain the shared symbolic resources through which societies make meaning. It opposes the purely market-driven allocation of cultural resources, which tends to replace meaning with entertainment.
Drug Policy and Mental Health: Meaning approaches the epidemic of despair, including addiction, suicide, and mental health crises, as symptoms of a meaning deficit rather than purely biomedical or economic problems. It supports policies that address social isolation, community disintegration, and the erosion of purpose, alongside clinical and economic interventions.
Technology Policy: Meaning is concerned with the effects of technology on the human capacity for reflection, attention, and deep engagement. It supports regulation of attention-extracting technologies, data privacy protections, and investment in educational technology designed to deepen rather than fragment intellectual life.
Cross-Spectrum: On the right, Meaning appears as defense of religious tradition, national identity, and the conviction that Western civilization carries a moral and spiritual heritage worth preserving. On the left, it appears as the search for meaning through social justice, environmentalism, and the creation of communities organized around shared purpose rather than shared consumption. Both sides are responding to the same crisis of meaning; they look to different sources for its resolution.
Shadow: Totalitarian movements have always exploited the human need for meaning, offering coherent narratives of purpose, belonging, and historical destiny that fill the void left by the collapse of traditional frameworks. Fascism, Stalinism, and contemporary jihadism all succeed in part by providing intense meaning to people who feel that their lives lack purpose. The more meaningless modern life feels, the more vulnerable populations become to movements that offer total meaning.
Trust demands that political institutions keep their promises, follow their own rules, and demonstrate the reliability without which self-governance is impossible.
<p>The Trust orientation understands politics as fundamentally a system of mutual commitment: citizens consent to be governed on the condition that government acts in their interest, follows established procedures, and honors its obligations. When political institutions break faith with citizens, whether through corruption, broken promises, or the arbitrary exercise of power, they undermine the foundation on which democratic governance rests. Political legitimacy, from this perspective, is not given once but must be continuously earned through consistent, reliable conduct.</p><p>This value is deeply concerned with the institutional infrastructure of trust: the rule of law, procedural fairness, contractual obligation, and the expectation that agreements will be honored. It recognizes that modern societies are built on networks of trust that extend far beyond personal acquaintance, and that the institutions which sustain this extended trust, from courts and banks to regulatory agencies and electoral systems, are civilization's most valuable and most fragile achievements.</p><p>At its most politically engaged, Trust insists that the erosion of institutional credibility is the most dangerous political development of any era, more threatening than any particular policy failure because it destroys the capacity for collective action itself. A society that cannot trust its elections, its courts, its currency, or its public health authorities is a society that cannot govern itself, regardless of how free or wealthy it may be.</p>
Primary Orientation: Trust is meta-ideological: it evaluates political systems by their reliability and consistency rather than by their policy content. On the right, it manifests as emphasis on the rule of law, contract enforcement, and institutional stability. On the left, it appears as demands for government accountability, corporate responsibility, and the fulfillment of social contract obligations. Both expressions share the premise that broken trust is the deepest form of political failure.
Institutional Relationship: Trust is the most institutionally supportive of all values: it defends the integrity of existing institutions, including courts, regulatory agencies, electoral systems, and central banks, because these are the mechanisms through which trust is maintained at scale. It supports institutional reform that restores credibility but opposes both institutional destruction and the capture of institutions by partisan interests.
Internal Tensions: Trust contains a tension between loyalty to institutions and accountability for institutional failure: at what point does defending an institution that has broken trust become complicity rather than fidelity? It also struggles with the asymmetry between building and destroying trust. Institutions can lose credibility in a moment but rebuild it only over decades, creating a bias toward paralysis when decisive but trust-risking action is needed.
Appeals: Politicians appeal to Trust through language emphasizing reliability, consistency, and promise-keeping. 'I will do what I said I would do,' 'You can count on me,' and 'I'll be straight with you' are characteristic appeals. The most effective trust-building rhetoric is not dramatic but consistent: the demonstration over time that what a leader says matches what they do.
Social contract theory (Locke, Rousseau, Rawls): Social contract theory holds that political authority is legitimate only to the extent that it fulfills the terms of an implicit agreement between citizens and the state. Locke's argument that government exists to protect natural rights, and that citizens may withdraw consent when government fails to do so, provides the foundational logic for Trust as a political value.
Institutional economics (North, Ostrom): Douglass North's argument that institutions, the formal and informal rules that govern human interaction, are the primary determinant of economic performance, and Elinor Ostrom's research on how communities build and maintain trust-based governance of shared resources, provide the empirical foundation for Trust's political claims.
Rule of law theory (Dicey, Fuller, Raz): The rule of law tradition, from Dicey's constitutional principles through Lon Fuller's 'inner morality of law' to Joseph Raz's formal requirements of legality, establishes the conditions under which legal systems generate and maintain trust. Fuller's argument that law must be general, public, prospective, and consistently enforced describes the institutional requirements of political trust.
Judicial Independence: Trust demands an independent judiciary insulated from political pressure, because courts are the ultimate mechanism for resolving disputes and enforcing commitments. It opposes court-packing, the politicization of judicial appointments, and any erosion of judicial independence, viewing these as attacks on the institutional foundation of trust.
Electoral Integrity: Trust supports transparent, auditable, and secure electoral systems that produce results accepted by winners and losers alike. It opposes both voter suppression and unfounded claims of fraud, because both erode confidence in the legitimacy of democratic outcomes. The peaceful transfer of power is the ultimate trust-dependent political act.
Financial Regulation: Trust supports the regulatory infrastructure that maintains confidence in financial systems: central bank independence, deposit insurance, securities regulation, and accounting standards. It views financial fraud and market manipulation as especially serious offenses because they undermine the trust on which economic activity depends.
Government Accountability: Trust supports robust accountability mechanisms including inspector general offices, the Government Accountability Office, freedom-of-information laws, and protected channels for whistleblowing. These mechanisms maintain institutional credibility by ensuring that government agencies can be verified to be performing as promised.
International Relations: Trust supports treaty compliance, alliance reliability, and the honoring of international commitments. It opposes unilateral withdrawal from agreements, because international trust, once lost, is extremely difficult to rebuild. The credibility of a nation's commitments is understood as a strategic asset that reckless leadership can squander.
Cross-Spectrum: On the right, Trust appears as constitutionalism, rule of law, enforcement of contracts, and the insistence that government follow established procedures. On the left, it appears as demands for government transparency, corporate accountability, and the fulfillment of social contract obligations to vulnerable populations. Both sides invoke trust; they disagree about which institutions and actors have earned it and which have forfeited it.
Shadow: The most sophisticated form of political manipulation is the strategic destruction of institutional trust. When citizens cannot trust elections, courts, media, or public health authorities, they become dependent on charismatic leaders who claim to be the only trustworthy source of information. Steve Bannon's stated strategy of 'flooding the zone' with disinformation aims precisely at this: creating an environment in which institutional trust is impossible and personal loyalty to a leader becomes the only available anchor.
Identity demands that political systems recognize and protect the right of individuals and communities to define themselves on their own terms.
<p>The Identity orientation understands politics as the arena in which questions of belonging, recognition, and self-definition are contested. It holds that political systems which ignore or suppress the distinctive identities of their members, whether ethnic, cultural, sexual, religious, or personal, are not merely unjust but are committing a form of violence against the human need to be seen and acknowledged as one truly is. The demand for recognition is not a secondary political concern but a fundamental one, because people who are denied the right to exist as themselves will fight for that right with the intensity of those fighting for survival.</p><p>This value is acutely sensitive to the ways in which political systems enforce conformity, whether through explicit laws, social norms, or institutional cultures that demand assimilation as the price of participation. It holds that diversity is not merely tolerable but valuable, and that a society in which everyone must become the same in order to belong is a society that has impoverished itself. The individual's relationship to the collective is negotiated rather than given: belonging should not require the surrender of distinctiveness.</p><p>At its most politically demanding, Identity insists that universal political categories, including 'citizen,' 'worker,' and 'voter,' are never truly universal but always reflect the experience and assumptions of dominant groups. Genuine political inclusion requires not just formal equality but the recognition that different people experience political life differently, and that policies which treat everyone identically may in fact privilege those whose identities happen to align with institutional norms.</p>
Primary Orientation: Identity politics appears across the spectrum in different forms. On the left, it manifests as advocacy for racial, gender, and sexual minorities and the critique of systemic exclusion. On the right, it appears as defense of national, cultural, and religious identity against perceived erasure. Both expressions share the conviction that identity matters politically and that the failure to protect it constitutes a fundamental political harm.
Institutional Relationship: Identity is reformist toward institutions that enforce conformity and supportive of institutions that protect distinctiveness. It supports anti-discrimination law, cultural preservation programs, and institutional diversity initiatives, while opposing institutions that demand assimilation as the price of participation.
Internal Tensions: Identity contains a tension between the demand for recognition of difference and the need for shared political identity that enables collective action. It also struggles with the relationship between individual and group identity: the assertion that group membership shapes experience can empower members of marginalized groups while also imposing expectations about how members of those groups should think and act.
Appeals: Politicians appeal to Identity through narratives of representation ('someone who looks like you'), cultural pride, and the promise to protect distinctiveness against erasure. The appeal often operates through visibility: the first member of a group to hold office, the first policy that acknowledges a previously invisible community. Barack Obama's 2008 election and the marriage equality movement both activated this value through the politics of recognition.
Recognition theory (Hegel, Taylor, Honneth): Hegel's master-slave dialectic established that human self-consciousness depends on recognition by others, and Charles Taylor's 'Politics of Recognition' argued that the demand for recognition is a fundamental political need. Axel Honneth's theory of recognition holds that self-respect, self-esteem, and self-confidence all depend on social and political acknowledgment of one's identity.
Existential authenticity (Kierkegaard, Heidegger, Sartre): The existentialist tradition's emphasis on authentic selfhood, the refusal to live according to others' expectations, provides the philosophical foundation for Identity's demand that individuals be free to define themselves. Sartre's insistence that existence precedes essence, that human beings create themselves through choices rather than conforming to a fixed nature, directly supports the politics of self-determination.
Postcolonial theory (Fanon, Said, Spivak): Postcolonial theory examines how colonial power structures imposed identities on colonized peoples while suppressing indigenous self-understanding. Fanon's analysis of the psychological damage of colonialism and Said's critique of Orientalism reveal how identity is not merely personal but politically constructed, and how the reclamation of identity is a political act.
Civil Rights and Anti-Discrimination: Identity supports robust anti-discrimination protections covering race, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity, religion, and disability. It favors proactive measures such as affirmative action, diversity requirements, and institutional audit processes that identify and correct patterns of exclusion, not merely reactive complaint mechanisms.
Cultural and Language Policy: Identity supports multilingual governance, cultural preservation funding, and policies that protect minority languages and cultural practices. It opposes assimilationist policies that demand cultural uniformity as a condition of civic membership, favoring instead a pluralist model that recognizes multiple ways of being a full member of the political community.
Education Policy: Identity supports curricula that represent diverse perspectives, histories, and experiences. It favors ethnic studies programs, culturally responsive teaching, and educational environments in which students from all backgrounds can see themselves reflected. It opposes standardized approaches that present a single cultural perspective as universal.
Healthcare Policy: Identity supports culturally competent healthcare, access to identity-affirming medical care including gender-affirming treatment, and the elimination of health disparities that reflect identity-based discrimination. It recognizes that healthcare systems built on the assumptions of a dominant group often fail to serve those outside that group.
Immigration and Citizenship: Identity approaches immigration policy through the lens of belonging and recognition, supporting pathways to citizenship that do not require cultural assimilation and opposing policies that treat immigrants as threats to national identity. It favors the recognition of dual citizenship and the accommodation of diverse cultural practices within civic frameworks.
Cross-Spectrum: On the left, Identity appears as multiculturalism, anti-racism, LGBTQ+ rights, and the critique of structural privilege. On the right, it appears as defense of national culture, religious identity, traditional gender roles, and resistance to what is perceived as the erasure of majority identity. Both sides are engaged in identity politics; the disagreement is about which identities are threatened and which are dominant.
Shadow: Identity is exploited when political actors mobilize identity grievances to consolidate power while doing nothing to address the structural conditions that produce those grievances. Ethno-nationalist movements exploit identity by framing the dominant group as threatened, generating fear and solidarity that can be directed against minorities, immigrants, and political opponents. The politics of resentment, in which an identity group is told that its problems are caused by another identity group, is the most common form of identity exploitation.
Devotion demands that political life be organized around the protection and nurturing of those who cannot protect themselves, beginning with children and extending to all who are vulnerable.
<p>The Devotion orientation understands politics through the lens of care, obligation, and the protection of vulnerability. It holds that the measure of a political system is how it treats those who are least able to advocate for themselves: children, the elderly, the disabled, the ill, and anyone whose circumstances have placed them at the mercy of others. A society that produces wealth while neglecting its most vulnerable members has failed the most basic test of political legitimacy, regardless of how prosperous or free it may be.</p><p>This value is rooted in the experience of caring for particular others, and it extends that experience outward to political life. It does not begin with abstract principles of justice but with the concrete recognition that human beings are dependent creatures who need one another, and that this dependence is not a weakness to be overcome but a fundamental feature of the human condition that political systems must accommodate. The individual's relationship to the collective is understood through the metaphor of family: mutual obligation, unconditional commitment, and the willingness to sacrifice for those who depend on you.</p><p>At its most politically engaged, Devotion challenges the liberal assumption that the autonomous individual is the basic unit of political life. It insists that relationships of care and dependence are prior to individual autonomy, that the capacity for autonomy itself is produced through good care, and that political systems built on the fiction of self-sufficient individuals will systematically neglect the care work on which all human life depends.</p>
Primary Orientation: Devotion appears across the spectrum in distinctive forms. On the left, it manifests as support for social welfare programs, universal healthcare, and the recognition of care work. On the right, it appears as defense of the family as the fundamental social unit, parental rights, and the conviction that private charity and religious institutions are the proper vehicles for care. Both expressions share the conviction that protecting the vulnerable is a primary political obligation.
Institutional Relationship: Devotion supports institutions that provide care: hospitals, schools, child welfare agencies, elder care systems, and religious charities. It is reformist toward institutions that fail to protect those they serve and deeply hostile to institutional abuse, particularly the abuse of children, the disabled, and others in institutional care.
Internal Tensions: Devotion contains a tension between care and empowerment: caring for the vulnerable can easily slide into controlling them, and the desire to protect can suppress the autonomy of those being protected. It also struggles with the scope of obligation: the intensity of devotion that sustains care for one's own family may be impossible to extend to strangers, creating a tension between particular loyalty and universal concern.
Appeals: Politicians appeal to Devotion through stories of vulnerable individuals, especially children, who need protection. The invocation of 'our children's future,' 'taking care of our seniors,' and 'protecting the most vulnerable' activates this value. The emotional register is warmth, moral urgency, and the sense that some obligations transcend political calculation.
Ethics of care (Gilligan, Noddings, Held): Carol Gilligan's research demonstrated that women's moral reasoning often centers on care and responsibility rather than abstract justice, and Nel Noddings and Virginia Held developed this insight into a comprehensive ethical framework. Care ethics argues that the caring relationship, not the autonomous individual, is the basic unit of moral and political life.
Catholic social teaching: Catholic social teaching, from Rerum Novarum through contemporary papal encyclicals, holds that political and economic systems must be evaluated by their effects on the most vulnerable members of society. The principle of the 'preferential option for the poor' expresses Devotion's political demand that the vulnerable be placed at the center of policy evaluation.
Confucian filial piety and relational ethics: Confucian political philosophy holds that the family is the model for political order and that the virtues cultivated in familial relationships, including loyalty, care, and reciprocal obligation, are the foundation of good governance. The concept of ren, or benevolence, extends the care of family relationships outward to encompass all of humanity.
Child Welfare and Family Policy: Devotion supports comprehensive child welfare systems, parental leave policies, affordable childcare, and strong protections against child abuse and neglect. It favors policies that support families in providing care rather than policies that separate families, and it insists that the welfare of children must take precedence over the convenience of institutions.
Healthcare Policy: Devotion supports universal access to healthcare as a basic obligation of political community. It is especially concerned with maternal health, pediatric care, elder care, and mental health services. The internal logic is that a society that allows its members to suffer from treatable conditions because they cannot afford treatment has broken the most basic obligation of care.
Elder Care: Devotion supports policies that protect the dignity and wellbeing of aging populations: Social Security, Medicare, long-term care insurance, and regulation of nursing home quality. It opposes the warehousing of elderly persons in substandard facilities and insists that a society's treatment of its elders is a measure of its moral character.
Labor Policy: Devotion supports policies that recognize and compensate care work: paid family leave, childcare subsidies, compensation for family caregivers, and labor protections for care workers including home health aides and childcare workers. It opposes the economic devaluation of care work and insists that labor policy must accommodate the reality that workers are also caregivers.
Disability Policy: Devotion supports robust disability protections, including the Americans with Disabilities Act framework, supported employment, accessible public infrastructure, and the provision of personal care services. It insists that disability policy be guided by the goal of enabling full participation rather than merely providing minimal support.
Cross-Spectrum: On the left, Devotion appears as support for the welfare state, universal healthcare, and the political recognition of care work. On the right, it appears as defense of the family as the fundamental caring institution, support for religious charities and faith-based social services, and the conviction that government programs cannot replace the intimate care that families and communities provide. Both sides want to protect the vulnerable; they disagree about whether the state or private institutions are the proper vehicle.
Shadow: Authoritarian regimes routinely invoke the protection of the family and the defense of children to justify repressive policies, from the suppression of LGBTQ+ rights to the censorship of media and education. The 'protect the children' frame is particularly effective because it is nearly impossible to oppose publicly, making it a powerful tool for shutting down debate about policies that have nothing to do with child welfare.
Connection demands that political life cultivate the capacity for genuine human understanding across the divisions that politics itself creates.
<p>The Connection orientation understands politics as an arena that either facilitates or obstructs genuine human relationship. It holds that the most important political outcomes are not policy achievements but the quality of human bonds within a society: whether citizens can understand one another across differences, whether political institutions bring people together or drive them apart, and whether the practice of governance strengthens or corrodes the capacity for empathy, affection, and mutual recognition.</p><p>This value is disturbed by the adversarial structure of democratic politics, which organizes public life around competition, opposition, and the defeat of rivals. While it does not reject conflict as illegitimate, it insists that political systems should be evaluated not only by whether they produce good outcomes but by whether they maintain the relational fabric of society. A political victory that is won by demonizing a portion of the citizenry is, from this perspective, a net loss regardless of the policy it achieves.</p><p>At its most politically engaged, Connection calls for a fundamental reorientation of political life away from the metaphors of war and toward the metaphors of relationship: politics as conversation rather than combat, as mutual understanding rather than mutual defeat, and as the ongoing negotiation of shared life rather than the periodic allocation of power. This is not naive idealism but a recognition that a society in which citizens cannot talk to one another across political lines is a society approaching collapse, no matter how effective its institutions may be.</p>
Primary Orientation: Connection gravitates toward communitarianism, deliberative democracy, and political projects organized around bridging social divides. It appears on the left as solidarity politics and the building of coalitions across identity lines, and on the right as civic nationalism and the defense of social bonds against atomizing market forces. Both expressions share the conviction that political polarization is itself a political crisis.
Institutional Relationship: Connection supports institutions that bring people together: public schools, libraries, parks, civic organizations, and deliberative democratic processes. It is critical of institutions that sort people into like-minded groups and of media ecosystems that profit from division.
Internal Tensions: Connection contains a tension between the desire for unity and the recognition that some divisions reflect genuine injustice that must be confronted rather than bridged. It also struggles with scale: the deep, empathic connection that is possible between individuals may be impossible to replicate at the level of mass politics, where relationships are mediated through institutions, media, and abstract categories.
Appeals: Politicians appeal to Connection through language of unity, common ground, and shared humanity. 'There is more that unites us than divides us,' 'We are all in this together,' and 'reaching across the aisle' are characteristic appeals. The emotional register is warmth, inclusion, and the desire for belonging. Obama's 2004 Democratic National Convention speech, with its rejection of 'red America and blue America,' remains the most effective modern activation of this value.
Dialogical philosophy (Buber, Levinas): Martin Buber's distinction between 'I-Thou' and 'I-It' relationships argues that genuine human encounter requires recognizing the other as a full subject rather than an object of use. Levinas's ethics of the face, which holds that moral obligation begins in the encounter with the other's vulnerability, provides the philosophical foundation for a politics organized around connection rather than competition.
Deliberative democracy (Habermas, Gutmann, Thompson): Habermas's theory of communicative action argues that legitimate political authority requires not just voting but genuine deliberation in which participants engage with one another's reasons and are willing to be persuaded. Gutmann and Thompson's deliberative democracy framework insists that political decisions gain legitimacy through the quality of the reasoning process, not merely the counting of preferences.
American civic republicanism (Tocqueville, Putnam): Tocqueville's analysis of American associational life argued that democracy depends on the habits of voluntary association and civic engagement that connect citizens to one another. Robert Putnam's 'Bowling Alone' documented the decline of these connections and argued that social capital, the networks of trust and reciprocity that link citizens, is essential to democratic health.
Civic Infrastructure: Connection supports public investment in shared civic spaces: libraries, community centers, public parks, and mixed-use urban design that creates opportunities for casual interaction across social lines. It opposes the privatization of public space and the geographic sorting of populations by income, race, or political affiliation.
Education Policy: Connection favors educational environments that bring together students from diverse backgrounds and cultivate the skills of dialogue, empathy, and collaborative problem-solving. It supports public schooling as a civic institution whose purpose includes the formation of citizens who can connect across differences, and it opposes educational sorting mechanisms that segregate students by class or background.
Media and Technology Policy: Connection supports regulation of social media algorithms that profit from division and outrage, investment in public media that serves civic rather than commercial purposes, and the development of online platforms designed to facilitate genuine dialogue rather than performative conflict. It views the attention economy as a threat to the relational fabric of democratic society.
Housing and Urban Policy: Connection supports mixed-income housing, inclusive zoning, and urban design that creates opportunities for social interaction across class and racial lines. It opposes the spatial sorting of populations into homogeneous enclaves and views physical proximity as a precondition for the kind of encounter that generates understanding.
Immigration and Integration Policy: Connection supports integration policies that facilitate genuine encounter between immigrant and receiving communities: language programs, community events, mentorship programs, and institutional designs that bring newcomers into existing social networks. It opposes both forced assimilation and parallel isolation, favoring instead the mutual transformation that genuine cultural encounter produces.
Cross-Spectrum: On the left, Connection appears as solidarity politics, community organizing, and the building of coalitions across identity lines. On the right, it appears as civic nationalism, defense of social institutions that bind communities together, and concern about the atomizing effects of market individualism and digital technology. Both sides want human bonds; they disagree about what threatens them most.
Shadow: Connection is exploited when political actors invoke unity and togetherness to silence legitimate dissent. The demand that everyone 'come together' after an election, a crisis, or an injustice can function as pressure to stop complaining rather than as genuine reconciliation. Authoritarian leaders often invoke national unity as a justification for suppressing opposition, framing political criticism as divisiveness that threatens the social bond.
Legacy demands that political actors think beyond their own tenure and build institutions, traditions, and commitments that will outlast them.
<p>The Legacy orientation understands politics as an intergenerational enterprise: the present generation inherits institutions, traditions, and obligations from its predecessors and holds them in trust for its successors. Political action is evaluated not only by its immediate effects but by whether it strengthens or weakens the inheritance that will be passed on. A political leader who achieves short-term success while depleting the institutional, environmental, or social capital that future generations will need has failed the most important test of governance.</p><p>This value is deeply concerned with institutional continuity, the maintenance of traditions that carry meaning across generations, and the creation of structures durable enough to outlast the individuals who build them. It holds that the most important political achievements are not dramatic reforms but the steady maintenance and gradual improvement of institutions that serve generation after generation: constitutions, universities, public infrastructure, and the cultural traditions that give a society its identity.</p><p>At its most politically engaged, Legacy insists that the temporal horizon of political thinking must extend far beyond the electoral cycle. Climate change, national debt, infrastructure maintenance, demographic change, and the preservation of democratic norms all require leaders who are willing to pay present costs for future benefits and who resist the temptation to mortgage the future for short-term advantage.</p>
Primary Orientation: Legacy gravitates toward institutional conservatism in the dispositional sense: it values what endures and is suspicious of what is merely fashionable. On the right, it appears as defense of tradition, constitutional originalism, and the conviction that inherited institutions embody wisdom that reformers ignore at their peril. On the left, it appears as commitment to long-term institution-building, environmental stewardship, and the creation of social infrastructure that will serve future generations.
Institutional Relationship: Legacy is the most institution-building of all values. It supports the creation and maintenance of durable institutions, resists the destruction of institutional knowledge, and insists that institutional reform preserve continuity with the past. It opposes both revolutionary destruction of existing institutions and the gradual erosion of institutional capacity through neglect and defunding.
Internal Tensions: Legacy contains a tension between preservation and progress: the determination to maintain what has been inherited can conflict with the recognition that some inherited arrangements, including slavery, patriarchy, and environmental exploitation, should be rejected rather than preserved. It also struggles with the problem of democratic legitimacy: building institutions designed to constrain future generations may protect them but also limits their self-determination.
Appeals: Politicians appeal to Legacy through invocations of future generations, historical destiny, and the obligation to leave a better world. 'What kind of world will we leave our grandchildren?' and 'We are the stewards, not the owners, of this nation' are characteristic appeals. The emotional register is solemnity, duty, and the weight of responsibility that comes from understanding one's place in a longer historical arc.
Burkean conservatism: Burke's argument that society is a partnership 'between those who are living, those who are dead, and those who are yet to be born' provides the foundational philosophical statement of Legacy as a political value. His insistence that inherited institutions embody the accumulated wisdom of generations and should be reformed gradually rather than destroyed wholesale directly expresses Legacy's political orientation.
Intergenerational justice (Rawls, Parfit, Jonas): The philosophical literature on obligations to future generations, from Rawls's 'just savings principle' through Derek Parfit's work on personal identity and future persons to Hans Jonas's ethics of responsibility, addresses Legacy's central question: what do the living owe to those who will come after them? Jonas's 'imperative of responsibility' argues that the power of modern technology creates unprecedented obligations to the future.
Confucian ancestor veneration and filial piety: Confucian political philosophy's emphasis on honoring ancestors and maintaining the continuity of family and cultural traditions across generations provides the most sustained non-Western philosophical expression of Legacy. The conviction that the present generation is a link in a chain connecting past and future, and that political action must respect this continuity, directly parallels Legacy's political claims.
Environmental and Climate Policy: Legacy demands aggressive action on climate change and environmental degradation because these represent the most direct threats to the inheritance future generations will receive. It supports long-term environmental planning, conservation of natural resources, and the willingness to accept present economic costs for future environmental stability. The internal logic is that no generation has the right to consume the ecological capital on which its successors depend.
Fiscal Policy: Legacy opposes unsustainable deficit spending and the accumulation of national debt that transfers costs to future generations. It supports long-term fiscal planning, the maintenance of sovereign wealth funds, and the institutional mechanisms that constrain short-term spending pressures. However, it also recognizes that investment in infrastructure and human capital can be a form of legacy-building that justifies present borrowing.
Infrastructure Policy: Legacy supports sustained investment in physical infrastructure: bridges, roads, water systems, and public buildings designed to serve for generations. It opposes the deferred maintenance that allows inherited infrastructure to deteriorate and views the decay of public works as a form of intergenerational theft.
Constitutional and Institutional Design: Legacy supports constitutional provisions that constrain short-term political impulses: independent judiciaries, central bank independence, entrenchment of fundamental rights, and supermajority requirements for constitutional amendment. It views these mechanisms as protections for future citizens against the passions and interests of the present moment.
Education and Cultural Policy: Legacy supports the transmission of cultural knowledge, historical understanding, and institutional memory to succeeding generations. It favors investment in libraries, archives, museums, and educational institutions that serve as repositories of collective knowledge. It opposes the erasure of historical memory, whether through neglect or ideological revisionism.
Cross-Spectrum: On the right, Legacy appears as defense of tradition, cultural heritage, constitutional originalism, and the conviction that inherited institutions should be maintained rather than replaced. On the left, it appears as environmental stewardship, long-term infrastructure investment, and the creation of social institutions designed to serve future generations. Both sides think in terms of legacy; they disagree about what is worth preserving and what is worth building.
Shadow: Legacy rhetoric is exploited by political actors who wrap unjust arrangements in the language of tradition and heritage. 'Preserving our heritage' has been used to justify everything from Confederate monuments to resistance against civil rights legislation. Authoritarian leaders build physical legacies, including monuments, stadiums, and capital cities, as expressions of personal vanity disguised as national legacy-building.
Liberation demands that no person be subjected to domination, and that political systems be continuously reformed to dismantle the structures through which some exercise unjust power over others.
<p>The Liberation orientation understands politics as the ongoing struggle against domination in all its forms: economic exploitation, racial subjugation, patriarchal control, colonial rule, and the subtler forms of power that operate through institutional design, cultural norms, and ideological framing. It holds that freedom is not a condition that has been achieved but a project that must be continuously pursued, because power constantly finds new mechanisms for concentrating itself and new justifications for hierarchy.</p><p>This value is skeptical of political arrangements that claim to be neutral or natural, because it recognizes that what appears neutral often reflects the interests of the powerful, and what appears natural is often the result of historical construction. Laws, markets, and cultural norms that treat existing distributions of power as legitimate are, from this perspective, not neutral frameworks but instruments of domination that require critical examination and transformation.</p><p>At its most politically engaged, Liberation insists that genuine freedom requires not just the absence of formal legal barriers but the presence of the material, social, and institutional conditions that make the exercise of freedom possible. A formally free person who lacks education, economic security, and social standing is not genuinely free, and a political system that protects formal rights while permitting structural domination is not genuinely just.</p>
Primary Orientation: Liberation gravitates toward the progressive left but has significant right-libertarian expressions as well. On the left, it appears as anti-racist, feminist, anti-colonial, and labor politics organized around the dismantling of structural domination. On the right, it appears as libertarianism's opposition to state power, gun rights advocacy's resistance to governmental disarmament, and anti-regulatory politics framed as liberation from bureaucratic control.
Institutional Relationship: Liberation is the most institutionally challenging of all values: it views existing institutions as potential instruments of domination and subjects them to continuous critical scrutiny. It supports institutional reform, the creation of new institutions designed to check power, and the dismantling of institutions that enforce unjust hierarchies. It recognizes that liberation requires institutions but insists that institutions be designed to distribute power rather than concentrate it.
Internal Tensions: Liberation contains a tension between negative freedom (freedom from domination) and positive freedom (freedom to flourish), because the state power required to dismantle structural domination can itself become a new form of domination. It also struggles with the question of whether liberation is a process that can be completed or a permanent struggle, and with the political difficulty of maintaining solidarity among differently oppressed groups whose interests may conflict.
Appeals: Politicians appeal to Liberation through narratives of struggle, resistance, and the unfinished work of justice. 'The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice,' 'Power concedes nothing without a demand,' and 'Freedom is never voluntarily given by the oppressor' are characteristic appeals. The emotional register combines moral urgency with historical awareness, and the most effective appeals connect present struggles to the long history of liberation movements.
Critical theory (Marx, Gramsci, Habermas, Fraser): The critical theory tradition analyzes how power operates through economic structures, cultural norms, and institutional arrangements to produce and maintain domination. Marx's analysis of class exploitation, Gramsci's theory of cultural hegemony, and Nancy Fraser's contemporary framework of redistribution, recognition, and representation all provide tools for understanding the mechanisms of domination that Liberation seeks to dismantle.
Liberal rights theory (Locke, Mill, Rawls): The liberal tradition's assertion of individual rights against state power provides the philosophical foundation for Liberation's demand that no person be subjected to arbitrary authority. Mill's harm principle, Rawls's emphasis on the priority of liberty, and the tradition of constitutional rights protection all express Liberation's commitment to limiting the power that any actor can exercise over another.
Postcolonial and decolonial theory (Fanon, Said, Mignolo): Postcolonial theory examines how colonial power structures continue to shape global politics, economics, and culture long after formal colonial rule has ended. Fanon's analysis of the violence of colonization and the necessity of decolonization, and Mignolo's concept of 'coloniality of power,' reveal forms of domination that liberal rights frameworks alone cannot address.
Criminal Justice Reform: Liberation demands fundamental reform of criminal justice systems that function as mechanisms of racial and class domination. It supports the decriminalization of poverty-related offenses, the elimination of cash bail, the reform of mandatory minimum sentencing, and the redirection of resources from incarceration to community investment. The internal logic is that the criminal justice system as currently configured does not merely punish crime but enforces a racial and economic hierarchy.
Labor and Economic Policy: Liberation supports policies that shift power from capital to labor: union rights, living wage legislation, worker ownership models, and the regulation of corporate power. It opposes the concentration of economic power that enables exploitation and supports structural changes, including progressive taxation, antitrust enforcement, and public ownership, that redistribute economic power.
Voting Rights and Political Participation: Liberation demands the removal of all barriers to political participation: voter ID laws that disproportionately burden minorities, gerrymandering that dilutes minority political power, felony disenfranchisement, and campaign finance systems that translate economic power into political power. The internal logic is that political domination is maintained through the suppression of the political agency of dominated groups.
Immigration Policy: Liberation views restrictive immigration policies through the lens of global inequality and historical exploitation. It supports expanded refugee protections, pathways to citizenship for undocumented persons, and the reform of immigration systems that perpetuate colonial-era hierarchies of human value. It opposes the criminalization of migration as a form of domination over the globally dispossessed.
Education Policy: Liberation supports educational access as a liberatory project: the removal of financial barriers to higher education, curricula that include the histories and perspectives of marginalized groups, and the transformation of educational institutions from mechanisms of social reproduction into engines of social mobility and critical consciousness.
Cross-Spectrum: On the left, Liberation appears as anti-racism, feminism, labor rights, and opposition to concentrated economic power. On the right, it appears as libertarianism's opposition to state power, gun rights advocacy's insistence on the right to resist governmental overreach, religious liberty claims against secularist imposition, and the anti-regulation movement's framing of government oversight as domination. The common thread is resistance to what each side perceives as unjust power.
Shadow: Liberation rhetoric is exploited by authoritarian leaders who frame their consolidation of power as liberation from corrupt elites, foreign influence, or cultural decadence. Hugo Chavez, Fidel Castro, and Robert Mugabe all used liberation narratives to justify the suppression of opposition and the concentration of personal power. The claim to speak for the oppressed is one of the most powerful and most abusable political positions.
Community demands that political systems actively cultivate the bonds of belonging and mutual obligation without which democracy is merely a procedure.
<p>The Community orientation understands politics as the practice of creating and maintaining the shared life of a people. It holds that political systems are not merely mechanisms for aggregating individual preferences or adjudicating competing interests but are, at their best, expressions of a collective identity and purpose that is greater than the sum of its parts. The quality of a democracy is measured not by the efficiency of its government but by the depth of the bonds between its citizens and the extent to which every member feels that they genuinely belong.</p><p>This value is concerned with the social conditions that make collective self-governance possible: shared civic identity, mutual obligation, a sense of belonging that extends beyond family and tribe to encompass the political community as a whole. It recognizes that these conditions do not emerge spontaneously but must be actively cultivated through public institutions, civic practices, and the deliberate creation of shared experiences that connect citizens to one another.</p><p>At its most politically engaged, Community insists that the central political crisis of modern democracies is not economic inequality or institutional corruption, though both are serious, but the erosion of the social bonds that make citizens willing to sacrifice for one another and to accept collective decisions they individually oppose. A society of isolated individuals, however prosperous and free, is not a political community but a market, and a market cannot sustain the obligations that democratic citizenship requires.</p>
Primary Orientation: Community appears across the spectrum as communitarianism, civic nationalism, and social solidarity. On the left, it manifests as labor solidarity, community organizing, and the conviction that collective action is necessary for social change. On the right, it appears as civic nationalism, defense of local community against globalizing forces, and the conviction that shared identity is necessary for social cohesion.
Institutional Relationship: Community supports institutions that create and sustain shared civic life: public schools, parks, libraries, community centers, and civic organizations. It is critical of institutions that sort people into homogeneous groups and of economic forces that dissolve community bonds. It supports both governmental and voluntary institutions that bring diverse citizens together around shared purposes.
Internal Tensions: Community contains a fundamental tension between inclusion and cohesion: the broader the community's boundaries, the thinner its bonds tend to be, while tight-knit communities often maintain their cohesion through exclusion. It also struggles with the relationship between community and individual freedom, since the norms, expectations, and social pressures that sustain community can also constrain individual autonomy.
Appeals: Politicians appeal to Community through language of togetherness, shared identity, and collective purpose. 'We're all in this together,' 'It takes a village,' and 'E pluribus unum' are characteristic appeals. The emotional register is warmth, belonging, and the sense of being part of something larger than oneself. The most effective appeals combine inclusive identity with concrete shared projects that make belonging tangible.
Communitarianism (Sandel, Etzioni, Walzer): Communitarian philosophy argues that liberalism's emphasis on individual rights and autonomy neglects the social bonds and shared meanings that make human life and political community possible. Sandel's critique of the 'unencumbered self,' Etzioni's emphasis on the balance between rights and responsibilities, and Walzer's theory of shared meanings all express Community's philosophical orientation.
Civic republicanism (Arendt, Pocock, Skinner): The civic republican tradition holds that political freedom depends on active civic participation and that citizens who withdraw from public life into private pursuits eventually lose the capacity for self-governance. Arendt's concept of the public realm as the space where citizens appear to one another and act together provides the philosophical foundation for Community's political claims.
Durkheimian sociology: Durkheim's analysis of social solidarity, including the distinction between mechanical and organic solidarity and the concept of anomie as the pathological absence of social bonds, provides the sociological foundation for Community's political concerns. His argument that modern societies need new forms of solidarity to replace the traditional bonds that industrialization has dissolved directly addresses Community's central question.
Civic Infrastructure: Community supports robust public investment in shared civic spaces and institutions: public libraries, parks, community centers, public transportation, and mixed-use urban design that creates opportunities for casual interaction across social lines. It opposes the privatization of public space and the defunding of civic institutions.
National Service: Community supports universal national service programs, whether military or civilian, that bring young people from diverse backgrounds together around shared projects. The internal logic is that shared experience across lines of class, race, and geography builds the civic bonds that democratic societies need and that voluntary sorting into homogeneous communities does not provide.
Housing and Urban Policy: Community supports mixed-income housing, inclusive zoning, and the preservation of neighborhood institutions that sustain community identity. It opposes both displacement through gentrification and the geographic sorting of populations by income and race, viewing both as destructive of the diverse communities that healthy democracies require.
Labor Policy: Community supports labor unions and worker organizations not only as mechanisms for wage negotiation but as civic institutions that build solidarity and provide members with experience in collective self-governance. It views the decline of unions as a civic as well as economic loss.
Immigration and Integration: Community supports immigration policies paired with robust integration programs: civic education, language instruction, community sponsorship, and institutional mechanisms for building connections between newcomers and established residents. The goal is neither assimilation nor parallel isolation but genuine mutual incorporation into an expanded community.
Cross-Spectrum: On the left, Community appears as labor solidarity, community organizing, and the conviction that collective action is necessary for social justice. On the right, it appears as civic nationalism, defense of local communities against global forces, and the conviction that shared cultural identity is necessary for social cohesion. Both sides want community; they disagree about the basis on which community should be built and who should be included.
Shadow: Community is exploited when political actors define the community in exclusionary terms and then use the language of belonging to justify hostility toward outsiders. Ethno-nationalism wraps racism in the language of community, and populist movements define 'the people' against elite enemies to generate a sense of solidarity through shared antagonism. The Nazis' volksgemeinschaft (people's community) represents the most catastrophic exploitation of Community rhetoric in modern history.
Vitality demands that political life serve not just survival and justice but the conditions for genuine human flourishing, joy, and the full expression of human energy.
<p>The Vitality orientation understands politics as a domain that must serve not only the negative goals of preventing harm and injustice but the positive goal of enabling human beings to live with energy, joy, and full engagement. It holds that a political system which provides security, equality, and freedom but produces a population that is exhausted, depressed, and disengaged has failed in a fundamental way. The political order has an obligation not only to protect life but to support the conditions under which life can be genuinely lived.</p><p>This value is impatient with political frameworks that are exclusively organized around problems, grievances, and the avoidance of suffering. While it does not dismiss these concerns, it insists that politics must also attend to the conditions for positive human experience: public health, recreation, cultural expression, aesthetic quality of the built environment, and the rhythms of work and rest that determine whether citizens have the energy to participate in civic life.</p><p>At its most politically engaged, Vitality challenges the implicit puritanism of much political discourse, which treats governance as necessarily grim and views pleasure, beauty, and joy as private matters irrelevant to political life. It holds that the quality of everyday experience, including the beauty of public spaces, the vitality of cultural life, the health of citizens' bodies, and the availability of genuine leisure, is a political outcome that matters as much as GDP or crime rates.</p>
Primary Orientation: Vitality appears across the spectrum in distinctive forms. On the left, it manifests as support for public health, work-life balance, universal access to recreation and culture, and the critique of economic systems that exhaust workers. On the right, it appears as defense of personal liberty to pursue happiness as one defines it, resistance to nanny-state regulation of lifestyle choices, and celebration of the entrepreneurial energy that drives economic dynamism.
Institutional Relationship: Vitality supports institutions that promote human flourishing: public health systems, parks and recreation departments, cultural institutions, and the regulatory frameworks that protect environmental quality and work-life balance. It is critical of institutions that drain human energy through bureaucratic dysfunction and of economic structures that sacrifice human wellbeing for productivity.
Internal Tensions: Vitality contains a tension between individual pleasure and collective wellbeing: what makes one person feel alive may impose costs on others, and the pursuit of personal vitality can come at the expense of social responsibility. It also struggles with the relationship between vitality and discipline, since the conditions for sustained flourishing, including health, fitness, and balanced living, often require the kind of restraint that is in tension with Vitality's celebration of spontaneity and energy.
Appeals: Politicians appeal to Vitality through optimistic, energetic language and the promise of a better quality of daily life. 'La dolce vita,' 'life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness,' and the celebration of national vigor all activate this value. The emotional register is enthusiasm, energy, and the promise that political action can make everyday life genuinely better. Kennedy's rhetoric of youthful vigor and Obama's message of hope both drew on Vitality's political energy.
Aristotelian eudaimonia: Aristotle's concept of eudaimonia, typically translated as 'flourishing' or 'happiness,' holds that the purpose of political life is to create the conditions under which citizens can realize their full potential as human beings. His argument in the Politics that the state exists not merely for the sake of living but for the sake of living well provides the classical philosophical foundation for Vitality's political claims.
Nietzschean life-affirmation: Nietzsche's concept of life-affirmation, the amor fati that says yes to existence in its fullness including suffering, provides the philosophical basis for Vitality's insistence that political life should serve not just the avoidance of harm but the full expression of human energy. His critique of life-denying moralities that suppress vitality in the name of safety or equality resonates with Vitality's challenge to puritanical political frameworks.
Positive psychology and capabilities approach: The positive psychology movement's emphasis on flourishing, resilience, and the conditions for optimal human functioning, combined with the capabilities approach of Sen and Nussbaum, provides the contemporary scientific and philosophical framework for Vitality's political claims. Nussbaum's list of central human capabilities, including play, bodily health, and emotional life, translates Vitality into a policy framework.
Public Health: Vitality supports comprehensive public health systems that promote wellness rather than merely treating illness: preventive care, mental health services, nutrition programs, and the environmental conditions that support health, including clean air, clean water, and green space. It opposes the reduction of health policy to the management of acute illness and insists on a positive conception of health as the capacity for full human functioning.
Labor Policy: Vitality supports policies that protect work-life balance: maximum working hours, guaranteed paid vacation, parental leave, and the right to disconnect from work communications outside working hours. It opposes the glorification of overwork and views burnout, chronic stress, and work-related health problems as political failures, not personal ones.
Parks, Recreation, and Cultural Policy: Vitality supports public investment in parks, recreation facilities, cultural institutions, and the aesthetic quality of the built environment. It views access to nature, sport, art, and beauty as public goods rather than private luxuries and insists that public spaces should be designed to inspire delight rather than merely to function efficiently.
Urban Planning and Architecture: Vitality supports urban design that promotes walking, cycling, social interaction, and aesthetic pleasure. It opposes the car-dependent, aesthetically barren suburban development that characterizes much of American construction and favors the kind of dense, walkable, beautiful urban environments that European cities demonstrate are possible.
Food and Agriculture Policy: Vitality supports policies that ensure access to nutritious, well-produced food and that protect the culinary traditions and agricultural practices that sustain food culture. It opposes the industrial food system's reduction of food to calories and nutrients and views the shared meal as a civic practice worth preserving.
Cross-Spectrum: On the left, Vitality appears as support for public health, work-life balance, and universal access to the conditions for flourishing. On the right, it appears as defense of personal freedom to pursue happiness, celebration of entrepreneurial energy, and resistance to governmental paternalism that tells people how to live. Both sides want flourishing; they disagree about whether it is best achieved through public provision or personal liberty.
Shadow: Vitality is exploited when political movements generate intense collective enthusiasm that is channeled toward destructive ends. Fascist movements were notorious for their cultivation of collective vitality through mass rallies, physical culture, and the aestheticization of politics. The Nazi emphasis on health, sport, and racial vigor represented the most catastrophic exploitation of Vitality rhetoric, demonstrating that the celebration of collective vitality can serve authoritarian as well as democratic purposes.