A former Muslim recently wrote something on X that deserves to be taken seriously:

“I was never a practising, observant Muslim. Yet, even I wanted Islam to take over Europe and the West until I was a teenager.”

 

That is not a small admission. It is a glimpse into a religious-political imagination many Westerners have been trained not to notice, or at least not to describe plainly.

The issue is not ordinary Muslim citizens living ordinary lives. The issue is the version of Islam that understands itself not merely as private faith, but as a total system of law, society, politics, and conquest. That distinction matters because Muslim Brotherhood-style Islamism does not present itself as a hobby, an identity, or a private devotional life. It presents itself as a movement, with a theory of history, a theory of law, a theory of society, and a theory of liberation.

At its centre is the belief that human beings are not truly free until they submit to divine law. That may sound pious in abstraction, but it immediately raises the question liberal societies cannot avoid: what happens to people who do not want to live under that law?

Sayyid Qutb’s Milestones gives one answer. Qutb was not merely writing about personal religious improvement. He was writing a revolutionary text for Islamism, one that treated Islam as both religion and movement. In that framework, Sharia is not one moral tradition among others; it is the only legitimate law. Other systems of law are not merely different, mistaken, or incomplete. They are jahili: ignorant, illegitimate, and awaiting correction.

This is the part Western liberal societies keep trying to soften into something less threatening. The problem is not that Muslims pray, fast, worship, build families, open businesses, or form communities. The problem is a doctrine that treats civil law as false law, liberal democracy as ignorance, and non-Islamic societies as places that must eventually be transformed.

There are Muslims who reject this. There are reformist Muslims, secular Muslims, quietist Muslims, and ordinary Muslims who want nothing to do with Qutbist revolutionary politics. They are not the target of this critique. The target is the Islamist doctrine that treats their moderation as compromise, their citizenship as suspect, and their acceptance of civil law as evidence that they have submitted to something other than God.

From there, the conflict with liberal democracy becomes unavoidable. Qutb’s framework does not simply say that Muslims should be faithful within their own private lives. It says society itself must be reordered around submission to God’s law. It rejects the idea that human beings may legislate for themselves outside divine command; worse, it treats such legislation as a form of servitude, because human authority has supposedly usurped the authority of God.

Every civilization has conquest in its past. The issue is not that Islamic empires, like other empires, expanded through force. The issue is what later ideologies teach people to feel about that expansion. Was it ordinary human empire, subject to the same moral scrutiny as any other empire? Or was it sacred victory, proof of divine favour, and a model for the future?

That is the trick at the centre of the ideology. The Islamist does not necessarily think he is enslaving others. He may think he is freeing them from man-made law, rescuing them from ignorance, and liberating them from the false gods of democracy, secularism, nationalism, pluralism, or individual liberty. But domination does not become freedom because the dominator calls it liberation.

A liberal society can tolerate deep religious difference. It can protect mosques, churches, synagogues, temples, and atheists alike. It can defend the right of people to pray, preach, publish, criticize, convert, leave, and dissent. That is what religious freedom means, and it is one of liberal civilization’s great achievements.

But religious freedom is not a suicide pact. A society built on equal citizenship and civil law has no obligation to pretend that a movement seeking to replace civil law with religious law is merely asking for inclusion. It is asking for room to build a rival sovereignty; it wants the freedoms of liberal society while denying the legitimacy of the liberal order that makes those freedoms possible.

Former Muslims often understand this in a way polite Western elites do not. They know the internal language, the heroic stories, the childhood assumptions, the selective memory, and the pressure to treat Islamic expansion as something nobler than ordinary imperial ambition. When a former Muslim says he was taught that Islam’s greatest achievements were conquest and colonialism, we should not rush to explain the statement away. We should ask what kind of moral education produces that desire in a teenager who was not even especially observant.

Conquest does not always begin with armies. It begins with a story: one law is holy and all others are illegitimate; one community has submitted while the rest of the world lives in ignorance; ordinary civic loyalty is lesser than religious loyalty; the surrounding society is not a common home but a problem to be transformed.

Once that story takes hold, liberal tolerance can be turned against liberal civilization itself.

Western societies have become very good at speaking about “extremism” in the abstract, as though radicalization were a mysterious weather system that occasionally rolls through alienated communities. We condemn “hate” without asking what the hated object actually is. We speak endlessly about inclusion, but hesitate when inclusion is demanded by movements that do not intend to return the favour.

The hesitation is not harmless. The target of Muslim Brotherhood-style Islamism is not merely Western foreign policy, social prejudice, or insufficient accommodation. Its target is the liberal settlement itself: equal citizenship, freedom of conscience, freedom of speech, secular civil law, and the right to live without submitting to a religious legal order.

A society cannot remain liberal if it treats every challenge to liberalism as just another form of diversity. There is a difference between welcoming Muslim citizens and making excuses for Islamic supremacism; between protecting private faith and accommodating political theology; between religious freedom and religious domination.

Those distinctions matter because liberal democracy depends on reciprocity. Citizens may believe different things, worship differently, argue fiercely, and disagree about ultimate truth; what they may not do is claim that their sacred law has a superior right to govern everyone else.

That is the line that must be defended, at all costs to preserve any society that does not wish to follow Sharia law.

When a movement teaches that non-believers live in ignorance until brought under divine law, it is not offering pluralism. When it treats civil law as illegitimate because only Sharia is legitimate, it is not asking for equal citizenship. When it remembers conquest as sacred achievement rather than domination, the West should stop pretending that the problem is misunderstanding.

The issue is Islamic supremacism: a religious-political project that seeks power over others while calling that power liberation.

No liberal society should be embarrassed to say so.

Conquest is not made holy by scripture. Colonialism is not redeemed by prayer. And religious domination is still domination, even when it arrives speaking the language of faith.

A blindfolded woman symbolizing Justice sits bound beside scales and a sword while a stern robed figure stands behind her holding a dark cloak.

When religious law claims supremacy over civil law, justice is no longer blind; it is bound.

References and Source Material

This essay was prompted by a former Muslim’s post on X describing being taught to admire Islamic conquest and colonialism.

It also draws on discussion of Sayyid Qutb’s Milestones and Muslim Brotherhood-style Islamism in the New Discourses podcast episode provided in transcript form.

A free society is not composed of isolated individuals on one side and government on the other. If those are the only two poles we recognize, every social problem eventually collapses into either a private burden or a state responsibility.

Civil society is the layer of life in between.

It is the network of families, friendships, churches, charities, clubs, unions, schools, neighbourhood groups, sports leagues, choirs, professional associations, volunteer organizations, and local institutions where people learn to live together without being commanded by the state. It is made of membership, duty, custom, trust, persuasion, service, affection, and shared purpose.

Alexis de Tocqueville noticed this in 19th-century America. What impressed him was not only the formal machinery of democracy, but the habit of association: citizens forming groups, solving problems, organizing locally, and learning self-government by practicing it together. Civil society is where that kind of habit is formed.

Civil society is not the same thing as government. Government works through law, taxation, regulation, courts, policing, public administration, and public authority. These are necessary. A society without courts, contracts, law enforcement, or public order will not remain free for long. But government is a blunt instrument compared with the dense human relationships that make ordinary life livable.

The state can punish theft, enforce contracts, provide services, and regulate conduct. It cannot easily make people neighbourly. It cannot manufacture trust by decree. It cannot replace every family, friendship, congregation, team, club, charity, and local association without becoming too large, too intrusive, and too impersonal.

Civil society is also not the same thing as the market. Markets matter because they allow people to cooperate through work, trade, investment, risk, and voluntary exchange. But not every human relationship is commercial. Friends are not customers. Children are not products. Neighbours are not merely service providers. Communities need loyalties and obligations that cannot be reduced to money.

That is where civil society does its work.

A person who joins a choir, coaches a team, volunteers at a food bank, serves on a board, visits a shut-in, helps with a fundraiser, mentors a young worker, or checks on an elderly neighbour is doing something socially important even if it does not look political. These acts create habits that no statute can simply summon into existence: patience, reciprocity, responsibility, compromise, forgiveness, and care for people beyond the self.

This is why civil society matters to a classically liberal society. Rights protect the individual from coercion, but rights alone do not teach people how to live well with one another. Law sets boundaries, but it cannot provide every form of belonging. Markets create prosperity, but they cannot provide every form of meaning. A free society needs people who can do more than assert rights, obey rules, and make transactions. It needs citizens who can join, serve, trust, repair, and keep showing up.

None of this means civil society is perfect. Families can fail. Churches can fail. Schools can fail. Charities can fail. Local communities can become narrow, unfair, stagnant, or cruel. Voluntary institutions are made of human beings, and human beings bring their faults with them.

Sometimes government intervention is necessary. Sometimes civil society is too weak, too captured, too exclusionary, or too absent to meet a real need. A serious defence of civil society does not require pretending otherwise.

But the alternative to imperfect civil society is not perfection. It is usually a colder society with fewer places to belong and more pressure on the state to fill the gaps. When families weaken, churches empty, local associations fade, and neighbours stop knowing one another, people do not float freely into greater autonomy. They often become more isolated, and isolated people tend to look upward for help, meaning, protection, and recognition.

That is how the state grows downward into more areas of ordinary life. Some of that growth may answer real suffering, but something is lost when every human need becomes a public program and every social failure becomes an administrative problem.

Civil society is slower than bureaucracy and less efficient than a spreadsheet, but it is far more human. It is where trust becomes real because people have to practice it: meeting, disagreeing, disappointing one another, forgiving one another, organizing, compromising, and trying again.

"A conceptual illustration showing the layers of society: a solitary man stands in shadow on the left, looking toward a vibrant middle layer filled with people engaged in community activities—choirs, volunteering, gardening, sports, book clubs, and neighbors connecting—linked by glowing paths. In the background stands the Canadian Parliament buildings on Parliament Hill. Warm golden light illuminates the civil society layer."

“Civil society: the human layer between the individual and the state. Where trust is practiced, communities form, and freedom becomes livable.”

In summary, civil society is the layer of voluntary life between the individual and the state. It is made of the relationships, institutions, duties, and habits that allow people to cooperate without constant government command.

It does not replace law. It does not replace markets. It does not replace individual rights.

It makes them livable.

A free society cannot survive as only individuals and government. It needs the institutions in between.

This week’s definitions have circled around the citizen: rights, law, speech, and equal standing before the state. Copland’s Fanfare for the Common Man is a fitting musical companion. It is solemn without being pompous, grand without being royalist, and public without being partisan. It sounds like civic dignity — not the glory of rulers, but the worth of ordinary people.

 

Equality before the law is one of the basic principles of a free society.

It means that every citizen enters the legal system with the same basic standing. The law does not treat a person as more guilty, more innocent, more believable, more suspicious, more deserving, or less deserving because of race, sex, religion, class, ancestry, political tribe, or social status.

The law deals with persons, not castes.

This does not mean every case is identical. Facts differ. Circumstances differ. Harm differs. Intent differs. Evidence differs. A fair legal system can recognize relevant differences between cases.

Equality before the law means those differences must be legally relevant. Identity by itself does not create superior or inferior legal standing.

1. The law recognizes citizens, not groups

A society governed by equality before the law treats people first as citizens.

A person is not merely a representative of a race, sex, religion, class, political movement, or historical category. A person is an individual with rights, duties, agency, and responsibility.

That matters because group-based judgment changes the nature of law. Once people are treated primarily as members of categories, legal judgment drifts toward inherited guilt, inherited innocence, inherited victimhood, or inherited suspicion.

Equality before the law keeps the legal focus on the person, the act, the evidence, and the standard being applied.

2. Protection and accountability both apply equally

Equality before the law has two sides.

The first is protection. Every person is protected by the same basic rights, whether popular or unpopular, powerful or weak, respectable or disliked.

The second is accountability. Every person is answerable to the same law when accused of wrongdoing.

A society loses equality before the law when some people become too important to punish, too sympathetic to scrutinize, too useful to question, or too unpopular to defend.

Equal law means protection is not a favour and accountability is not selective.

3. Guilt and innocence belong to individuals

In a classically liberal legal order, guilt is individual.

A person is not guilty because of race, sex, religion, ancestry, class, nationality, or political association. Nor is a person innocent because of those things.

The law asks what this person did, what evidence exists, what intent can be shown, what harm occurred, what rights apply, and what process is required.

Collective guilt and collective innocence both undermine equality before the law because both replace individual judgment with group judgment.

The law may consider context, but it cannot turn identity into verdict.

4. Process must be consistent

Equality before the law applies to process as well as outcomes.

Who gets investigated, charged, believed, doubted, excused, or punished? If similar cases are handled differently because of politics, status, public pressure, institutional embarrassment, or group identity, trust in the legal system erodes.

Consistent process does not mean mechanical sameness. It means similar standards of evidence, procedure, and accountability apply across cases.

Without consistent process, equality before the law becomes a slogan rather than a reality.

5. Context can matter without becoming legal rank

A fair legal system can recognize context.

Age, intent, coercion, mental capacity, prior conduct, vulnerability, harm, motive, and circumstance may all matter in different legal settings. Law is not blind to reality.

But context is different from rank.

Context helps the law understand the case. Rank changes the standing of the person before the law.

Equality before the law allows relevant facts to matter. It does not allow identity, status, or political usefulness to create superior or inferior legal standing.

6. The opposite is caste law

The opposite of equality before the law is not merely unfairness.

It is caste law.

Caste law means different rules, presumptions, protections, punishments, or privileges depending on who someone is. One group receives leniency. Another receives suspicion. One group is protected from criticism. Another is denied ordinary sympathy. One group is treated as morally authoritative. Another is treated as morally suspect.

A society does not need formal castes to drift in this direction. It only needs institutions that apply different standards to different people for reasons the public can see but officials refuse to admit.

That is why equality before the law matters to public trust.

Citizens can endure imperfect laws more easily than they can endure selective law.

Five different citizens stand behind identical podiums labelled “Citizen” in front of classical columns.

Equality before the law means the law sees citizens, not castes.

In summary

Equality before the law means every person has the same basic legal standing.

It means citizens are protected by the same rights, answerable to the same laws, and judged by the same standards of evidence and process.

It does not mean every case is identical. It does not mean context never matters. It does not mean equal outcomes are guaranteed.

It means identity is not legal rank.

It means guilt and innocence belong to individuals, not groups.

It means the law sees citizens, not castes.

Free speech is often defended badly.

Sometimes it is treated as a license to say anything without consequence. Sometimes it is reduced to personal self-expression. Sometimes it is framed as a courtesy extended to polite, harmless, approved opinions.

That misses the deeper point.

In a classically liberal society, free speech serves a practical purpose: it lets citizens search for truth, correct error, restrain power, and govern themselves.

It is not decorative. It is part of the machinery of a free society.

1. Free speech helps society find truth

Human beings are fallible.

Individuals can be wrong. Experts can be wrong. Majorities can be wrong. Governments can be wrong. Institutions can be wrong. Moral crusades can be wrong.

Free speech matters because no authority is wise enough to decide, permanently and in advance, which ideas may be questioned.

Some claims are false, foolish, dishonest, or ugly. But the answer to bad claims is usually better argument, better evidence, open criticism, and public testing.

A society that cannot question its own certainties may still call its beliefs truth, but it has stopped checking.

2. Free speech protects dissent

Free speech is easy to support when everyone agrees.

Its real test comes when speech is irritating, unpopular, offensive, inconvenient, or aimed at powerful people.

Many ideas now considered obvious were once treated as dangerous, immoral, foolish, or socially disruptive. That does not make every dissenter right. Much dissent is mistaken, partial, crankish, or premature. But we often cannot know which is which until dissent is allowed to be heard and tested.

A society that protects only approved speech protects consensus, not free speech.

Dissent needs room before it becomes respectable.

3. Free speech restrains power

Free speech allows citizens to question institutions.

What are you doing? Why are you doing it? What evidence supports it? Who benefits? Who pays? What are the tradeoffs? What are you hiding?

Those questions matter because institutions tend to protect themselves. Governments, corporations, universities, professional bodies, media organizations, activist movements, and bureaucracies all prefer deference when they have power.

Free speech keeps authority answerable to public challenge. Without it, institutions can govern through status, expertise, fear, or moral pressure instead of justification.

4. Free speech makes self-government possible

Democracy requires more than voting.

Citizens need to argue about laws, leaders, policies, institutions, values, evidence, and public priorities. If people can vote but cannot freely discuss what they are voting about, democracy becomes managed consent.

Free speech allows citizens to hear competing arguments, compare claims, criticize leaders, expose failures, and persuade one another.

It is not only an individual right. It is a condition of honest public judgment.

5. Free speech includes the right to be wrong

A meaningful free-speech principle must protect some false or mistaken speech.

If only “true” speech is protected, someone must decide what counts as true before debate even begins. That power rarely stays neutral.

This does not protect fraud, defamation, threats, perjury, direct incitement, or criminal harassment. Free speech has limits.

But contested public questions cannot be settled by official truth-arbiters. Free societies answer error through argument wherever possible, because the cure for bad speech can easily become worse than the disease.

6. Free speech protects listeners too

Free speech is not only the right to speak.

It is also the right to hear, read, compare, consider, reject, and decide.

Censorship does not only silence the speaker. It also treats the listener as too fragile, foolish, or dangerous to encounter the wrong idea.

A free citizen is not merely someone allowed to express approved thoughts. A free citizen is someone trusted to hear arguments and judge them.

7. Free speech is uncomfortable by design

Free speech requires citizens to tolerate disagreement, offence, criticism of cherished beliefs, and ideas they consider wrong or dangerous.

That discomfort is not a flaw. It is the price of living among free adults rather than under enforced consensus.

A free society does not remain peaceful because no one disagrees. It remains peaceful because disagreement can be spoken, challenged, mocked, answered, revised, and defeated without being driven underground or handed over to the state.

Two people stand on separate stone platforms between classical columns, facing each other in conversation or debate.

Free speech allows disagreement to remain public, peaceful, and answerable to reason.

In summary

Free speech is the right to speak, hear, question, criticize, argue, publish, dissent, and persuade without unlawful censorship or coercion.

Its purpose is not merely self-expression. It is the error-correction system of a free society. It helps test truth, expose mistakes, restrain power, protect dissent, and make self-government possible.

Free speech does not mean every claim is wise. It does not mean speech has no limits. It does not mean freedom from criticism, disagreement, ridicule, or consequence.

It means no authority gets final ownership of public truth.

Free speech is not a luxury for when society agrees.

It is the mechanism that allows disagreement to remain peaceful, public, and answerable to reason.

Canada Day should be more than a long weekend with fireworks.

It should be a day when we remember that a country is not held together by accident. It is held together by habits, loyalties, rituals, and obligations that must be taught, repeated, and defended.

Some of those rituals may seem small. Singing the national anthem at schools and public events. Flying the Canadian flag without embarrassment. Learning our history as something more than a list of crimes. Speaking of Canada as a home worth loving, not merely a political arrangement to be managed.

Small rituals matter because shared belonging does not maintain itself.

Canada is a country of two official languages, many regions, many peoples, many faiths, and many histories. That diversity can be a strength, but diversity alone is not a nation. A nation also needs common allegiance. It needs citizens who understand that difference is not the opposite of unity.

Patriotism does not require historical amnesia. Canada has made mistakes. Some were grave. A serious country should be able to tell the truth about its failures without turning national memory into self-loathing.

We should be able to say both things plainly: Canada has done wrong, and Canada is still worth loving.

We built a country across a hard geography, through long winters, regional tensions, war, immigration, compromise, endurance, and work. That is no small achievement. It deserves gratitude, not sneering embarrassment.

The Canadian character, at its best, is not flashy. It is polite, restrained, practical, neighbourly, and stubborn when it needs to be. It values peace, order, and good government. It values fairness, responsibility, and helping each other through the cold.

That last part matters.

Commitment to country begins with commitment to community. It begins with shovelling the walk, checking on the elderly neighbour, coaching the team, volunteering at the food bank, serving on the committee, helping during the flood, and making room for people who are trying to belong.

Patriotism is not only what we say about Canada. It is what we are willing to do for Canadians.

That is why the fashion for national embarrassment is so corrosive. A people taught to distrust their own country will not defend it. A people taught that patriotism is suspect will not pass it on. A people taught to define themselves mainly by guilt, grievance, or negation will eventually forget what they are supposed to love.

Canada cannot thrive merely by being “not American.” That is not enough. A nation needs a positive vision of itself.

We should aspire to be Canadian in the fuller sense: free, responsible, fair-minded, resilient, compassionate, self-governing, and loyal to a common civic home.

This Canada Day, sing the anthem. Fly the flag. Learn the history. Tell the truth. Help your neighbour. Honour what is good. Repair what needs repair.

Canada is not perfect.

No country is.

But Canada is ours, and it is worth loving out loud.

People often say they support “the rule of law,” but the phrase can become so familiar that we stop asking what it means.

The rule of law does not simply mean that a society has laws. Every society has laws. Dictatorships have laws. Theocracies have laws. Police states have laws. A government can pass thousands of statutes and still be unjust if those laws mainly serve power rather than restrain it.

In the classical liberal sense, the rule of law means that public power is exercised only according to public, known rules that also bind those who wield power.

That is the central idea: the rule of law is not only about controlling citizens. It is about controlling power.

1. The law applies to everyone

A rule-of-law society begins from the principle that no person or institution stands above the law.

This includes politicians, police, judges, bureaucrats, regulators, public agencies, private citizens, corporations, activists, and ordinary voters. The law recognizes different roles and responsibilities, but it does not create a class of people exempt from ordinary legal limits.

The same principle runs in the other direction. No one falls beneath the protection of the law. An unpopular person is still protected. A disliked minority is still protected. A political opponent is still protected. A person accused of wrongdoing remains protected by process until guilt is established.

Equality before the law does not mean everyone has the same wealth, status, history, talents, or circumstances. It means the law recognizes citizens as citizens, rather than sorting them into favoured and unfavoured classes.

2. The state acts under legal authority

The state has powers ordinary citizens do not have. It can tax, arrest, regulate, prosecute, fine, imprison, seize property, restrict movement, and use force. Some of those powers are necessary. A society without courts, policing, public order, or contract enforcement will not remain free for long.

But necessary power is still power.

The rule of law requires government to justify its actions by law. A public official cannot rely merely on usefulness, popularity, safety, urgency, or good intentions. The relevant question is: what legal authority permits this action, and what limits govern that authority?

Without that requirement, law becomes something government applies to others while remaining above meaningful restraint itself.

3. Laws are public and knowable

People cannot obey laws they cannot know.

For law to guide citizens, it has to be public, accessible, and clear enough that ordinary people can understand what is expected of them. Modern legal systems are complicated, and not every rule can be simple. Even so, citizens are not governed well by hidden standards, secret procedures, vague commands, or rules that only become clear after punishment begins.

Vague law expands official discretion. It allows officials to decide later who counts as guilty, which makes citizens dependent not on law itself, but on the judgment, mood, ideology, or priorities of those enforcing it.

A rule-of-law society makes legal duties knowable before citizens are punished for violating them.

4. Laws are general, not targeted

Law is built around principles rather than enemies.

A general law applies across cases. It does not exist merely to punish a disliked person, silence a faction, reward an ally, or create special treatment for a favoured group. When law becomes too targeted, it stops functioning as law and starts functioning as political power in legal form.

This does not mean law never distinguishes between situations. Criminal law treats theft differently from murder. Tax law treats income differently from gifts. Public safety law treats dangerous conduct differently from ordinary conduct.

The problem is not distinction. The problem is arbitrary distinction.

A rule-of-law society distinguishes between laws grounded in general principles and laws used to protect friends or punish enemies.

5. Due process matters

Due process means that the state cannot simply accuse, condemn, and punish. There has to be fair procedure.

At minimum, a person knows the accusation, has a chance to respond, faces evidence rather than rumour, and is judged by an impartial process. The more serious the possible punishment, the more important these protections become.

Due process is sometimes treated as a loophole or a technicality, especially when the accused person is unpopular. But due process is most important when it is least popular.

Under the rule of law, punishment follows lawful process rather than public anger, political convenience, bureaucratic shortcut, or moral panic.

6. Courts and remedies exist

Rights are weak if citizens have no way to enforce them.

A rule-of-law society has independent courts and meaningful remedies when government exceeds its authority. Citizens have some lawful path to challenge unlawful action, whether through courts, appeals, judicial review, legislative oversight, public inquiries, ombudsmen, or other accountability mechanisms.

No institution is perfect. Courts can be slow, expensive, inconsistent, or wrong. But without some independent body able to say to government, “You have gone too far,” legal rights become largely decorative.

The rule of law depends not only on written promises, but on mechanisms that allow citizens to test whether those promises have been kept.

7. Emergency powers remain limited

Emergencies are real. Wars, disasters, riots, pandemics, and public-order crises can require government to act quickly. A rule-of-law society does not pretend that ordinary conditions always apply.

But emergency power arrives with urgency attached. The public is told there is no time for normal limits, ordinary procedures, or careful objections. Temporary extraordinary powers may sometimes be justified, but under the rule of law they remain lawful, limited, proportionate, reviewable, and temporary.

A crisis does not erase legal restraint. Crisis is precisely when legal restraint becomes most necessary, because fear makes people more willing to grant power without limits.

Rule of law versus rule by law

The distinction between rule of law and rule by law is useful.

Rule of law means law restrains power.

Rule by law means power uses law as a tool.

An authoritarian government may have courts, police, regulations, official procedures, and legal language. It may pass laws constantly. But if those laws mainly protect the regime, punish enemies, control speech, excuse officials, or make citizens dependent on arbitrary discretion, then the society is not governed by the rule of law in the liberal sense.

The question is not simply whether laws exist. The question is whether law stands above power, or whether power bends law to its own purposes.

A woman stands between stone columns holding scales of justice, with a sword resting on a stone table nearby, symbolizing law restraining power.

Law is not merely what power writes down. Rule of law means power itself is bound.

In summary

The rule of law means that society is governed by public, general, knowable, and fairly applied laws rather than arbitrary power.

It means the law binds the state as well as the citizen. It requires legal limits on government, equality before the law, due process, independent review, and meaningful remedies when power is abused.

It does not mean every law is wise. It does not mean every court is right. It does not mean government can never act. It means that even necessary government action must remain under law.

Rule of law is not merely having laws.

Every tyranny has laws.

Rule of law means law restrains power.

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The WordPress C(h)ronicle

These are the best links shared by people working with WordPress

HANDS ACROSS THE AISLE

Gender is the Problem, Not the Solution

fmnst

Peak Trans and other feminist topics

There Are So Many Things Wrong With This

if you don't like the news, make some of your own

Gentle Curiosity

Musing over important things. More questions than answers.

violetwisp

short commentaries, pretty pictures and strong opinions

Revive the Second Wave

gender-critical sex-negative intersectional radical feminism