Pop Decay wrote:
If you don't have freedom, you don't need security.
If everybody is controlled by society, they are forced to behave how the society wants them to behave. In the same case, the security would be the society. Where's the need for security if we aren't free to break the law?
* I'd rather have freedom over peace; peace is over rated. It can never be achieved correctly no matter what happens, even if all the terrorism in the world stops and everybody starts loving eachother. Where there's no freedom, there's no heart and passion, and there's no peace.
I've never really thought of things that way until you mentioned it. It seems like one is a catalyst for the other. If there's a society with draconian methods to ensure their idea of security (control over the will of their citizens) is enforced, then it will always breed discontent-- especially when large masses of people are affected. On the other hand, laissez-faire societies see a decline in the cultural glue that unites their people and revolution almost always happens as a result. By this, I mean countries that let freedom expand beyond basic commonly-accepted human freedoms (right to free speech, religion, etc) are most likely to experience backlash.
I guess you could call it the resilience of the human species that causes us to delve into change so frequently. Wars, coups, revolutions, and just pure thought and opinion can cause social change in varying degrees. When I see people who choose to be safe over having to experience change, I see it as a decision that's made on personal preference. Sure, I'd rather sit here and type this message in peace and quiet than to the sound of bombs dropping nearby, but that's only because my base instinct tells me that the most favourable choice is the one that will make me ultimately live longer.
Base instincts aside, a controlled society versus a loosely-controlled one is something that will never fit the liking of every single person affected by it. Therefore, neither are really the right answer since we always get sick of one or the other soon enough.