I believe you are correct. Most people do not understand, that freedom comes from within. Surprisingly even most anarchists do not understand that. (in my experience) Or maybe they don't understand the implications of it. (for instance the impossibility of forcing people to be free, to want to be free)
I don't think that the covid mania was (still kinda is) specific to NZ. I saw it pretty much across the entire developed world. If you said CZ instead of NZ, it would apply to a letter to my home country of Czechia.
On the financial note, I am bit hesitant to agree. Unless there is something I am missing, struggling to make ends meet does not, imho, reduce freedom. It reduces luxury. I believe I am as free now, that I make over 2x the national average, as I was when I was homeless and literally begged for food money. Both inregard to the outer and inner freedom.
In fact I dare to say, that even people who struggle to make ends meet today still have a more luxurious lives than literal kings just a couple hundred years ago. (at least in developed countries)
I suspect the problem is of cognitive rsther than economic nature. What I mean is that in absolute terms, even the lower income classes have way more than we actually need, but we see, that other people have even way more than we do. The problem IMO is that we too often consider relative wealth, not absolute wealth. That pushes us to imitate lifestyles of those who have more than us, to compare ourselves to them instead of comparing our needs to what we already have now and what we possibly can have in the future.
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Ohhh this. Yes. You are sooo right. I get it on so many levels. Maybe it's my empathy that sways me to the economic side of freedom. It will be fun for me to explore this...
born rich (but love poor), messed up my life badly, solo parent on welfare (felt free and happy at my worst economic time), rebuilt myself from the inside out, constantly striving for more... Found more freedom through my travels, but I cannot shake the feeling that I was so privileged and felt the (not sure if it was envy, jealousy or just misunderstanding of my life) growing up. I am going to play on all of this tomorrow because something in here is going to help me break through to my next level π€©ππΌππΌππΌ
That is very interesting. For me, it's kind of the reverse. By embracing economic freedom I am swayed towards more empathetic positions.
Yes, the feeling of undeserved privilege is dangerous. I wasn't born filthy rich, but rich enough, that my parents did not have to take a loan to buy a second house when I was a teenager. It was exactly the feeling of undesired privilege that led to me making terrible decisions and eventually to me being homeless and struggling even way more than I secretly wished to. Even now, years later I am still paying for that.
If anything said here today helps you grow in any way, I'll be extremely satisfied. :)