From the point of view of natural law, the foundations of socialism violate firstly the right of freedom and secondly the right of property. The theory of socialism is built on the violation of natural law and absolutism. Let's look at detailed views of both suppressed and oppressed rights. The project of transformation to establish a good life has been eclipsed by socialist orthodoxy. Furthermore, the ethical-political reality has moved away from statist administrative objectives or, simply, has adopted the values of liberals. However, control was not achieved through the liberal values that attract criticism – its partial concept of freedom, its obvious market failures, its individualism (Ojeili, 2002). Furthermore, postmodernism was not convinced of the notion of unitary human essence on the ground plane. conflicting face of liberal and communitarian characteristics. Indeed, ethics and politics appear unthinkable without such universalistic aspirations. The universalist commitments of the emancipatory ethic focus on both freedom and equality, and on the establishment of true political community against the distortion and supremacy of capital and the state. Politics should be primary under appropriate conditions of ethical engagement adjacent to the modern passion for ethics, which is often depoliticised, defensive, privatised, sloganistic and banal (Ojeili, 2002). According to Ojeili, the author argues that, in line with Castoriadis' theses, "such a political community, and an aspiration for truly ethical and political deliberation, can only be achieved when socialists free themselves from faith in the possibility of social guarantees extras beyond those free play of passions and needs and from the expectation of the end to the tensions and dilemmas around the question of... half the paper... or most people because the system takes someone's money for give it to another. This action is morally polluted against the background of theft. Freedom is never safe to the extent that a ruling class is allowed to monopolize the very means of production right way by taking the individual into the custody of government power and acting like a thief. Furthermore, socialism rejects the right to be the absolute owner of labor, land and even oneself, leading to serfdom or slavery. Applied ethics also sheds light on the overall wrong outcomes that socialism entails. In the teleological study, the end of socialist governments is the result of the impracticability of socialism. The utilitarian aspect also illustrates that the results are not the best for most people. Therefore, socialism is an evil and unethical form of government.
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