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Description
Discover the philosophical loophole that allows extremists to use democratic freedom to destroy democracy. In modern democracies, tolerance is heralded as the ultimate moral virtue. We are taught to be open to all ideas, platforms, and beliefs. Yet, in 1945, philosopher Karl Popper identified a catastrophic logical flaw in this absolute worldview: The Paradox of Tolerance. If a society is completely tolerant without limits, its ability to be tolerant will eventually be seized and destroyed by the intolerant.This striking political analysis examines the mechanics of democratic collapse. By extending free speech and unconditional protection to extremist ideologies that actively seek to abolish those very freedoms, an open society essentially hands the executioner the axe. The book uses historical evidence-from the fall of the Weimar Republic to modern digital echo chambers-to prove that intolerance thrives under the protective shield of absolute openness.The narrative challenges the comfortable illusions of pacifism. It dissects the uncomfortable truth that a society must reserve the right to be highly intolerant of intolerance to survive.Redefine your political philosophy. This book argues that defending freedom requires drawing a hard, unapologetic line in the sand before the system is weaponized against itself.



