Nicolas Jutzet, project manager at Institut Libéral and co-founder of the platform Liber-thé, is a liberal through and through, having read the works of Frédéric Bastiat, Benjamin Constant and Friedrich Hayek. This 27-year-old intellectual had already retired from political life last year. He had made a name for himself in the media, where he became a frequent contributor, by leading the French-speaking campaign for the «No Billag» initiative, calling for the abolition of the licence fee, and then, more recently, the first successful initiative of the Young Swiss Liberal-Radicals, aimed at linking the retirement age to life expectancy. I wanted to ask him what he thought of the French presidential campaign that has just ended. I covered the previous campaign with him, when he began his editorial career at Regard Libre and that his hope had a name: Macron. Since then, water has flowed under the bridge.
Frédéric Bastiat
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Le Regard Libre N° 65 - Danilo Heyer
Last May, in a videoconference speech on the theme of financing development in poor countries, our current President Simonetta Sommaruga defended her vision of a global society: less unequal, more sustainable and better able to meet the challenges of societal change, including the current pandemic and climate change. But if this banal speech struck me, it's because she also wanted tomorrow's world to be... fairer! By this, the Socialist Federal Councillor didn't really mean justice, but social justice. So what is this notion that we come across so often? Does it have anything to do with traditional justice?
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