penny wrote:Bureaucratic red tape does not denote a lack of freedom. On the contrary, bureaucratic red tape could be viewed as an ally to freedom. It provides an avenue.
Jonathan_S wrote:Um, but you previously said that East Germans were not free. Yet they had a bureaucratic process, with its red tape, to apply to visit West Berlin, West Germany, or other international locations.
What rejection rate from the bureaucracy make a people unfree?
Apparently East Germans at IIRC >50% rejection were unfree. But over 2% of US residents are apparently barred from entering Canada due to prior DUI convictions, and virtually no US residents are permitted (by the US) to travel to Cuba but I presume you view US residents as free. So where's the cut-off?
tlb wrote:To the extent that this is a "right" whose lawful exercise is very much dependent on government actions and the "bureaucratic red tape" is a result of restrictive laws passed by those governments.
penny wrote:Oh my word! Anyone should know that bureaucratic red tape comes in all shapes and forms. I DID say that bureaucratic red tape "COULD" be viewed as an ally to travel; as a means, as a path. IF such red tape is not TOO restrictive. Such as it was with East Germany. East Germans could not exchange enough of their currency for the destination's currency. Like Czechoslovakia. So after you arrived you did not have enough money to BUY anything. If you did not return, you can bet your family members would not be allowed to go ANYWHERE. Lines at the border were so long that only the healthy could handle it. Etc., etc. I have heard horror stories from my Romanian friends; some of whom were Romanian by way of East Germany. I have bookends made from the Berlin Wall.
Referencing East Germany as a country who allowed its citizens to travel is asinine! They were not traveling. They were FLEEING!
I have tried here to arrange the quotes about East Germany in order. To be clear, no one here has said that they were free. Jonathan_S was asking you about the sorites paradox (which has come up before): at what point does that "red tape" hinder freedom, specifically aren't we in the US less free because of restrictions on going to Cuba? Note that this does not equate us to the citizens of the former East Germany, because we are at different ends of the spectrum that varies from slightly restricted to extremely restricted.
I have only said (or tied to say) that the "red tape" grows out of the country's laws and whether it is to any extent helpful depends on the intent and interpretation of those laws.