Quote from Ghost of Cutten:
Well, I am not debating this with people who form their views from mindless herd-following - I am assuming people amenable to reason (maybe an optimistic assumption). After all, if a herd of brainless cattle are charging towards me, I don't try to reason with them, I just get out of the way as best I can. But most people interested in discussing politics and morality will listen to reason, and those who form policy certainly do (even if they ultimately override it for various reasons).
One thing you are overlooking is that social democracy/liberalism is condemned by its own core values - it uses rights-based arguments to justify personal liberties in various areas (religious belief, expression/speech, sexual behaviour etc) but then tramples all over rights in the economic sphere (high taxation, heavy regulation, prohibition of freedom of contract and trade). Thus it is logically incoherent in objective terms, *regardless* of your political views - either rights exist in which case freedom matters in the economic as well as personal/sexual/political sphere; or rights don't exist in which case they can't be used to defend personal/sexual/political liberty.
That means that liberalism is equally inconsistent and logically flawed/impossible whether you are a communist, nazi, socialist, liberal, conservative or libertarian or anything else. It is wrong on objective standards.
The only justification for liberalism in the current form is purely utilitarian i.e. that the group as a whole are better off being given personal/sexual/political liberties, but not economic liberties (e.g. if "small government" would lead to a much more impoverished or brutal society than the modern liberal/social democratic state). That is an empirically testable question and thus again it is an objective, not subjective matter. Besides, I have never met a liberal who defends liberalism on purely utilitarian grounds - utilitarians tend to be very *illiberal*.