Interactivity Foundation

Freedom From Want: a Community Conversation about Four Freedoms (Part 3 of 4)

What does the freedom from want mean? And how does it relate to the spirit of democracy?

In this four-part exploratory conversation series, Four Freedoms: The Spirit of Democracy Today and Tomorrow, we are helping each other explore different aspects of freedom. To do this, we’re looking at the four freedoms articulated by FDR as core human rights and as they are depicted by artists Norman Rockwell and Maggie Meiners: freedom of speech, freedom of worship, freedom from want, and freedom from fear. In our conversations on May 25th, we explored freedom from want. Below we have summarized some of the different ways the participants were thinking about freedom from want and how it relates to the spirit of democracy.

What would you add about the meaning of freedom and the spirit of our democracy? Please join us by registering for our final session in this series this coming Wednesday, June 8 at 1 pm ET to explore freedom from fear  (more series info at the link). What do you think freedom from fear could mean or should mean? What if our democracy embraced freedom from fear as a core value? And how might this freedom relate to other values in a healthy democratic society? Join our next community conversation to explore these questions and enrich our sense of what freedom can mean.


How might Rockwell’s and Meiners’ depictions of Freedom From Want help us understand different aspects of this freedom?

In the bigger picture, what are some key issues, concerns, or limits for freedom from want?

Looking forward, how might we better fulfill this freedom? Or what might it look like in the future?

Exit mobile version