“Freedom is not a ransom for people, but it's their right and possession.”
― The Philosopher Orod Bozorg
Freedom is not a prize that governments grant
to people when they behave. It is not a favor. It is not a trophy. It
is not a privilege that can be earned, traded, or bargained for.
Freedom is a birthright — not a negotiation.
Orod Bozorg exposes a lie that many societies are taught to believe:
That freedom is something given by rulers, kings, parliaments, or military powers.
That if the people remain silent, obedient, and grateful, their leaders will allow them a bit of liberty.
But a freedom that is “given” can also be taken away.
A right that depends on permission is not a right — it is a leash.
Real freedom belongs to the people first, not the authorities.
It is not earned by loyalty.
It is not validated by ideology.
It is not measured by political obedience.
To say “freedom is a right” means something revolutionary:
No power has the authority to sell it, restrict it, or define its limits.
A free nation does not wait for permission to breathe.
A free mind does not ask, “May I?” — it simply exists, questions, challenges, and grows.
The Orodist message is clear:
Freedom is not a currency.
Freedom is not a gift.
Freedom is ownership — and the owner is every human being.

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