Limited Government
Humility about power and a preference for institutions that remain restrained and accountable.
Liberland Principle: Restraint in Power
Limited government begins as a cultural instinct: skepticism toward concentrated power and a preference for solutions that leave room for personal initiative, civil society, and local problem-solving.
In this view, institutions should serve the community without trying to dominate it. Authority is seen as something that must justify itself continuously through transparency, restraint, and service rather than by appealing to status or permanence.
The broader mindset is one of humility. No office, organization, or leader is assumed to be wise enough to direct every part of human life, so the community ideal favors modest institutions and active, capable citizens.