Libertarianism needs
rather than
. It's pretty much a "screw the rest" kind of attitude without any care for common wellbeing. Although, on the other hand, the "survival of the fittest" aspect of it might be
.
Fascism is
, since it's got an extreme focus on order, but also on overall progress.
Socialism is
, since it's also focused on order (regulation) and progress (either towards the communist end of history or, in a more modern sense, mankind's greatest possible liberation from the yoke of labour), while also, obviously, focusing on the common good.
Communism is
. Just because
Anarchism is
, as it's focused on freedom and absolutely counter
, which justifies
just to have both of
's enemy colours in.
Btw, I think this thread would be more at home in another part of the MtG Forum^^
I'm not convinced libertarianism is black. Obviously that's one (some would say, the main) motive for endorsing the philosophy, the philosophy itself is red. You may use libertarianism for black means, but you believe in it for red ones.
I'm not sure that fascism needs blue in it. All political philosophies advocate progress of some sort. For fascism that is a very white sort of progress achieved through very white means.
Naturally communism must be red because commies are red. THough going by the term "pinko", maybe a little white is needed.
My argument about libertarianism also applies to anarchy. Anarchy may result in a
-ruled world, but that's not what the anarchists are going for.
Utilitarianism is basically Consequentialism with an ill-defined metric, and probably fits best as
, maybe
. A little mathy for green and a little rule breaky for white, it is however, very, very blue. It is basically blue loooking at the other colors and going, "So you want to be happy? That's easy, just measure happiness at all possible points in the space time continuum and graph them, then only choose paths of positive slope. Of course, that can lead you to only local maxima, so you would need to start investigating some higher order pathfinding..." Basically what you get when an Engineer takes philosophy.
That's a pretty good point. In classical utilitarianism though, it's all about instituting the system that will bring about maximum well-being so rule-breaking isn't a requirement. There's definitely blue in there. It just can't be monoblue. Blue isn't overly concerned with everyone's well-being, so another colour is required to act as the motive for blue's means.