Contemporaneous liberalism - now called classical liberalism - advocated both political freedom for individuals and a free market in the economic sphere.
And what is called modern liberalism, multiculturalism, they see - correctly - as allied with the establishment.
As Ribuffo (2011) notes, "what Americans now call conservatism much of the world calls liberalism or neoliberalism."
There's a word for that attitude - it's called 'liberalism.'
I don't care if it's called communism, liberalism or socialism.
He also warned against the right, and People's Daily called for opposition to "bourgeois liberalism," which means Western political ideas.
The Soviet drama, finally, made a point about what we call conservatism and liberalism in politics.
All of these people were involved in a turn in liberal thought that was called "new liberalism", a liberalism with a social conscience.
This, along with concepts such as the brotherhood of man and a rejection of miracles led to what is called "Classical liberalism".
This return to the ideas of classical liberalism was called "neo-classical liberalism".