LP,
Eh, ok. I don't think I ever disagreed with that. My disagreement with the conventional thought towards rights has been and continues to be the claim that rights are moral guarantees. I always had a pragmatist position towards them.
Flint,
That's not an informative question. It's like asking me to choose the life of the person behind the left door or the person behind the right door. As I have already stated, form does not cause liberality. There have been liberal autocracies in history, the most successful and long-lasting was during Rome's period called the "Five Good Emperors (each successor to the throne was chosen by merit)." Moreover, the majority of democracies, broadly speaking to include republics, are illiberal.
Concluding Statements:
1. Most democracies, oligarchies and autocracies are illiberal.
2. A government's form does not cause it to be liberal.
So because of (1) and (2), your question isn't informative. I may as well toss a coin.
What is Informative:
Better Predictor of Liberality:
1. Western states and Japan are the best known liberal democracies. Indeed, they account for the majority of liberal democracies. But there are many other democracies in the present day, and the majority of them are illiberal.
2. What the Western states and Japan have in common is a high standard of living, as a result of being wealthier. Of course, you could argue that their wealth resulted from liberal democracy. While liberal democracy may have made them wealthier, the fact is that the traditional nobility wasn't overthrown until a middle class developed.
So rather than ask me what country I would like to be born in to based on government type, it would be more informative to ask me to decide based on GDP per capita.