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Title: The Most Libertarian Towns in America
Source: Strike The Root
URL Source: http://strike-the-root.com/most-libertarian-towns-in-america
Published: Feb 13, 2018
Author: Alex R. Knight III
Post Date: 2018-03-09 10:41:00 by Deckard
Keywords: None
Views: 966
Comments: 11

Maybe you're thinking seriously about getting out of some hellhole in favor of living in a slightly less statist place, around more like-minded people – or possibly you just want a break and an interesting place to visit. Either way, I think I've identified a few places that might interest you:

Keene, New Hampshire: It has more or less evolved into the de facto epicenter of the oxymoronically-named Free State Project, and thus also boasts some of the movement's more vibrant projects and media endeavors, such as Free Keene, Free Talk Live, and the Liberty Radio Network. There's also been a considerable history of civil disobedience in Keene, ranging from open pot-smoking, to conducting business without licenses, to wearing hats in courtrooms, to so many others too numerous to recount here.

Auburn, Alabama: This city is the home of Auburn University, wherein you will find one Roderick T. Long as professor of Philosophy. Of the many libertarian/market anarchist causes and organizations Long is involved with – and which may be found at his web pages above – one of them is the Ludwig Von Mises Institute, also physically located in Auburn.

Austin, Texas: Most famously, perhaps, Austin is home to Alex Jones, but somewhat more puritanically to voluntaryists, the city includes John Bush and Catherine Bleish's Brave New Books, and Cody Wilson's Defense Distributed (yes, he of the 3D printed “ghost gun,” and the excellent read, Come and Take It).

Mesa, Arizona: Home to the one and only Marc Stevens, and his program The No-State Project. Stevens has also written the excellent and groundbreaking books, Adventures in Legal Land, and Government Indicted. He has helped innumerable people challenge government in everything from traffic tickets to property taxes to IRS harassment, and continues to do so on a daily basis.

Anderson, Alaska: I wrote an STRicle about this place once upon a blue moon – you can read about it again here (or for the first time if you missed it way back in '07). Not much has changed, I don't think, except for my own personal circumstances described therein. Which is a perfect segue, because . . .

Then there's . . . Vermont! Not typically known as being too libertarian, and if we're talking taxes, that's fairly accurate. I moved here in 2002, and wrote a kind of semi-humorous justification piece back in '06 comparing Vermont to the rest of New England. I still stick by most of it (even though some of the specifics are dated by now). Vermont is very low-population, very few cops, least gun laws anywhere, and very few building codes (something most folks don't know about). I'm right next door to New Hampshire (about 40 minutes from downtown Keene, in fact) and can shop tax-free whenever I damn well please (not that there still isn't plenty of opportunity for that here on the Internet). I find that, as then, I still like the peace, quiet, and natural beauty – and all the more so since I have a different and better house than I did a dozen years ago. A lot of other things have changed over those years, too. This place has grown on me. This is home.

So I won't add Vermont to this list – at least not “officially,” anyway. Unless you consider my presence here to make it more libertarian . . . and I hope that's actually true, if only in some small way.

In any case, I just thought I'd point out a few places on the map for you that've come to my attention over time, as all seemed to indicate a higher than ordinary level of libertarian activity. You might decide from this point forward to make that happen wherever you are right now. Or, you might decide to pull up stakes, and move on. Been there and done that myself a few times until, for me, at least, I got it right.

Either way – and any way that suits you – happy travels.

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#1. To: Deckard (#0)

Austin, Texas is the most liberal ie progressive shithole in Texas. There might be a few sprinklings of true liberal ie libertarian places but it is blue as it gets for Texas. They remind me of people from Minnesota. Crazy!

Justified  posted on  2018-03-09   10:48:28 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: Deckard (#0)

The Most Libertarian Towns in America – Auburn, Alabama.
Libertarians Prove Their Irrelevance in Auburn.

Henry Olson, American Renaissance, April 19, 2017

“Freedom—yes, but for whom? To do what?”

When Murray Rothbard and Lew Rockwell opened a libertarian think tank in Auburn, Alabama, it struck observers as somewhat odd. Auburn was a surprising location for the fledgling Ludwig von Mises Institute—but the choice was inspired at least in part by nearby Auburn University, which at the time had an economics department friendly toward the Mises-Rothbard brand of Austrian economics.

That was 1982.

Though the Mises Institute still sits next to Auburn University, it is hard to overstate what a difference 35 years have made. As we saw on Tuesday, Auburn, the once “Austrian- friendly,” conservative bastion of the Old South, tried everything it could to prevent Richard Spencer from giving a speech. It gave in only at the eleventh hour, after reneging on a contract, and under the compulsion of a federal court order.

But if Auburn will ease up on its left-wing censorship only through government command, then it is difficult to see how it differs from any Northern liberal school.

This brings us to a sad but unavoidable truth. If we assume that Rothbard and Mr. Rockwell were right to move to Auburn in the first place, then 35 years of close proximity to some of the world’s best and most insightful libertarian theorists has done nothing to prevent Auburn from following the general cultural tides leftward. At worst, it may have contributed to it.

As such, the Mises-Auburn dynamic is a microcosm for libertarianism’s relationship to the country at large. The Libertarian Party was founded in the 1970s, but our country is less free in virtually every resepect that matters to libertarians. And though Murray Rothbard was a courageous thinker who attacked egalitarianism on philosophical grounds, supported the science behind race differences in IQ, and at the end of his life even turned against open immigration, the movement he created, belonged to, and left to us is more given to navel-gazing than honestly addressing the existential issues of our time. As I write, the top articles on the Mises Institute home page are about the Federal Reserve (two), taxes (two more), a “dems-are-the-real-racists” attack on minimum wage laws, and an expose of government intervention in the Easter- candy market.

The Mises Institute has published nothing about the sustained efforts by communists and left-wing campus bureaucrats to undermine free speech at its own front door. As far as I can tell, its commentary on events in Auburn consists exclusively of three Jeffrey Tucker articles (1, 2, 3) complaining that the city has too many stop signs.

Libertarianism is irrelevant since, unlike the ascendant alt-right, it does not meet the enemy head on. No matter what the Mises Institute may claim, the enemies of our civilization are not motivated by a desire to regulate Easter candy. At their heart, they are not even motivated by economic intervention, though leftists will certainly support extensive economic controls when given the chance.

When Ludwig von Mises wrote in the 1920s and 30s, the debate between free markets and interventionism was important and lively. But his disciples, in their zeal to emulate the master, have forgotten that time moves on, and that their enemies no longer care about the discredited interwar collectivism they once espoused. As Paul Gottfried wrote in The Strange Death of Marxism, the Left has replaced its old economic ideology with a cultural and racial one. It still believes that the proletariat needs to destroy the oppressors; but now the proletariat is a medley of blacks, women, Muslims, gays, Jews, Hispanics, transsexuals, and otherkin, while the oppressors are straight white males.

Libertarians like to pretend they can get along with the modern Left, mainly out of a belief that its focus on sex and drugs reflects opposition to government controls. In fact, on the road to achieving their vision of sexually and emotionally “liberated” individuals, there is no doubt today’s Left will become every bit as oppressive as their Maoist and Leninist predecessors. Witness the cheers to which Kim Davis was put in jail for defying gay marriage. Witness the constant cries that free speech does not apply to “racists.” Or witness the Left gloating over the prospects of white dispossession—even as the South African Boers face ruthless government-backed plunder—while it cheers the importation of millions of Muslim migrants for whom apostasy is a capital offense.

Each of these should be enough to make a real friend of liberty grab a stick and join the fight against the antifa. Instead, we get mealy- mouthed false equivalencies that claim both Left and Right are equally bad. Or worse, we get silence.

But, as the Battles of Huntington Beach, then Berkeley, and now Auburn show, libertarians cannot long retreat into what William F. Buckley called “their busy little seminars to demunicipalize the garbage collectors.” The modern Left, like its communist predecessors, is a totalitarian monster that will allow no peace to those who do not accept its ever-increasing demands.

An injured Trump 
supporter holds a sign during a free speech rally in Berkeley, California. (Credit 
Image: © Emily Molli/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)

An injured Trump supporter holds a sign during a free speech rally in Berkeley, California. (Credit Image: © Emily Molli/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)

During an anti-Milo protest, antifa destroyed a Starbucks leaving the spray-painted message “Liberals Get the Bullet Too.” If antifa had rioted in Auburn, there is no doubt they would have smashed the Mises Institute, if they knew what it was. They focus on Mr. Spencer because he is more outspoken and newsworthy, but people who think Starbucks is insufficiently leftist will certainly not tolerate a group named after an economist who compared socialism to potassium cyanide.

And as bad as antifa are, they at least come from a European culture that speaks in terms of human rights. The Somalis and Pakistanis with whom they want to replace native whites do not even have that. If the Left gets its way and transforms us into a minority-white country, we may pine for the benevolent rule of people like Moldylocks.

Libertarians do not understand that not only is our enemy no longer at the gates; he is rampaging inside the city walls. And he does not recognize the concept of neutrals or bystanders. We no longer have the luxury of debating whether taxation is theft or whether stop signs violate the non-aggression principle. Libertarian debates were always luxury goods that were possible only in a peaceful, cohesive society where both sides accepted the same principles of honest discourse. But now, when the enemy does not want to debate you, but instead wants to silence you so that he may demographically destroy you, there is no framework for a reasoned discussion of policy.

An alt-right supporter was arrested at 
Auburn after a scuffle with antifa.

An alt-right supporter being arrested at Auburn after a scuffle with antifa.

Today, free speech is under vicious attack. And white people—the only people in the history of the world ever to care about another group’s liberty—are slated for demographic destruction. If we lose these battles, libertarians will not be able to go back to their debates and seminars. As white men—and how many libertarians are not?—they will be attacked, expropriated, and driven from their homes. Yesterday, the formerly white population of Rhodesia; tomorrow, the whites of South Africa; how long before they come for us?

It is past time libertarians recognized this. If you love liberty, if you love progress, if you love reason and the triumph of light over the darkness, you should stand and fight for the civilization that gave us the Magna Carta and the man on the moon. Berkeley and Auburn prove this. Those who refuse to see it are only proving their irrelevance.

Gatlin  posted on  2018-03-10   0:35:59 ET  (2 images) Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: Deckard (#0)

The Most Libertarian Towns in America – Austin, Texas.
Is Austin an ideal place for liberals? This study says it’s one of the best.

The study found that Austin ranks as the second-best place to be a liberal and is the only Texas city to make the list. Seattle came in at No.1. Here is what the study says about Austin:

Austin is the highest-scoring liberal city in Texas. While it is not quite as liberal as some other cities in our study, it does have a strong economy (5th lowest unemployment rate) and a very highly educated local population (5th highest percentage of residents with a bachelor’s degree at 33.86 percent).

Gatlin  posted on  2018-03-10   0:45:09 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: Deckard (#0)

he Most Libertarian Towns in America – Mesa, Arizona.

ARE LIBERTARIANS LIBERAL OR CONSERVATIVE?

Libertarians are neither . Unlike liberals or conservatives, Libertarians advocate a high degree of both personal and economic liberty.

Libertarians advocate freedom in economic matters, so we’re in favor of lowering and eliminating taxes, slashing bureaucratic regulation of business, and charitable — rather than government — welfare.

Libertarians are also socially inclusive. We think each person should be free to make their own choices so long as they do not infringe on others’ rights. We oppose laws that seek to control people’s personal choices.

Mesa, Arizona, Is America's Most Conservative City - POLITICO .

Are Conservative Cities Better?

Welcome to Mesa, Arizona—the land of Goldwater, Arpaio and a new kind of urbanism.

It’s enough to make one wonder: In the year 2014, can a major American city be— gasp—conservative? If you believe the results of a recent study from a couple of academic researchers at MIT and UCLA, you’d do well to look to the Southwest to find out. Mesa, Arizona, the researchers found, after analyzing more than a decade’s worth of public opinion surveys, is the most conservative American city of more than 250,000 residents, more conservative than such famously right-wing bastions as Oklahoma City and Colorado Springs. “On an overall basis,” says the boisterous Scott Smith, who was mayor of Mesa from 2008 until early this year, “there’s no doubt it’s extremely conservative.”

It might also be a glimpse of the GOP’s coming urban revival.

Squint, and you can see that Mesa is just one of several places where Republicans are creating a new model of conservatism for the post-Tea Party era, through an appealing blend of fiscal pragmatism and no-nonsense competence. Across the country, Republican cities are building new infrastructure and even embracing trendy liberal ideas like “new urbanism”—all while managing to keep costs in line and municipal workforces small and cost-effective. As the great, Democratic-run cities across the country—Chicago, Detroit, Los Angeles—face fiscal calamity, America’s conservative cities are showing that there’s another way.

***

Most of Mesa, despite its growing population of more than 450,000 (making it more populous than Pittsburgh, Atlanta, Miami and Minneapolis) hardly feels like a city at all. Located some 20 miles east of Phoenix, Mesa sprawls in every direction; at nearly 140 square miles, it covers roughly twice the area of Washington, D.C.

Essentially a Phoenix bedroom community (though some larger employers, notably Apple, have recently moved into Mesa itself), Mesa consists of endless miles of strip malls and subdivisions filled with squat ranch houses, all connected by six-lane roads where people regularly zip by at 60 miles an hour. There are also numerous mobile home communities, open only to those 55 and older—retirees apparently enjoy living in a city where summer temperatures regularly top 107 degrees. It’s hardly, in other words, an urbanist’s paradise: Shortly after I arrived at my hotel south of downtown, I took a mile or so walk. I saw only two other pedestrians on my constitutional—both, apparently, homeless.

Mesa’s sprawling layout owes much to its history. The area began its modern existence as a Mormon settlement in the late 19th century, and it remained a small frontier community for much of its early years. The town’s population only broke into five digits in the 1940s, when fighter pilots began training for World War II combat at Mesa’s Falcon Field and the Williams Air Force Base—and, equally crucial, when air conditioning became widely available. Because it only really began to grow quickly in the 1940s and ’50s, Mesa followed the classic postwar development pattern most famously embodied by Levittown, New York: miles of modest, single family homes in subdivisions, wide boulevards meant for speedy driving and shopping centers boasting ample parking. In sum, the bulk of Mesa is quintessentially suburban. As former mayor Smith puts it, Mesa attracts those who think “being boring is OK.”

Mesa’s religious roots continue to influence the city heavily today. Mormons, though they now constitute only 13 percent of its population (the Catholic population is twice as large, owing to the sizable Hispanic population, with the remaining balance mostly Evangelical Christian), hold three of seven City Council seats (down from four in the last term). Smith is a Mormon, and the incoming mayor is an LDS member, as well. The spectacular Mesa Arizona Temple dominates much of central Mesa, and one of the city’s (admittedly few) iconic restaurants, The Landmark, is in a building that began life as a Mormon church. America’s most famous Mormon has a Mesa connection as well—Mitt Romney’s cousin Bill Romney lives there. Smith says that the strong Mormon influence in town has attracted other religious people, too. “Mesa is a city of churches,” he says, adding that the Mormonism has attracted spiritually inclined people of all faiths to settle there.

While Mesa has long pursued the lightly regulated development patterns that one would expect from the wellspring of Goldwater Republicanism, change is afoot. Over the past several years, the city has begun embracing development that’s downright trendy, and implementing policies that will make it more like Portland, Oregon, than Orange County, California.

“Mesa is discovering what it wants to be what it is when it grows up,” says City Councilman Dave Richins over an afternoon snack of tacos, chips and salsa at Matta’s, a Mesa institution that’s been serving up Mexican food for some 61 years. Though Mesa’s city government is officially non-partisan, Richins happily volunteers that he’s a Republican—albeit a moderate one. We’re holed up in the air- conditioned restaurant, taking shelter from the sweltering 103-degree heat outside. Matta’s has just moved to a new location in a brand new shopping center, just around the corner from a branch of Toby Keith’s I Love This Bar & Grill.

“Everybody [in Mesa] is going, ‘We don’t just want to be a big suburb,’” Richins says. That’s most apparent in the city’s squat downtown, essentially one long drag, which is being re-born. “We’re going through the same evolution as every other town in America: revitalizing downtown, adding transportation and pedestrian and street options, looking at compact development,” he says. The centerpiece of Mesa’s developing downtown is the strikingly post-modern Arts Center, opened in 2005, which is home to four performing arts venues, making it the largest such complex in the state of Arizona. Light rail, which will connect Mesa to Tempe, downtown Phoenix and beyond, is wending its way into downtown Mesa now as well—a new station is slated to start operating there next year. “Transit-oriented development” of the new urbanism school (which promotes walkable communities and population density) is already taking place. A five-story, income-restricted senior citizen apartment building recently opened downtown—a far cry from the seniors-only trailer parks that stretch out across much of eastern Mesa.

Mesa’s robust public investments have apparently succeeded in their goal of luring private development. In the trough of the recession, the city successfully lured five liberal arts colleges to set up campuses downtown, an initiative spearheaded by then-mayor Smith. A local hospital also moved downtown in 2011. That’s not to say the shopping district downtown doesn’t display a strain of Arizona conservatism. The used bookstore on Main Street doesn’t display the predictable tracts from Michael Moore or Noam Chomsky in its window, but instead trumpets its collection of military-themed works. (And not far from downtown, I witnessed a pickup truck rolling coal as it cruised down a busy thoroughfare.)

The flair for new, pedestrian- and transit-friendly development extends beyond downtown. All through the city, Mesa is pursuing development policies that are downright crunchy. The city is undergoing a “road diet,” cutting one six-lane road to two, expanding sidewalks and adding bike lanes. “[We’re] trying to set the table for a more pedestrian-friendly environment,” says Richins, who has served on the City Council since 2008. A sprawling new park, adjacent to where the Chicago Cubs are building a new spring training stadium (another development that Smith spearheaded), has recently opened.

Manhattan, it’s not—but a garden-variety transplant from Burlington, Vermont, would likely be pleased with some the changes that are occurring here, though she might be taken aback by the political signs for candidates that plaster each street corner, blaring messages like FIGHT COMMON CORE and FIGHTING OBAMA. (This is still Arizona, after all, where the state House passed a “birther” bill in 2011, where the president’s approval rating stands at just 38 percent, and where a Democratic presidential candidate hasn’t carried the state since Bill Clinton in 1996.) But Smith cautions that we shouldn’t be too surprised at the environmentalist feints, despite Mesa’s conservative reputation. He claims that Mesa was the first city in America to have citywide, curbside recycling, some 30 years ago, adding that this makes perfect sense: “[It’s conservative] to conserve things,” he says.

As former mayor Smith puts it, Mesa attracts those who think “being boring is OK.”

Notably, Mesa’s generally tightwad electorate—it rejected imposing a primary property tax in 2011, by a vote of 60 to 40 percent—has been repeatedly willing to open its wallet to finance these developments. The arts center was partially paid for thanks to a 1998 bond issue to the tune of nearly $100 million. It passed with 56 percent support. Ten years later, 67 percent of Mesa voters approved a $170 million bond package for new public safety facilities and street repairs. More recently, in 2012, Mesa residents agreed to a $70 million bond for parks, which even included a secondary property tax. And last year, Mesa voters approved more public safety and street bonds at a cost of $130 million.

So what accounts for Goldwater Country’s willingness to pony up for these projects? After all, “you would think a truly conservative city would never tax itself on anything,” says Councilman Richins. “But … folks that live in Mesa want a high quality of life.” Vice Mayor Chris Glover, whose City Hall office is festooned with a Ronald Reagan bust and Barry Goldwater paraphernalia, agrees. “We are conservative, but we are also pragmatic,” he says. “We want to have a very aesthetically pleasing downtown.”

It also helps that bond issues go to specific projects, and cover only a specific amount of money. That’s different from funding a social program, or simply forking over higher taxes and hoping that the extra funds go where the government says they’re going. “People are OK with investing in their communities,” says Smith. “People don’t trust programs. They trust … tangible results.” And because the bonds are earmarked to specific projects, even skinflint Mesa residents feel OK about voting yes. Glover also thinks the referendum process itself leads to more support for infrastructure projects. “We look to the voters to say what [they would] like to see done in the city. We try to have them be more engaged,” he says.

While it’s willing to make investments, Mesa is also lean in ways that more bloated liberal cities can’t boast. Take the City Council. Despite Mesa’s hefty population, council members are part-timers who have day jobs in fields from education to copper mining. City leaders also pay themselves considerably less than those in other cities do. Mesa City Council members make only $33,000 a year, and the mayor is paid only $73,000. (And those salaries represent the fruits of a big raise: Before last year, city councilmembers made less than $20,000 a year and the mayor earned only $36,000.) By contrast, as of 2012, in similarly sized Fresno, the mayor made $126,000; city council members brought home nearly $65,000. In neighboring Phoenix, meanwhile, the mayor makes $88,000 and city councilmen earn more than $61,000.

In fact, Mesa is lean all around. The entire municipal workforce stands at only about 3,200 people, down from approximately 3,600 before the recession, and only the firefighters and police officers are unionized. (The school district is separate from the city.) The city doesn’t hand out the fat union contracts that make infrastructure projects in blue states so outlandishly expensive (and thereby reduce support for infrastructure spending, period). During the Great Recession, when area construction companies were reeling and desperate for business after housing starts had fallen off a cliff, the city inked a number of extremely cost-efficient deals— literally building three firehouses for the price of four.

City leaders also trumpet their relatively benign relations with the public safety unions—unlike in, say, heavily Democratic Providence, Rhode Island, where public safety unions are currently suing the city in a dispute over overtime pay. During the recession, Mesa’s police and firefighters agreed to a 2 percent pay cut across the board for three years. (“In a lot of places, police and fire are untouchable,” notes Richins.) Glover, while saying he appreciates the cooperative nature of the unions, also credits their humility with Arizona being a right-to-work state (meaning, among other things, that workers cannot be compelled to join unions as a condition of employment, greatly weakening organized labor).

As a result of its efficient government, Mesa is not only able to invest in infrastructure, but also has the distinction of being the only municipality in the area with no primary property tax—any property taxes are tied to specific bond issuances. Mesa instead relies heavily on a 1.75 percent consumption tax on everything purchased in the city—your average Cato Institute economist’s dream— to fund its everyday operations.

Mesa’s traditional fiscal rectitude, coupled with its new interest in smart development, seems to be paying dividends. From the liberal arts colleges to the new Cubs stadium, the city can point to some real successes in recent years. Still, Arizona’s GOP is as much the party of Barry Goldwater and Sheriff Joe Arpaio, the famously anti-immigrant lawman whose county includes Mesa, as it is of Sen. John McCain and the uber-pragmatic Scott Smith, who has been known to say things like “ideologues can’t govern.” And so, there’s been an inevitable backlash here against the allegedly liberal leanings of the mayor and city council.

In January, when Scott announced his candidacy for governor, he planned to use his record as Mesa mayor as his springboard. Not all residents agreed that his mayoralty was worth celebrating, however; one aggrieved Mesa denizen wrote, “Arizona Republicans will be asked again this year to ‘hold our noses’ and vote for another ‘centrist, compassionate’ (could that possibly mean R.I.N.O.) Republican.” Tracy Langston, a local conservative activist affiliated with the Center for Self Governance, which teaches classes in conservative political philosophy, last year penned a missive charging, “A decade ago, Mesa was a model of fiscal conservatism. However, since 2005, the city’s budget has almost doubled, from $720 million to $1.33 billion … it is time for Mesa residents to state loudly and clearly that we want City Council to put the brakes on out-of-control government spending and simply live within their means.”

Contractor Danny Ray tried to capitalize on that disaffection earlier this year, when Smith resigned from Mesa’s mayoralty to run for governor. Ray, a 36-year-old father of six, ran as the “true conservative” candidate. He’s livid at what he considers to be Mesa’s leftward drift, arguing that the formerly conservative city is moving in “more of a big-government direction” and “mimicking the federal government”—them’s fightin’ words in anti-Obama Arizona!—on spending. He points to Mesa’s nearly $1.5 billion in public debt. That’s a lot of money, to be sure—but it pales in comparison to Portland, Oregon’s nearly $7 billion in bond and unfunded retirement debt, let alone the more than $18 billion that Detroit owed to creditors when it entered bankruptcy last year. And Moody’s still gives Mesa a very good Aa2 credit rating.

But Ray’s critique extends beyond fiduciary matters; he rejects the new styles of development as well. Pointing to greater population density, he says he doesn’t “know anyone who wants to live that way.” People in Mesa, he says, when they become successful, “want a 4,000 square foot apartment with a yard,” not “1,000 square feet on top of a building.”

Perhaps. But while Smith came in second in a six-way race for the GOP gubernatorial nomination earlier this year, losing by 15 points, Danny Ray did even worse in his race. He got clobbered late last month in the Mesa mayor’s race, 73-27 percent, by the attorney John Giles. Giles, who will be sworn in later this month, essentially promises to continue Smith’s policies. “I’m not running because I think the city of Mesa has been managed poorly,” he said during the campaign. “Quite the opposite. I’m very excited at the great things we’ve seen happening in recent years in the city of Mesa … [I have] the desire to keep that momentum going.” Evidently, the bulk of Mesa’s voters agreed with him.

But Mesa isn’t the only big city embracing conservative policies on a municipal level. Across the country, innovative mayors are showing that Republicans can govern urban areas effectively and innovatively—and indeed, that oftentimes they can execute traditionally “liberal” policies with greater discipline and efficacy than Democratic-run cities can manage.

Oklahoma City is probably most similar to Mesa. It too has Republican leadership— yet it too has been making serious capital investments. Since 1993, the city’s voters have agreed to hike sales taxes three times, at a total cost of $1.8 billion. Those funds have been plowed into major projects, including new schools and a shiny downtown entertainment district geared toward pedestrians. City leaders credit those public investments with attracting private dollars, particularly the downtown development that brought the Seattle Supersonics to Oklahoma City and re- christened them the Thunder.

“I think the citizens of Oklahoma City have begun to differentiate between the type of government they don’t mind paying for and the type they don’t like to pay for,” the city’s mayor, Republican Mick Cornett, said on a recent edition of Meet the Press, “I think they like capital projects that they can go up and touch and feel and they know they’re going to be long-lasting.” Sounds a lot like Mesa. And as in Mesa, the only unionized workers in OKC are in public safety—that helped in keeping construction costs reasonable.

Indianapolis is a similar case. From 2010 to 2013, under the leadership of Republican mayor Greg Ballard’s RebuildIndy campaign, the city made more than $500 million worth of infrastructure repairs. Ballard funded these projects not through the traditional liberal route—raising taxes—but by selling the city’s water and sewer systems. He recently proposed a $300 million RebuildIndy 2—though it relies heavily on borrowing. Ballard also created the city’s first Office of Sustainability, charged with greening city operations and encouraging eco-friendly development, though Indianapolis still ranks low on walkability.

Colorado Springs, the famously conservative redoubt that is home to the U.S. Air Force Academy and Focus on the Family, is arguably be the city that went too far, offering the most radically libertarian version of city governance seen in recent times. In late 2009 and early 2010, as the recession hammered the sales tax receipts that were used to fund most government operations (the city’s property taxes are some of the lowest in the nation), Colorado Springs was forced to drastically cut its operations. Pools were closed. Trashcans were removed from parks. Bus service was gutted. A third of the city’s streetlights were turned off. When the city’s voters rejected an initiative in 2010 that would have hiked taxes to restore many services, Colorado Springs embarked on a remarkable experiment in fee-for-service government. Instead, of paying taxes, residents could elect to have their streetlights turned back on—if they were willing to pay $100. This model didn’t stop at streetlights: One group of neighbors pooled $2,500 to “adopt” their local park. Once the city received the cash, the trashcans and sprinklers were returned. Colorado Springs remains very libertarian—bus service, for example, has never really recovered. The lights are back on, however, a seeming admission from city government that the initial cuts might have gone too far. with Brooke. On the right: Howard and Joan Stapleton have lived in Mesa for 35 years. | Mark Peterson/Redux

But if Mesa’s die-hard conservatives get fed up with their city’s newly spendthrift ways, they don’t need to move all the way to Colorado to find a respite. After all, they can always move just a couple of miles south to Gilbert, a town of 220,000, which has a strong Tea Party influence on its city council and recently rejected standardized building codes on the argument that they were a case of big government run amok. As Glover, Mesa’s vice mayor, says, “If Gilbert were a city, it would definitely beat out Mesa for the most conservative city in America.”

Ethan Epstein is an assistant editor at The Weekly Standard.

Gatlin  posted on  2018-03-10   1:06:01 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: Deckard (#4)

Author: Alex R. Knight III
It is readily apparent that ole Alex did not do any diligent research before writing his article.

This is so typical about most the trashy articles you continually post.

Gatlin  posted on  2018-03-10   1:39:23 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: Gatlin (#4)

Hondo68  posted on  2018-03-10   3:03:32 ET  (1 image) Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#7. To: Deckard (#0)

Austin lol. So libetprtarians are really just ultra liberal pieces of shit.

A K A Stone  posted on  2018-03-10   7:40:17 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#8. To: Deckard (#0)

Maybe you're thinking seriously about getting out of some hellhole in favor of living in a slightly less statist place, around more like-minded people

You might wanna tag T-Paper, with this article. Instead of just posting articles, why not force change and shame one of your drug addict loving pals, tpaine? You are like rich reverse racist Oprah. She does a lot of talking about helping the poor black man... but hasn't divided her wealth up amongst ALL of the potatoes.

Don't be a potato... lead from the front and don't associate with those that live different than you propagate.

I'm the infidel... Allah warned you about. كافر المسلح

GrandIsland  posted on  2018-03-10   8:16:33 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#9. To: A K A Stone (#7)

So libetprtarians are really just ultra liberal

I've been trying to tell you for years that most LIBERALterians are merely just Jane Fonda's with a gun collection.

I'm the infidel... Allah warned you about. كافر المسلح

GrandIsland  posted on  2018-03-10   8:20:27 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#10. To: A K A Stone (#7)

Austin lol.

I know. Place is a festering liberal-Commie anarchists' paradise. Conservatives need not apply.

Liberator  posted on  2018-03-10   9:42:09 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#11. To: A K A Stone, Deckard (#7)

So libetprtarians are really just ultra liberal pieces of shit.

Actually they are all just a bunch of confused pieces of shit....each not knowing who they really are.

But when it comes down to it, the radical libertarians are the new communists and here are a couple of folks explaining why:

Most people would consider radical libertarianism and communism polar opposites: The first glorifies personal freedom. The second would obliterate it. Yet the ideologies are simply mirror images. Both attempt to answer the same questions, and fail to do so in similar ways. Where communism was adopted, the result was misery, poverty and tyranny. If extremist libertarians ever translated their beliefs into policy, it would lead to the same kinds of catastrophe.

Let’s start with some definitions. By radical libertarianism, we mean the ideology that holds that individual liberty trumps all other values. By communism, we mean the ideology of extreme state domination of private and economic life.

Some of the radical libertarians are Ayn Rand fans who divide their fellow citizens into makers, in the mold of John Galt, and takers, in the mold of anyone not John Galt.

Some, such as the Koch brothers, are economic royalists who repackage trickle- down economics as “libertarian populism.” Some are followers of Texas Senator Ted Cruz, whose highest aspiration is to shut down government. Some resemble the anti-tax activist Grover Norquist, who has made a career out of trying to drown, stifle or strangle government.

Yes, liberty is a core American value, and an overweening state can be unhealthy. And there are plenty of self-described libertarians who have adopted the label mainly because they support same-sex marriage or decry government surveillance. These social libertarians aren’t the problem. It is the nihilist anti-state libertarians of the Koch-Cruz-Norquist-Paul (Ron and Rand alike) school who should worry us.

Human Nature

Like communism, this philosophy is defective in its misreading of human nature, misunderstanding of how societies work and utter failure to adapt to changing circumstances. Radical libertarianism assumes that humans are wired only to be selfish, when in fact cooperation is the height of human evolution. It assumes that societies are efficient mechanisms requiring no rules or enforcers, when, in fact, they are fragile ecosystems prone to collapse and easily overwhelmed by free-riders. And it is fanatically rigid in its insistence on a single solution to every problem: Roll back the state!

Communism failed in three strikingly similar ways. It believed that humans should be willing cogs serving the proletariat. It assumed that societies could be run top-down like machines. And it, too, was fanatically rigid in its insistence on an all- encompassing ideology, leading to totalitarianism.

Radical libertarianism, if ever put into practice at the scale of something bigger than a tiny enclave, would also be a disaster.

We say the conditional “would” because radical libertarianism has a fatal flaw: It can’t be applied across a functioning society. What might radical libertarians do if they actually had power? A President Paul would rule by tantrum, shutting down the government in order to repeal laws already passed by Congress. A Secretary Norquist would eliminate the Internal Revenue Service and progressive taxation, so that the already wealthy could exponentially compound their advantage, as the programs that sustain a prosperous middle class are gutted. A Koch domestic policy would obliterate environmental standards for clean air and water, so that polluters could externalize all their costs onto other people.

Radical libertarians would be great at destroying. They would have little concept of creating or governing. It is in failed states such as Somalia that libertarianism finds its fullest actual expression.

Extreme Positions

Some libertarians will claim we are arguing against a straw man and that no serious adherent to their philosophy advocates the extreme positions we describe. The public record of extreme statements by the likes of Cruz, Norquist and the Pauls speaks for itself. Reasonable people debate how best to regulate or how government can most effectively do its work — not whether to regulate at all or whether government should even exist.

The alternative to this extremism is an evolving blend of freedom and cooperation. The relationship between social happiness and economic success can be plotted on a bell curve, and the sweet spot is away from the extremes of either pure liberty or pure communitarianism. That is where true citizenship and healthy capitalism are found.

True citizenship enables a society to thrive for precisely the reasons that communism and radical libertarianism cannot. It is based on a realistic conception of human nature that recognizes we must cooperate to be able compete at higher levels. True citizenship means changing policy to adapt to changes in circumstance. Sometimes government isn’t the answer. Other times it is.

If the U.S. is to continue to adapt and evolve, we have to see that freedom isn’t simply the removal of encumbrance, or the ability to ignore inconvenient rules or limitations. Freedom is responsibility. Communism failed because it kept citizens from taking responsibility for governing themselves. By preaching individualism above all else, so does radical libertarianism.

It is one thing to oppose intrusive government surveillance or the overreach of federal programs. It is another to call for the evisceration of government itself. Let’s put radical libertarianism into the dustbin of history, along with its cousin communism.

By Nick Hanauer and Eric Liu

Gatlin  posted on  2018-03-10   10:20:27 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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