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Title: Why I'm Not A Libertarian Anymore
Source: The Right Stuff
URL Source: http:///therightstuff.biz/2017/03/3 ... /2017/03/31/not-a-libertarian/
Published: Mar 31, 2017
Author: Nathan Bedford Forrest
Post Date: 2017-07-06 06:29:44 by Gatlin
Keywords: None
Views: 22709
Comments: 89

I am a former libertarian.

I was exposed to libertarianism in high school, when I read The Fountainhead, Atlas Shrugged, and We the Living. I admired the rugged individualism of (((Ayn Rand’s))) protagonists, like Howard Roark, Hank Rearden, and Kira Argounova, and shivered at her all-too-familiar leftist antagonists, from the heartless (Pavel Syerov and Victor Duneva), to the soulless (Ellsworth Toohey), and the brainless (Rearden’s family and friends).

In college, chafing against the dismal science of Keynesian economics, I read F.A. Hayek, which naturally led me to Austrian economics. The systematic quality of Austrian economics appealed to me: everything was deductible from the axiomatic truth of human action. Since Austrian economists such as (((Ludwig von Mises))) and (((Murray Rothbard))) were also libertarians themselves, the political philosophy followed quickly and easily. Much like Austrian economics, libertarianism was systematic and logical: everything was deductible from the axiomatic truth of the non- aggression principle. At the same time, I was introduced to libertarian-revisionist history through Tom Woods and Thomas DiLorenzo, who taught me that, much like in economics, most of what I had been taught in school about American history was wrong. All in all, I believed that I understood everything about the way the world worked.

I was a donor to the Ludwig von Mises Institute and attended several of its conferences. I voted for Ron Paul in 2008 and 2012 and donated to every single “money-bomb.” I listened to the (((Peter Schiff))) Show and read Antiwar.com every day, invested heavily in gold, began stockpiling weapons, and drank, smoked, and fucked too much. I spent a lot of time online debating statists and writing for a number of blogs. I began to take seriously Hans-Hermann Hoppe’s theory of “individual secession,” whereby we bring down the state by refusing to grant it any legitimacy in our daily lives. I was content to “live and let live” and “surf the crash” while waiting for the apocalypse (either a financial meltdown, violent revolution, or dissolution of the Union).

Frustrated with the intellectual and political complacency of libertarianism after Ron Paul’s final defeat, as well as infiltration and subversion from fairies like Tucklypuff and sluts like (((Reinsenwitz))), I began exploring “paleo-libertarianism” and “paleo- conservatism.” I became far less interested in politics and economics and much more interested in history and culture. After joining the Sons of the American Revolution and Sons of Confederate Veterans, I began thinking more about my ancestry and feeling more of an identity. My country and my people, which once were no more to me (a deracinated and atomized individual) than arbitrary lines on a map and strangers in a crowd, started to mean something to me once more. I remembered who I was and realized that I was more than what I had become: I was a part of a nation with a past, present, and future, with a duty to honor my ancestors and pass on my patrimony to my descendants. I began to understand just how unnatural it was to tear human beings up from their roots, as I had been.

The massive political assault on Confederate symbols in the South was a turning point. The tearing down of flags, toppling of statues, and digging up of graves turned my stomach and hurt my heart. Seeing the ruling class – an “occupation government” and “government against its people” – and its slavish minions flaunt their hatred of my heritage was a profoundly embittering and hardening moment.

After reading Ann Coulter’s Adios America, Patrick J. Buchanan’s The Death of the West, Samuel P. Huntington’s Who Are We? The Challenges to America’s National Identity, and Jared Taylor’s White Identity: Racial Consciousness in the 21st Century, I was rudely awakened to the existential threat which mass-immigration from the Third World posed to Western Civilization. Despite my best efforts to sound the alarm, libertarians refused to acknowledge that “demography is destiny” (even though most immigrants are anti- white/anti-American and vote left) and were opposed to doing anything which might violate the nebulous “freedom of travel” (even though immigration is a government program). Libertarians were fiddling while Rome burned.

I started reading VDare.com, AmRen.com, and OccidentalDissent.com every day. Along with Justin Raimondo, Walter Block, Ralph Raico, and Stefan Molyneux, I announced myself as a pro-Trump libertarian, mainly because of his “America First” stance on illegal immigration and foreign intervention. Drawing heavily from Hoppe’s right-wing libertarianism, Buchanan’s opposition to open-border immigration and trade, and Raimondo’s anti-interventionism, I wrote a long article titled, “I’m a Libertarian Who’s Voting for Trump.”

Although I had grown up in a nice white part of Florida, at the time I was living in Los Angeles, where any illusions I harbored about equality and diversity were quickly dispelled. Living alone, surrounded by foreigners strip-mining our economy, rent- seeking off our government, turning our cities into slums, degrading our political culture, and dissolving our national identity was a severely alienating experience and made me realize just how much I took white society and culture for granted.

One day, in the midst of the Great Meme War, a fellow listener of Christopher Cantwell’s podcast sent me three episodes of The Daily Shoah (#16, 17, and 18), claiming that they were something which all libertarians needed to hear. Instead of listening to The Tom Woods Show that day, I listened to The Daily Shoah. I immediately identified with The Death Panel (a group of goys who shared a similar intellectual journey to mine) and began catching up on old episodes. Fash the Nation (F) kept me from getting gaslit and made me seem like a genius to my friends and family when Trump won.

It did not take long for me to realize that I no longer identified as a libertarian; in fact, I had not for quite some time, though I had yet to accept it. It is not that I changed my mind and decided that libertarianism is wrong about everything – that the state cannot be oppressive and abusive, that socialism can run an economy, that war is not the sum of all evils, etc. On the contrary, I think that libertarianism is right about a great many things, and could remain a viable third-party movement if it reroutes from left-wing faggotry back to right-wing populism. I simply came to the conclusion that whatever its virtues, libertarianism had an incomplete view of human life and backwards priorities, was too limited in its possibilities, and last, but not least, was overrun by ideological blowhards, cynical politicos, and dimwitted figureheads.

On the one hand, to paraphrase Ronald Reagan’s remark about the Democratic Party, “I did not leave libertarianism; libertarianism left me.” On the other hand, I chose to leave libertarianism. I would like to explain exactly what I mean.

There’s More to Life than Liberty

To the libertarian, individual liberty is all that matters: each and every question is answered according to whatever results in more liberty and less government, regardless of any other related issues or resulting effects. In other words, more liberty is always good and more government is always bad, period. Libertarians have essentially made a religion out of Patrick Henry’s stirring rhetoric of “give me liberty or give me death” (he may very well have chosen death if he had known that one day the likes of Austin Petersen would be quoting him). For all their emotion and idealism, however, libertarians have an intellectually stunted and morally deformed view of human life.

First, individual liberty does matter, and is immensely important to the pursuit of happiness, but it is not all that should matter to us. Our safety and security also matter (John C. Calhoun noted that liberty could not even exist without safety/security), yet libertarianism cheers on the dark feral underclass and jeers at the embattled police. A stable, fair, and growing economy also matters, yet libertarianism dogmatically insists on adhering to the economic theory of free trade in spite of the fact that all of the preconditions on which it was premised no longer prevail. Our people and our culture also matter, yet libertarians scream “Nazi” at anyone who wants to preserve the ideas, institutions, and identity which we have inherited. Our environmental and historical heritage also matters, yet libertarianism is content to see a lake drained and paved over or an old building demolished in order to build a parking lot for a shopping mall. Our families and communities also matter, but libertarianism sneers at any such groupings as “collectivism” and preaches a “virtue of selfishness” which idolizes sex, money, and other mindless self-indulgences. “Individualism, at first, only saps the virtues of public life,” observed Alexis de Tocqueville, “but in the long run it attacks and destroys all others and is at length absorbed in downright selfishness.”

“Moral foundations theory” argues that human morality is founded on six different principles: care/harm, fairness/cheating, loyalty/betrayal, authority/subversion, sanctity/degradation, and liberty/oppression (along with related themes of divinity, community, hierarchy, tradition, and sin). According to research by NYU and USC social psychologists Jonathan Haidt and Jesse Graham, left-liberals are responsive only to the foundations of care/harm and fairness/cheating, right- conservatives are responsive to all six foundations, and libertarians are responsive only to liberty/oppression.

Thus, much like left-liberalism, libertarianism is based on an incomplete moral foundation:

It removes even the constraints of liberalism. It basically attracts sociopaths. Going back to Haidt, if you boil everything down to liberty/oppression and you’re a morally warped person, then it sounds exactly like what they believe in: “Everything revolves around my needs. The world doesn’t matter.” It’s really bad. You see that in the left-libertarian milieu. They’re totalitarians in their own mind.

Haidt…posits that for libertarians in particular, they have only one moral axis: liberty/oppression. As is, such a truncated morality leads to bizarre and, for me, offensive rejections of sometimes common sense social ideas and norms. (Bulbasaur)

Plato and Aristotle were both skeptical about the virtues of unlimited individual liberty, warning of a cycle in which an excess of liberty (licentiousness) in a democracy causes a reaction that would end in the absence of liberty (tyranny) and the return of an oligarchy. “The excess of liberty, whether in states or individuals, seems only to pass into excess of slavery,” Plato argued in The Republic, “and so tyranny naturally arises out of democracy, and the most aggravated form of tyranny and slavery out of the most extreme form of liberty.” Plato and Aristotle believed not so much in individual liberty (“the liberty of the moderns”), but more in the self- government of the polity (“the liberty of the ancients”), which was why they viewed Spartan authoritarianism as a “golden mean” between Athenian egalitarianism and Persian totalitarianism.

As silly as it may sound, it was reading fiction which rekindled these long- suppressed moral foundations in my heart and mind. Up until a few years ago, I had read nothing but libertarian ideology for years – libertarian economics, libertarian politics, and libertarian history. Besides what I had been required to read in school, the last piece of fiction I had read was probably J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings. After watching “Game of Thrones” on HBO, however, I decided to read George R.R. Martin’s A Song of Ice and Fire, followed afterwards by Robert Jordan’s Wheel of Time. To force myself to keep reading, I started a “book club” with my fiancé, where we read everything from sci-fi/fantasy, historical fiction, and classical literature (Putin paid me to say that I prefer the Russian greats). Such epic stories about human life – full of care/harm, fairness/cheating, loyalty/betrayal, authority/subversion, and sanctity/degradation – is the best antidote to the libertarianism’s one-dimensional morality of liberty/oppression.

Second, as the British statesman Daniel Hannan argues in Inventing Freedom: How the English-Speaking Peoples Made the Modern World, individual liberty is more of an export of the British Isles than it is a universal abstraction. “Abstract liberty, like other mere abstractions, is not to be found,” quipped Edmund Burke. Liberty, at least in the modern sense, is our political inheritance from the English, beginning with the Magna Charta Libertatum in 1215 (when King John made peace with rebellious barons by agreeing to a bill of rights) and culminating with the Glorious Revolution of 1688 (when the Parliament overthrew King James II and instituted a bill of rights). Everything that we consider “liberty,” from constitutional government (e.g. a government of laws rather than a government of men), civil liberties (e.g. freedom of speech, keeping/bearing arms, habeas corpus, etc.), and laissez-faire capitalism (e.g. light public burdens and tight public budgets), are all essentially English inventions.

With the European colonization of the New World, these English ideas and institutions soon crossed the Atlantic, where the pioneering spirit, abundant economic opportunity, and distance from the central government made the colonists even more individualistic and independent than their brethren in the mother country. As Alexandre de Tocqueville observed, “The American is the Englishman left to himself.” In a famous speech in the Parliament urging compromise with the Colonies, Edmund Burke gave three reasons why “a love of freedom is the predominating feature which marks and distinguishes the whole” of the British-Americans. The first was that British-Americans were “descendants of Englishmen” and thus were “not only devoted to liberty, but to liberty according to English ideas and on English principles.” The second was that, particularly in the Northern Colonies, British- Americans were Protestants “of that kind which the most adverse to all implicit submission of mind and opinion.” The third was that, particularly in the Southern Colonies, slavery (by binding liberty to race and placing the opposite of liberty on stark display) made “the spirit of liberty still more high and haughty than those in the northward.” Liberty, therefore, is not the product of pure reason, but rather of a time, a place, and a people, and cannot exist without that original identity. Those left- liberals who scoff at the neo-conservatives’ delusion of “spreading freedom” by “invading the world” but who preach the gospel of “spreading freedom” by “inviting the world” are equally deluded. Liberty can no more be maintained by Afghan and Iraqi immigrants than it can be imposed upon Afghanistan and Iraq.

For whatever it is worth, scientific research shows that the United Kingdom and the United States are by far the two most individualistic countries on earth, with Europeans more individualistic than non-whites, the British more individualistic than other Europeans, and Americans more individualistic than the British. Indeed, the more genetically distinct a population is from the United Kingdom (America’s mother country), the less individualistic they tend to be. At the same time, most American immigration comes from two of the most collectivist regions in the world, Latin America and Asia. Libertarians who believe that identity is irrelevant to liberty – that is, that the ideas and institutions which grew only on the British Isles can be planted anywhere – will soon find that a majority-minority country comprised of non-white collectivists will be more like Star War’s Mos Eisley Cantina than Star Trek’s U.S.S. Enterprise

Overdosing on the Non-Aggression Principle

There is nothing particularly original about the non-aggression principle, although libertarians act as if it is some gnostic truth comprehensible only to the ultra-initiated. It is not only common sense (your parents probably taught it to you before your first day of school), but also a distillation of the Western “natural law- natural rights” intellectual tradition, which originated with Aristotle and Saint Aquinas and was politicized into the “rights of man” (and even “rights of woman”) during the Enlightenment.

Thomas Jefferson, the great American statesman and Virginian planter, was somewhat of a proto-libertarian in his day and age, and excellently summarized the non-aggression principle: “No man has a natural right to commit aggression on the equal rights of another; and this is all from which the laws ought to restrain him...”

The non-aggression principle is reasonable enough, yet libertarians, to be philosophically principled and ideologically pure, unnecessarily take it to extreme logical conclusions, forgetting, as the ancient Greeks advised, “Everything in moderation.” Indeed, in politics, taking each and every principle to its logical conclusion often leads to outcomes either absurd or atrocious. “Let experience be our guide,” the Pennsylvania Founder John Dickinson advised. “Reason may mislead us.”

By applying the non-aggression principle to every interaction, including/especially anything involving the state, libertarians deduce that the state is, in Murray Rothbard’s famous phrase, “a gang of thieves writ large,” and that to be governed is, in Pierre-Joseph Proudhon’s famous rant, to be subject to every indignity and injustice under the pretext of the public good and under the penalty of death. Each state, no matter how beneficent, is just another Third Reich, the Soviet Union, or People’s Republic, with each politician just another Hitler, Stalin, or Mao. The police and the military are thugs hiding behind costumes and badges. Taxation is legalized theft and/or extortion. Fiat currency is legalized counterfeiting. Licensing is a violation of the freedoms of association and contract. Zoning and fire codes are an invasion of private property. Disarmament is the first step to genocide. Driving under the influence or having sex with a minor is a victimless crime. Libertarians stress, only half- ironically, that they never literally signed a social contract. Libertarianism twists a healthy suspicion of power and politicians into anti-government and anti-social paranoia. In other words, “Help! Help! I’m being repressed!”

Only a libertarian could see a public library or park, which anyone can enjoy for free, as symbols of oppression. “But it’s not free! Someone else was taxed for it!” Indeed, and the benefits far outweigh the costs. If taxes get too heavy, then they can be lightened. If taxes then get too light, they can be raised again. Good governance is a constant balancing act, not transcendence.

The other day, I was watching a documentary about “Big Food” with my fiancé. While explaining how “Big Food” shuts down any attempt at regulation, a string of pundits and politicians denouncing the “tyranny” of any sort of regulation and defending advertising to children in the name of “free speech” were shown. There is such a thing as tyranny, and it is terrible; comparing the removal of junk food from school lunches to tyranny cheapens the horror of real tyranny. There is such a thing as the right of free speech, and it is wonderful; comparing junk-food advertising to susceptible children cheapens the beauty of real free speech. “Tyranny” and “free speech” become meaningless when the non-aggression principle is taken to extremes.

For what it is worth, Jefferson’s full letter goes quite a bit deeper than the non- aggression principle:

Our legislators are not sufficiently apprized of the rightful limits of their power; that their true office is to declare and enforce only our natural rights and duties, and to take none of them from us. No man has a natural right to commit aggression on the equal rights of another; and this is all from which the laws ought to restrain him; every man is under the natural duty of contributing to the necessities of the society; and this is all the laws should enforce on him; and, no man having a natural right to be the judge between himself and another, it is his natural duty to submit to the umpirage of an impartial third. When the laws have declared and enforced all this, they have fulfilled their functions, and the idea is quite unfounded, that on entering into society we give up any natural right.

Natural rights, then, are also counterbalanced by natural duties. The duty of the state is to keep the peace and the duty of the individual is to be a productive member of society. The state is not inherently illegitimate, but only illegitimate when it is not doing its duty. When Jefferson endorsed “revolution,” he did not mean a Jacobin- or Bolshevik-style destruction and reconstruction of a society and culture according to some ideology, but literally “revolving back” to first principles and original intentions.

Even Ludwig von Mises, another proto-libertarian, disavowed anarchism and acknowledged the legitimacy of the state:

With human nature as it is, the state is a necessary and indispensable institution. The state is, if properly administered, the foundation of society, of human coöperation and civilization. It is the most beneficial and most useful instrument in the endeavors of man to promote human happiness and welfare.

Liberalism differs radically from anarchism. It has nothing in common with the absurd illusions of the anarchists. We must emphasize this point because etatists sometimes try to discover a similarity. Liberalism is not so foolish as to aim at the abolition of the state. Liberals fully recognize that no social cooperation and no civilization could exist without some amount of compulsion and coercion. It is the task of government to protect the social system against the attacks of those who plan actions detrimental to its maintenance and operation.

The Stupidity of Ideology

Up until Ron Paul’s last stand in 2012, I subscribed to a systematic libertarian ideology which held that anything in violation of the non-aggression principle was wrongful, including/especially anything involving the state. I went so far down this rabbit-hole that I began fantasizing about an armed revolution against the U.S. government. When (((Adam Kokesh))) marched on Washington and brandished a shotgun outside the White House, he seemed like no less than the reincarnation of Samuel Adams. I interpreted all news, developed all my opinions, and began to define my very identity according this ideology. In many respects, it can be difficult to tell the difference between an ideology and a cult.

By prescribing exactly how to think and what to think about anything and everything, ideology stifles critical thought and free inquiry, thereby reducing the beautifully complex human mind to a programmatic computer (of course, this is true of all ideologies, not just libertarian ideology). Libertarians pride themselves on their reason and logic, yet they are utterly unable to free their minds and think creatively (“take the Red Pill”) or account for information that clashes with their prejudices (“glitches in the Matrix”). Libertarians are not free-thinkers, but rather are clinging to one “big idea” as a substitute for thinking for themselves.

So long as libertarians’ political opinions are ideologically pure, they are happy – even as the world around them goes to Hell. After all, they are deracinated, atomized individuals; what do they care about anyone or anything else? “They owe nothing to any man, they expect nothing from any man,” Alexis de Tocqueville observed of the modern, individualistic man. “They acquire the habit of always considering themselves as standing alone, and they are apt to imagine that their whole destiny is in their own hands.” Yet as members of a nation, tied to the past, present, and future, we should be willing to go to Hell if it means that our people can go to Heaven. “A man almost always knows his forefathers and respects them; he thinks he already sees his remote descendants and he loves them,” de Tocqueville further observed of the pre-modern, feudal man. “He willingly imposes duties on himself towards the former and the latter, and he will frequently sacrifice his personal gratifications to those who went before and to those who will come after him.”

Furthermore, political ideologies turn our political priorities upside-down. The role of the state is not to follow a prescriptive party program or experiment with fantastical theories and ideas, but to protect the lives and liberties of its people and promote their happiness and welfare. “The good in the sphere of politics is justice,” Aristotle wrote in Politics, responding to oligarchs demanding more privileges and democrats demanding more rights, “and justice consists in what tends to promote the common interest.” According to Aristotle, “the good life,” not any particular political ideology, “is the end of the city-state.” As Cicero put it in The Laws, “Let the welfare of the people be the ultimate law.” The U.S. Constitution is not an ideological manifesto enshrining sacred principles into law, but a compact dividing various governmental powers between Washington D.C. and the States:

We the people of the United States, in order to form a more perfect union, establish justice, insure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general welfare, and secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.

Of course, principles are still vitally important to good governance, but we should be guided, not ruled, by them. For my own part, my guiding principles are as follows:

“That government is best which governs least.”

“Who guards the guards themselves?”

“To make us love our country, our country ought to be lovely.”

“If it is not necessary to change, it is necessary not to change.”

“Peace is a virgin who dare not show her face without Strength, her father, for protection.”

“Complete equality of rights for all nations; the right of all nations to self- determination…”

“The most precious possession you have in the whole world is your own people.”

Imagine the seemingly endless partisan wars that could be ended with an ideological armistice. Take the renewed debate over healthcare, for instance. In Italy, a private- and public-sector healthcare option exist side by side, thus allowing Italians to weigh the costs and benefits of each option and decide for themselves. If not for the massive free-rider problem in the United States (the result of the Third-Worldization of American demographics since “immigration reform” in 1965), Italy’s system could easily be imported to the United States. To be sure, such a system would violate libertarian ideology (which demands that the government get out of healthcare altogether), but the general welfare and common good of society should always come before the purity of an ideology. It would be a good compromise which allowed Americans to enjoy the benefits of each system (private quality/efficiency and public accessibility/affordability) while avoiding the costs (private expensiveness and public slowness). It would certainly be preferable to ObamaCare (which merely makes the current corporate-dominated system worse) or RyanCare (which makes ObamaCare better in some ways but worse in other ways). These are the sort of common-sense solutions which ideology strictly forbids.

During the (((Russian Revolution))), the (((Bolsheviks))) encountered failure after failure of (((Marxist-Leninist ideology))), but kept pressing on anyway. Under Communism, the collectivization of the means of production was supposed to lead to a prosperous and egalitarian utopia, but instead the economy collapsed, the people starved, and the state killed to stay in power. Under Communism, the peasantry and proletariat were supposed to unite against the bourgeoisie, clergy, and royalists, but most peasants and proletarians resisted the state and the military and secret police had to do all the fighting and killing. Under Communism, the state was supposed to wither away, along with all organized violence against people, but the state became bigger, stronger, and more violent than it ever was under the Tsar.

Libertarians are, in a way, in a similar position as the Bolsheviks, although without ever having achieved power anywhere: they are clinging to an increasingly discredited ideology which narrows their intellectual horizons and puts theories and ideas before society.

In other words, libertarianism is the Marxism of the Right:

You may shake your head and come back with the rather cliched claim that libertarianism is the political expression of individualism, capitalism, and freedom, while Marxism is the intellectual grandfather of tyranny, socialism, and collectivism. What gives? Are not these two ideologies in direct opposition to each other. Sure they are: in theory they are bitterly opposed, but that is why there is so much crossover.

Marxism and libertarianism are essentially perverted mirror images of each other. Both are uncompromising, totalitarian, utopian, and reject the status quo as morally intolerable according to their own esoteric philosophical constructs. These qualities are more likely to be attractive to a certain type of person than any particular point of dogma. Both ideologies promote what are essentially unfalsifiable narratives and back them up with rhetorical techniques that guarantee a “win” in any political debate. (Mike Enoch)

At the height of my libertarian faggotry, an Arab thot who was stealing my Aryan seed mistook me for a Marxist-Leninist. At the time, I laughed off her error - “silly statist!” - but now I see that she was actually on to something.

Choice and Consent are Overrated

Whenever libertarians are asked about ethics, they typically answer, “Whatever consenting adults want to do in the privacy of their homes is none of my business.” This is a tempting ethical code because it disguises a cheap, easy “live and let live” agnosticism as a high-minded principle. Yet sometimes what consenting adults want to do in the privacy of their homes may not cause direct physical harm to another, but indirect social harm to everyone else.

Consider the case of marijuana, the issue closest to Gary Johnson’s heart. While smoking marijuana may not directly harm anyone else, the harm that smoking does to the user ultimately harms society as a whole: increased social and economic failure (aka being a loser who cannot maintain employment or relationships), a weakened immune system and hormone production (aka being sickly and sterile), and neuropsychological decline (aka being stupid and slow). Why should any society tolerate a substance which creates such a dysfunctional underclass, even if the consumption of it is a free choice?

The “socially liberal” aspect of libertarianism tends to produce the same things liberalism produces – fatherless children, drug and alcohol addicts, rootless and detribalized people with no cultural standards, unhealthy lifestyles of all kinds, and hordes of unproductive, violent, and needy immigrants – all of which call for bigger and more expensive government paid for by the few remaining functional taxpayers. This, of course, drastically undercuts the “fiscally conservative” aspect of libertarianism. (Libertarian Nationalist)

Of course, libertarians will object that “society” has no right to dictate “morality” to “individuals,” and will probably add that “society” is just a code word for “state.” This is how intellectually bankrupt libertarianism has become: it cannot even recognize what a society is, why individuals form them, and what the role of the state should be. Edmund Burke understood, as did America’s Founding Fathers, that without morality, liberty would quickly degrade into licentiousness:

Men are qualified for civil liberty in exact proportion to their disposition to put moral chains upon their own appetites – in proportion as their love of justice is above their rapacity – in proportion as their soundness and sobriety of understanding is above their vanity and presumption – in proportion as they are more disposed to listen to the counsels of the wise and good, in preference to the flattery of knaves. Society cannot exist, unless a controlling power upon will and appetite be placed somewhere; and the less of it there is within, the more there must be without. It is ordained in the eternal constitution of things, that men of intemperate minds cannot be free. Their passions forge their fetters.

This “live and let live” agnosticism does not just make excuses for degenerate behavior, but barbaric behavior as well. For example, the courts, acting as Jacobin- and Bolshevik-style revolutionary tribunals, have cast aside justice and the law in order to decree abortion a human right. For what it is worth, scientific research has thoroughly validated the natural-law belief that life begins at conception (that is, that when male and female gametes unite to form a zygote, a genetically distinct human organism is conceived, albeit at an early stage of development), yet out of a superstitious reverence for “a woman’s right to choose,” poisoning or dismembering an unborn baby, or even partially delivering it and vacuuming out its brains, is protected by law.

To sanitize the savagery, abortion is described in clean, clinical euphemisms (“termination” of a “fetus”) and defended in terms of female empowerment (“my body, my choice”). “Live and let live” ends in mass-infanticide that would make Moloch and Baal cringe.

An ethical code should promote a positive vision for human life, not indulge humanity’s baser instincts. An ethical code should not defend degeneracy or barbarity in the name of “human rights,” but promote a healthy and happy society – what Aristotle called eudaimonia, i.e. “human flourishing.” An ethical code should not be agnostic about “right” and “wrong,” but promote human virtue (arete, i.e. “excellence” in human qualities) and inspire the people to become “great-souled” by living virtuously.

The Free Market is not a Philosopher’s Stone

Laissez-faire capitalism brings prosperity and progress while socialism brings slavery and suffering. By now, even most leftists concede this point, which is why they have dropped the traditional Marxist “class war” in favor of a “culture war.” Libertarians believe, however, that because the free market is the most efficient economic system, that is necessarily the best economic system (as well as social and cultural system) and can never be fettered in any way.

What does efficiency even mean? The free market is best at maximizing production and minimizing costs, i.e. making the most stuff for the cheapest price. The free market is also best at allocating resources and innovating new products, i.e. keeping the economy running smoothly and coming up with cool new stuff. This is what efficiency means, yet there is more to human life than efficiency. Indeed, Austrian economists themselves even have a “subjective theory of value,” although they tend to apply it only to the prices of goods. As Hans-Hermann Hoppe notes, however, “What constitutes ‘wealth’ and ‘welfare’ is subjective.”

A story involving the greatest of all Austrian economists illustrates the myopia of mere efficiency. In 1947, Ludwig von Mises (the champion of the free market) and Wilhelm Ropke (the champion of the social market) met at Ropke’s home in Geneva, Switzerland. To cope with shortages during World War II, Geneva allotted each citizen a small plot outside the city for gardening their own vegetables. These gardens became so popular among the people that they were maintained after the war. “A very inefficient way of producing foodstuffs,” scoffed Mises at the sight of the gardens. “Perhaps so,” retorted Ropke, “but a very efficient way of producing human happiness.”

The free market is indisputably a powerful engine driving mankind’s material welfare forward, but it is not a philosopher’s stone capable of solving any and every problem. For instance, no less a free-market economist than F.A. Hayek endorsed “a certain minimum income for everyone…a sort of floor below which nobody need fall even when he is unable to provide for himself.”

Take pollution, for instance. Left unfettered, the market pollutes the environment, which harms humans as well as plants and animals. There is nothing wrong with environmental regulations which, if well-designed and properly administered, lower pollution. We have just as much of an interest in environmental protection as we do in industrial capitalism. Or take poverty. Left unfettered, the market puts many to work, but also leaves some out of work. There is nothing wrong with welfare programs which, if well-designed and properly administered, provide a social safety net. We have just as much of an interest in caring for the poor as we do in small government. What about trade? Left unfettered, the market redistributes capital from higher-wage countries to lower-wage countries, and labor from lower-wage countries to higher-wage countries. This has the effect of gutting the economy and displacing labor in higher-wage countries, which is exactly what is happening in the United States today. There is nothing wrong with walling off the outflow of capital and the inflow of labor. We have just as much of an interest in protecting our economy and labor as we do in free trade. In every case, it is preferable to weigh competing interests and come to a fair compromise than be inflexibly ideological. According to the father of conservatism, Edmund Burke, “All government – indeed, every human benefit and enjoyment, every virtue, and every prudent act – is founded on compromise and barter.”

To be honest, while Scandinavian-style “democratic socialism” clashes with my Anglo-American predisposition to individualism and independence, and is certainly not the utopia that senile (((Bernie Sanders))) imagines, the Scandinavians are some of the happiest people in the world. Such a system, however, requires a homogeneous, healthy, high-functioning, and high-trust society, as well as a below- replacement birthrate (because there is little to no net job growth) and closed borders (because immigration breaks up the four H’s above).

Libertarians also insist that traditional “public goods,” such as the policing, firefighting, or even roads be privatized. Their ideas can make for interesting thought experiments, and ambitious entrepreneurs are certainly willing to experiment as far as legally permissible, but they are totally irrelevant to the pressing issues of the day. Of course, most libertarians have no idea how such public goods would actually be provided without the state. All they understand is that taxing people to pay for public goods violates the non-aggression principle, so therefore there must be a better way.

The free market is a means which we should use to make our lives better, not an end in and of itself. As the grand old Patrick Buchanan has reminded us again and again, “The country comes before the economy and the economy exists for the people.”

Putting Blaming America First

Anti-interventionism is the belief that countries should engage in peaceful and commercial relations with one another, but not form alliances, and that wars should only ever be fought in self-defense, not for “king and country” or to “make the world safe for democracy.” The premier anti-interventionist of our time, Ron Paul, defined anti-interventionism as “A Foreign Policy of Freedom: Peace, Commerce, and Honest Friendship.” Anti-interventionism was the unanimous policy of America’s Founding Fathers, who diligently maintained neutrality in the endless series of European wars. “Observe good faith and justice towards all nations; cultivate peace and harmony with all,” George Washington advised in his farewell address. “Harmony, liberal intercourse with all nations, are recommended by policy, humanity, and interest.”

Libertarians often point out that military interventions have often had unfortunate unintended consequences. American entry into World War I, for instance, prolonged a war that was on the verge of ending, resulting in the collapse of liberal democracy in Russia and the rise of Communism, the vengeful Treaty of Versailles and the rise of Nazism in Germany, and World War II itself. Indeed, there have been unintended consequences to interventions, and these should be understood so that future misguided interventions may be avoided. Libertarians, however, out of an intense hatred for their own government and alienation from their own nation, try to paint every problem in the world as stemming from some American intervention, oftentimes rewriting history to the point of absurdity.

At the same time, libertarians refuse to concede that there can be any positive outcomes to military intervention. To use the earlier example of American entry into WWI, while it may have led to Communism, Nazism, and WWII, it also led to the defeat of the Central Powers, without which nothing would have stopped Turkey from completing the Armenian genocide. I, for one, am glad that the genocide of Transcaucasian Christians by Turkish Muslims was stopped, even if stopping it did violate non-interventionist principles. Similarly, military intervention in defense of Alexander Kerensky’s government in Russia and Chiang Kai-shek’s government in China would have been better than doing nothing as revolutionaries seized total power and ultimately did more damage to world peace than any military intervention. Instead of saving Russia and China from Communism, President Roosevelt surrendered Central Europe to Comrade Stalin (over the protests of General Patton) and President Truman surrendered North Korea to Chairman Mao (over the protests of General MacArthur). As George Washington also advised in his farewell address, “We may choose peace or war, as our interest, guided by justice, shall counsel.”

Currently, we have the worst of all worlds: the U.S. government is not anti- interventionist and can never seem to choose the right side in any of its many interventions. In the past century, the government has not fought a single war in the national or even global interest (much less in self-defense), instead always coming up with the dumbest reasons to intervene somewhere and coming down on the side of the worst factions there. American foreign policy, particularly in our lifetime, has grown increasingly counter-productive and self-destructive, and only now with President Trump in office is there a chance of stopping it from spiraling completely out of control.

Today, libertarians are outraged that President Trump is militarily intervening in Syria to defeat the Islamic State. Anti-interventionism in this case, however, is simply out of the question. The Islamic State is a veritable Frankenstein’s monster of the American destruction of Iraq, Libya, and nearly Syria (each of which required an authoritarian like Hussein, Gaddafi, and Assad to keep the peace between the sectarians), and thus the U.S. government has a moral obligation, like Doctor Frankenstein, to kill its creation. Libertarians cannot invoke anti-interventionism in order to avoid responsibility for the consequences of past interventions.

Anti-interventionism is a wise policy, but it should be one of many guiding principles, not an ideological dictate. In the realm of statecraft, where the stakes can be as high as peace and prosperity versus war and want, realism must counterbalance idealism. “The statesman must think in terms of the national interest, conceived as power among other powers,” argued American diplomat Hans Morgenthau in Politics Among Nations: The Struggle for Power and Peace. “The popular mind, unaware of the fine distinctions of the statesman’s thinking, reasons more often than not in the simple moralistic and legalistic terms of absolute good and absolute evil.”

Ruling in Hell (LARPing) rather than Serving in Heaven (Working within the System)

Libertarians love to quote Thomas Jefferson’s endorsement of revolution and rebellion, but they are loathe to quote his recommendation of pragmatic politics: “What is practicable must often control what is pure theory,” and “The question is not what we wish, but what is practicable.”

Libertarianism’s answer to each and every political question is to abolish and/or privatize it. To libertarians, striking such radical poses may seem exciting and make them feel better than everyone else, but to those who actually want to make progress on an issue or solve a problem, this sort of posturing is tedious and intolerable. While the libertarian is grinning smugly and stupidly, everyone else is groaning and rolling their eyes.

By glibly taking radical positions which have no practical value whatsoever, or just reflexively opposing whatever the state does, libertarians manage to avoid ever actually engaging in an argument while also congratulating themselves on winning every argument. When it comes to the arguments they have with imaginary statist adversaries, libertarians are undefeated. Ironically, by taking such useless positions “on principle,” libertarians actually make a mockery of the principles which they claim to be preserving and miss opportunities to use whatever political influence they do have to advance those principles.

Murray Rothbard himself became exasperated with this sort of “blind, unintelligent sectarianism” among libertarians (which he also identified among Marxists) and urged them to give it up and “become relevant.” Rothbard argued that the sectarian “isolates himself from all problems of the real world, and, in further irony, keeps himself from having any impact toward the ultimate goal he cherishes.” Rothbard’s explanation of why sectarians “have no impact whatsoever on American life” was devastating:

This is a comfortable position to take because it doesn’t really alienate the partisans of either side. Both sides in any war will write this man off as a hopelessly “idealistic” and out-of-it sectarian, a man who is even rather lovable because he simply parrots his “pure” position without informing himself or taking sides on whatever war is raging in the world. In short, both sides will tolerate the sectarian precisely because he is irrelevant, and because his irrelevancy guarantees that he makes no impact on the course of events or on public opinion about these events.

According to Rothbard, “Libertarians must come to realize that parroting ultimate principles is not enough for coping with the real world.” The complacency and stupidity of such sectarians – who are convinced that sharing “taxation is theft” and “if it please the crown” memes on social media does more good than voting – was what first compelled me to consider alternatives to libertarianism.

Rothbard understood these sectarian-libertarians better than they understood themselves. Although they fashion themselves as full of principle and integrity, the truth is that they are either moral and mental midgets (afraid of giving offense and getting into an argument) or pretentious posers and contrarians (addicted to purity- signaling amongst themselves and scoffing at the unenlightened). That is why, on each and every issue, libertarians avoid engaging with the actual terms of the debate:

Q: “Are you for or against building a wall on our southern border and deporting illegal aliens?”

Left-liberal: “Against. Diversity is our strength and America has always been a nation of immigrants. White America has also always been bigoted and deserves to die. A wall will be expensive and ineffective, anyway.”

Right-conservative: “For. Illegal immigration is causing serious cultural, economic, and even criminal problems in many parts of the country. White America is America; without a white majority, this country will not be America anymore. What is the government supposed to do if not defend its national borders?”

Libertarian: “Actually, the very concept of national borders is racist and statist. Why is the government sending its thugs to guard an arbitrary line on a map? Besides, the United States stole most of that territory from Mexico, anyway. If you want to reduce illegal immigration, though, what you should do instead of just building a wall and deporting illegal aliens is welfare and entitlement reform. That’s much easier, right? Open borders and a welfare state are incompatible.”

Left-winger and right-winger: “Uh...”

Q: “Anyway…”

For years, I advocated the sectarian-libertarian line on everything, going so far as actual anarchy, yet I was never taken seriously by anyone – patronized at best, pitied at worst. No “statist” ever saw me or any of my beliefs as a threat. No left- liberal ever opened up to the free market because I was open to gay marriage. No right-conservative ever opened up to gay marriage because I was open to the free market. In my own mind, making radical demands for liberty or death made me dangerous, but in reality I could not have been more harmless. Remembering the sort of simple- and narrow-minded statements I made to my friends and family makes me cringe.

During the standoff between the FBI and the Bundys, I was shocked to see most libertarians sneering at the Bundys. Was this not the Lexington and Concord of the Second American Revolution about which we have been fantasizing, I asked? Libertarians answered that they refused to support the Bundys because they did patriotic things like wave American flags (“a worthless piece of cloth and the symbol of their enemies”) and praise the Constitution (“a worthless piece of paper which has failed to limit government in any way”). Floored by their hatefulness and pettiness, I invoked Thomas Jefferson, arguing that even though “the spirit of resistance to government” will “often be exercised when wrong,” it is “so valuable on certain occasions, that I wish it to be always kept alive.” In response, I was sneered at as a “statist” who worshipped “muh cloth” and “muh paper.”

After weeks of making “Brokeback Mountain” jokes about the besieged cowboys, libertarians began immediately wailing about “Waco” and “Ruby Ridge” when Lavoy Finicum was shot and killed by the feds. First, when it was popular to hate the Bundys, cowardly libertarians devised their own elaborate reasons for joining the mob (about which none of the leftists calling for the head of any white man who defies a black-run government cared or were even aware). Then, when the situation changed and it suddenly became popular to condemn police brutality, cowardly libertarians convinced themselves of all the opposite reasons to join the new mob. Libertarians care more about signaling their ideological purity to one another and indulging their own vanity than they do making a positive difference in the world.

Why I’m Not A Libertarian Anymore

Make no mistake, libertarianism was once a vigorous movement which energized and inspired millions of bright young men to challenge the status quo:

Libertarianism has always been an ideology for white males. It is an intellectual forum in which they can engage in philosophical argument, repartee, camaraderie, and non-violent competition for status. It should be celebrated and preserved as a masculine, Western-oriented political movement standing against the tide of progressivism, Marxism, feminism, and egalitarianism, not allowing itself to be co-opted or handicapped by these poisonous ideologies. (Mike Enoch)

Libertarianism was also once consciously rooted in the Western philosophical tradition and proud of its heritage:

Liberty, the rule of law, respect for the commons, society over tribe, and monogamy are cultural values. They are values that all American patriots hold dear, not because they’ve been empirically proven or rationally derived, but because they are the context in which we have been raised, the morals woven into the story of our nation, and the principles guiding our interactions since childhood. These values are ethnic values, evolving from the Rights of Englishmen and other ideals in an arc stretching back to before the fall of Rome. (Hateful Heretic)

Libertarianism also brought some valuable truths to light and made a lasting impact on public awareness, particularly on economics and foreign policy:

The libertarian critique is very valuable, except when it veers off into insanity for the sake of foolish “consistency.”

The problem with libertarians is that they’ve taken a useful method of critique and elevated it first to the status of an ideology, and then to that of a virtual religion. (Libertarian Nationalist)

Libertarianism’s glory days faded fast, however, and whatever “libertarian moment” the media was twittering about several years ago has passed:

Ron Paul encapsulated the closest thing the modern libertarian movement had to an ideal that could not be reduced to pleasure – to the alimentary canal. Without him at the helm this lack of higher values has been made evident.

Post-Paul libertarianism is largely about pot, sex, and other mindless indulgences. Libertarian justifications for this behavior are every bit as petulant and self-centered as the progressive. It makes absolute sense their earlier “revolution” was aimed towards the American Right: besides some posturing on intervention and economics, libertarians are largely in agreement with modern liberalism’s social agenda – which is an agenda that does not give much of a damn about society. (Bulbasaur)

After Ron Paul’s quixotic protest-campaign failed to catch fire among the public, most intelligent libertarians gave up and went far-left or far-right. Libertarianism is now nothing more than enablement for degenerates and perverts, rhetorical and dialectical weapons for subversives, and a status symbol for obnoxious prigs. To be honest, however, even in its prime, libertarianism was an incomplete ideology unwilling and unable to balance liberty with everything else that matters in human life. That is why I no longer am a libertarian.

Nathan Bedford Forrest

I was a lolbertarian who grew up in the "nice, safe, clean" suburbs but went full-fash after moving out to "diversity" and "vibrancy."

[Boldness Added]

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#49. To: Pinguinite (#46)

It's no wonder he thought it was a great article. He could really relate.

It's more than that, I think.

You see this pattern of Gatlin posting this steady stream of I-wuz-a-commie-Liberterian-until articles, all from anonymous content farms no one has ever heard of.

Your average libertarian has never read any of these sites. None of them have articles from any recognized libertarian and most of their "content" is entirely anonymous or by people that no one has ever heard of. They are only of use for people posting on political fora (like LF) or on Creepbook in order to discredit libertarianism (either big L or small L).

So Gatlin is obviously a seminar poster, as Rush Limbaugh would describe. He's got an agenda, a long list of anti-liberty websites that no one ever reads or notices but which he, liberty-hater that he is, seems to know all about.

If you didn't know better, you'd assume it's all a disinfo campaign and that Tater is being paid to post this drivel here at LF. However, I don't think they need to pay him. He's doing it for free, I think.

As an admin, you can look back at Gatlin's posted threads pretty easily. It takes only a cursory perusal of his threads to notice his obvious anti-liberty agenda.

It's more than just a suspicion of libertarian politics. He has deeper motivation, though it isn't clear what that is.

Tooconservative  posted on  2017-07-07   13:21:19 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#50. To: Tooconservative (#49)

As an admin, you can look back at Gatlin's posted threads pretty easily. It takes only a cursory perusal of his threads to notice his obvious anti-liberty agenda.

I could use my special access to find out things about him or anyone else here, but I don't and have never done so, and never will. At least not to find any info that couldn't be found through the normal interface open to the public. That for several reasons.

1) It would not be ethical, as I do not own the site.

2) Expending the time and effort to do such things would itself be an exercise in obsession on my own part. I think I am not personally acquainted with anyone here, as is the case for most of us. So I don't care and actually take a little pride in not caring, even for people that annoy me.

But to your point about Gatlin, he obviously does have an obsession about Libertarianism (small or big L) and that's apparent enough to anyone who's been here any length of time just from what he posts.

It's more than just a suspicion of libertarian politics. He has deeper motivation, though it isn't clear what that is.

It's certainly not political. It's more personal than that, whatever it is.

Pinguinite  posted on  2017-07-07   15:08:03 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#51. To: Tooconservative (#49) (Edited)

It's more than just a suspicion of libertarian politics.
   He has deeper motivation, though it isn't clear what that is.

WHY IS GATLIN

DOING THIS TO ME

Gatlin  posted on  2017-07-07   16:00:22 ET  (1 image) Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#52. To: Pinguinite (#50)

It's certainly not political. It's more personal than that, whatever it is.

Probably just an old Cold Warrior hippie-hater.

Tooconservative  posted on  2017-07-07   16:30:54 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#53. To: Gatlin (#51)

WHY IS GATLIN

DOING THIS TO ME

Don't flatter yourself, geezebot.

Tooconservative  posted on  2017-07-07   16:32:02 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#54. To: Tooconservative (#53) (Edited)

Don't flatter yourself ...

Not flattery….merely FACTUAL.

Look at the number of posts you have devoted attempting to determine to my motive[s].

I am bugging the shit out you….admit it.

Your posts make it so obvious to everyone else.

Why does what I post BOTHER you so MUCH?

Gatlin  posted on  2017-07-07   16:44:00 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#55. To: Gatlin (#54)

I grasp that you are unhappy when I point out your long and repugnant record of posting these liberty-hating threads both here and at LP.

Unfortunately for you, everyone already knows this about you.

I'm not your problem. Your own longstanding posting habits are.

Tooconservative  posted on  2017-07-07   16:49:51 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#56. To: Tooconservative (#55)

The bozo filter is proving itself to be quite useful. The few times I do see some comments from him for not being logged in always assures me it's a bozo slot well utilized.

I'm not even curious.

Pinguinite  posted on  2017-07-07   16:57:13 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#57. To: Tooconservative (#55)

I grasp that you are unhappy ...

Not at all.

Nothing you post bothers me in the least bit.

OTOH….it is obvious that what I post bothers the Hell outta you.

The question is: Why do you let it?

Gatlin  posted on  2017-07-07   17:26:50 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#58. To: Deckard (#47)

To the libertarian, individual liberty is all that matters: ...

Gatlin  posted on  2017-07-07   17:47:05 ET  (1 image) Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#59. To: Tooconservative (#55)

I point out your long and repugnant record of posting these liberty-hating threads both here and at LP.

You are spinning. There have been absolutely no “liberty-hating threads” posted by me. I have however posted many threads questioning the foundatioal belief support for your beloved libertarianism.

I have questioned, and will continue to do so, the validity of any “libertarian notions of liberty” you so easily and falsely espouse because of the total absence of any real-world examples were libertarianism works. One can easily observe that of the almost 200 countries in the world today, absolutely none have anything close to an actualized libertarian society.

I have always contended, and will continue to vigorously do so, that if libertarianism is the fantastic idea that you and others so blindly adhere to , then there would be at least one country that would have tried it and found it to be successful. But there has not. If libertarianism is so great, then why doesn’t some country have minimal centralized government, exercise total free trade, open all their borders, have no criminal drug laws, no public welfare system and no public education system? WHY?

Libertarianism is a God Damned pipe dream that you idiots draw into as an escape from reality while searching for a mythical utopia you will never find. Your unproven assumptions that libertarianism will inevitably result in eternal happiness and increased quality of life for everyone is total bullshit.

I'm not your problem.

You are YOUR problem!!!

Quit trying to live in a dream world …

Gatlin  posted on  2017-07-07   19:54:01 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#60. To: Gatlin (#59)

If libertarianism is so great, then why doesn’t some country have minimal centralized government, exercise total free trade, open all their borders, have no criminal drug laws, no public welfare system and no public education system? WHY?

Because early 19th century America succumbed to centralization and "progressive" policies put forth by your type of nannying.

There was not total free trade, but the tariffs were controversial and attempts to tax income during and after the Civil War were shot down. Borders were wide open until 1878, and even then only the Chinese were restricted. No drug laws. No public welfare (private and religious charities, yes). Public education was run entirely at the local level. The latter continued in some states up until the 1970s.

Anthem  posted on  2017-07-07   20:06:32 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#61. To: Anthem, tater cuck, cuck, cuck (#60)

tater does not understand the notion of laissez-faire. It assumes that the whole world only understands the government comforts it has enjoyed for a brief stint in the USAF and then upon retirement a free 298 buck/month stipend for the rest of its life.

buckeroo  posted on  2017-07-07   20:16:25 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#62. To: Gatlin, McCain 2008, loser, Deckard, Pinguinite, Tooconservative (#58)

Gatlin has been on a jihad against libertarians ever since Ron Paul disrespected his beloved Senator, Juan McCain of Panama.


The D&R terrorists hate us because we're free, to vote second party

"We (government) need to do a lot less, a lot sooner" ~Ron Paul

Hondo68  posted on  2017-07-07   21:15:02 ET  (1 image) Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#63. To: Anthem, buckeroo, hondo68, Pinguinite (#60)

Reading your posts, I realize that I'm giving Tater far more attention than he merits.

Neil is right. The bozo filter is useful. Unfortunately, it doesn't filter out the threads posted by your bozos.

Tooconservative  posted on  2017-07-07   22:27:21 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#64. To: hondo68 (#62)

Gatlin has been on a jihad against libertarians ever since Ron Paul disrespected his beloved Senator, Juan McCain of Panama.

Nope! You are so wrong. But then you always are.

It was Ron Paul’s notoriously out of control fractious fans, the “Paultards” who during his run for the White House were everywhere going wild to run up the numbers on every online poll they could find. They would send out email alerts to the polls. The obnoxious bastards tried to be everywhere in a desperate bid for national attention and ran roughshod never caring how they affected anyone or anything. Oh, they created massive amounts of voter-generated media when they made everything from viral videos to even a Ron Paul blimp. But they were preaching to the choir, wasting time talking to themselves. None of those tactics the fanatical grass-roots supporters came up with like the blimp they spent $600,000 on did anything to actually help Roin Paul win votes.

What the Paultard simpletons failed to realize was that when the Internet hyper-powered their small group of fanatical people and enabled them to reach out above their intelligence level, it also hyper-exposed them for what they were….a bunch of loud mouth assholes who made great efforts to “spam” all forums with slanted news favoring Paul. The uncouth and extremely vocal Paultard supporters outnumbered their critics on the forums with their language and tactics most often arrogant and downright ugly. Oh, they recognized that great passion can power a campaign, but they failed to realize their self-righteousness can also couldcripple it…..and it did. The Paultard base couldn’t handle criticism at all and listened to no one. They kept right on driving over the cliff to self destruct. There is still no way today anyone can ever tell the Paultards in anyway they are wrong. So, FUCK ‘EM….one and all.

Gatlin  posted on  2017-07-07   22:39:14 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#65. To: Gatlin, hondo68 (#64)

The uncouth and extremely vocal Paultard supporters outnumbered their critics on the forums with their language and tactics most often arrogant and downright ugly.

Selective memory syndrome Gatslime? Or just full of shit as usual?

Lest you forget, over at the now defunct Liberty Post, you and countless others ran roughshod over the Ron Paul supporters by posting lies, innuendo, articles from leftist and even communist sites, rumors, hearsay - engaging in constant name-calling, posting blasphemous, tawdry images (you in particular and Byteshredder among others).

You and your cadre of contentious crackheads generally behaved like bratty little juvenile delinquents.

You haven't changed your deplorable tactics since then.You even managed to get several posters placed on probation by whining to Goldi when in fact it was YOUR anti-Paul articles that were spamming the forum.

Gatlin has been on a jihad against libertarians ever since Ron Paul disrespected his beloved Senator, Juan McCain of Panama.

Don't try and deny that you obsessive-compulsive little turd. Your hatred of all things relating to Liberty are legendary on this and other forums. For someone who "claims" to be a retired AF officer, your disdain for the constitution belies your claims.

You have been McCain's biggest cheerleader ever since you decided to disgrace this forum with your odious presence.

Eat a buffet of dicks, queerbait.

“Truth is treason in the empire of lies.” - Ron Paul

Those who most loudly denounce Fake News are typically those most aggressively disseminating it.

Deckard  posted on  2017-07-07   23:01:39 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#66. To: Anthem (#60)

Oh, I see. Libertarianism didn’t work because Americans wanted centralization and progressive policies.

In other words, people weren’t ready for it.

Americans weren’t ready for it in the early 19th century and they still aren’t ready for it today.

How interesting …

So what you libertarians need have is a come-to-Jesus moment and fully realize is there never will be a government that functions according to the libertarian principles.

If libertarianism cannot even get a foothold….how can it ever be expected to establish a stronghold?

Obviously….it can’t!!!

All you libertarians continue to have is a pipe dream ….

Gatlin  posted on  2017-07-07   23:14:48 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#67. To: Deckard (#65)

I like the liberty and economic message from RP but his annoying fans makes me not want to support RP. Have several friends in the same boat too. Some of the shouting, talking down on people insults etc gets too much.
https://forum.bodybuilding.com/showthread.php?t=141258561

Gatlin  posted on  2017-07-07   23:23:31 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#68. To: Deckard (#65)

I think the Ron Paul bots are too funny! If Ron Paul had his way, I would say that 99.99% of them would NEVER be able to survive Libertarian policies, lol!
http://thisainthell.us/blog/?p=26227

Gatlin  posted on  2017-07-07   23:25:45 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#69. To: Gatlin (#67)

https://forum.bodybuilding.com/showthread.php?t=141258561

You have to dig back five years to find anti-RP crap to quote from a nobody forum to post here?

You are pathetic.

Tooconservative  posted on  2017-07-07   23:28:30 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#70. To: Tooconservative (#69)

You have to dig back five years to find anti-RP crap to quote from a nobody forum to post here?

Time does not change truth.

Gatlin  posted on  2017-07-07   23:35:15 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#71. To: Deckard (#65)

Eat a buffet of dicks, queerbait.

Oh, you poor baby.

Settle down….try to control yourself.

Gatlin  posted on  2017-07-07   23:36:55 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#72. To: Gatlin (#67)

To: Gatlin (#3)

There ABSOLUTELY are TOO many articles and posts about Ron Paul ... we are in agreement!

Then stop spamming with your dozen or more hit pieces, in a 24 hour period.

Slavik_Avenger  posted on  2011-12-15   6:46:48 ET

***

Gatlin, Goldi-Lox, Magician, Slavik_Avenger, TooConservative, U Dont Know Me, thoughtomator, GeorgiaConservative, dwornock, Good Ole Boy, FresnoGrifter, Refinersfire (#72) (Edited)

All I did was point out the misalignment of Infowarrior’s (aka Bill Berger, who has been banned) priorities caused by his psychotic obsessive continuous spamming actions.

Once again, you have posted nothing but lies and ad hominems in a desperate attempt to make yourself look blameless.

Look at the database Gatlin....check out the number of anti-Paul articles you have posted compared to my output.

Why is it that if I'm the bad guy here, the majority of posters on this thread alone are in agreement with me that you are the main culprit, spamming the site with your blog opinions and hit pieces?

Take a look at the way you and your Paul-hater club constantly hijack threads with your bullying of those of us who support Ron Paul.

Why are you so afraid of the man? He's not going to win anyways according to you clowns. Why are you not getting behind a candidate and supporting him instead of trying to tear others down?

Why do you and your clique use the most obscene and vulgar terms to denigrate Congressman Paul and his supporters?

I simply argued ab asurdo to establish the validity in the error in the ways of Infowarrior / Bill D Berger by calling attention to the fact that his actions were ridiculous and the absurdity of his foolishness was detrimental.

What do you care if according to you I am in error for supporting Ron Paul? It's MY vote! you are free to vote for any one you choose, this is America.

Infowarrior posts and articles were obviously and flatly opposed to manifest truth by being inconsistent with the plain dictates of common sense. He continued with logically contradictory, nonsensical and ridiculous assertions and non-validated claims.

What a bunch of babbling nonsense! Again, you are confused.

Who made you the sole arbiter of what the truth is? You have posted articles from obscure, slanted blogs, left wing websites, and you even tried to use a disgraced former Paul Staffer (Eric Dondero) as a legitimate source.

Truth? You wouldn't know it if it hit you in the head.

The essence of his faith was not to seek a rational explanation in matters that are factual. Infowarrior only posted dramas stressing the irrational or illogical aspects of life, usually to show that an acceptable normal life is pointless.

More insane psychobabble bullshit. You are good at that though, using lots of big words (which you probably don't understand anyways) that don't mean anything in a feeble attempt to convey superiority.

I have not been banned.

Neither have I.

You and your little fan club can go ahead and gloat, thinking you have silenced me, and you can try your best to shut up the Ron Paul supporters like the good little liberals you are.

I have 5 posts per day to use wisely. I won't be wasting another one on you.

BTW, the fact that you support Goldi's decision to limit my posts shows that we Ron Paul supporters are winning.

You are so afraid of us and the candidate we represent that you can't handle the light of truth being shone on your lies.

Infowarrior  posted on  2011-12-16   10:35:59 ET  [Locked]   Trace  

“Truth is treason in the empire of lies.” - Ron Paul

Those who most loudly denounce Fake News are typically those most aggressively disseminating it.

Deckard  posted on  2017-07-07   23:39:31 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#73. To: Gatlin (#71) (Edited)

“Truth is treason in the empire of lies.” - Ron Paul

Those who most loudly denounce Fake News are typically those most aggressively disseminating it.

Deckard  posted on  2017-07-07   23:43:20 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#74. To: Gatlin (#71)

Up your dosage of Midol you menstruating bitch.

“Truth is treason in the empire of lies.” - Ron Paul

Those who most loudly denounce Fake News are typically those most aggressively disseminating it.

Deckard  posted on  2017-07-07   23:44:00 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#75. To: Deckard, Gatlin spam spam spam, cuck cuck cuck, *Arab Spring Jihad* (#65)

Mohammad McCain Islamic Center, Scottsdale Arizona

The Crescent Spam Medal, for helping to elect Obama.


The D&R terrorists hate us because we're free, to vote second party

"We (government) need to do a lot less, a lot sooner" ~Ron Paul

Hondo68  posted on  2017-07-07   23:46:32 ET  (1 image) Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#76. To: Deckard (#73)

Why did you delete this post?

Gatlin  posted on  2017-07-07   23:50:11 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#77. To: Deckard (#72)

You are so afraid of us and the candidate we represent that you can't handle the light of truth being shone on your lies.

ROTFLMAO ...

Gatlin  posted on  2017-07-07   23:51:14 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#78. To: Gatlin (#66)

Oh, I see. Libertarianism didn’t work because Americans wanted centralization and progressive policies.

Huh? By what measure did it not work?

The very libertarian US went from a small country with a struggling economy in the early 1800's to the powerhouse of the world by the end of that century (when the progressive rot started). We outgrew Mexico, Brazil, and Venezuela, not to mention most of Europe. None of which had a libertarian government like the US did, yet they had plenty of natural resources. Mexico, Central and South America had been the dominant economies, far surpassing the North American continent, in the pre- Columbian era.

It's ok sweety, I don't expect logic. Go make your man a sammich or something. Not much history or logic required for that.

Anthem  posted on  2017-07-08   0:32:43 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#79. To: Anthem (#78) (Edited)

That’s a bullshit claim. Just like the claim the Founding Fathers were libertarians.

Libertarians go wrong when it comes to history when by and large they try to present American history as an essentially libertarian story.

BTW: Your sarcasism does nothing to cover your ignorance….therefore it is a waste of time.

Gatlin  posted on  2017-07-08   0:38:41 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#80. To: Gatlin (#79)

That’s a bullshit claim.

What Gatlin-like claim did I make? Do you disagree that the US outgrew the rest of the world?

Just like the claim the Founding Fathers were libertarians.

I hesitate to ask, as I have no reason to expect anything other than some hysterical reply, but how do you define libertarian?

Was liberty not a major part of their whole reason for the revolution?

Anthem  posted on  2017-07-08   0:48:55 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#81. To: Anthem, Gatlin (#80)

The very libertarian US went from a small country with a struggling economy in the early 1800's to the powerhouse of the world by the end of that century (when the progressive rot started).

The U.S. has never been very libertarian, and is not very libertarian today.

The early politics featured a battle between the Hamiltonians and Jeffersonians. The Hamiltonians won the political battle. The limited federal government has morphed into an all powerful federal government. The first governmenmts were Federalist. SCOTUS was 100% Federalist. For decades, the Federalists interpreted the Constitution to mean what they wanted it to mean. The expanding federal power culminated in the Civil War, when all practically restraints were removed.

Generally, American libertarianism vaguely refers to fiscally conservative and socially liberal. Our early government denied the vote to women, and featured chattel slavery, not exactly socially liberal. Our current government features nearly $20T in federal debt, the anthesis of fiscal conservatism. When the federal government has a balanced budget, one may speak of the country being fiscally conservative. The last one to do that was Eisenhower, unless one counts Slick Willie's creative accounting and fake news.

Today's Libertarian Party has 0 seats in the Senate, 0 in the House, and 0 Governorships. That does not speak for a very libertarian U.S.

The main reason for the revolution was the desire to keep tax revenue here rather than ship it across the ocean. Why pay the man when you can be the man?

nolu chan  posted on  2017-07-08   1:27:20 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#82. To: Anthem (#80)

Do you disagree that the US outgrew the rest of the world?

And you are saying that libertarians caused that?

Gatlin  posted on  2017-07-08   1:29:35 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#83. To: nolu chan, Anthem (#81) (Edited)

The very libertarian US went from a small country with a struggling economy in the early 1800's to the powerhouse of the world by the end of that century (when the progressive rot started).

The U.S. has never been very libertarian, and is not very libertarian today.

It is true that the U.S. has never been very libertarian and it is difficult to understand how someone can even think there ever was a “very libertarian US”…
- When it has been republicanism and not libertarianism that served as the eternal guiding political philosophy of America.

- When republicanism has been the major part of the American civic thought since its founding.

- When it is republicanism that stresses the central values of liberty, unalienable individual rights and making people sovereign.

- When from the beginning republicanism totally rejected any monarchy, aristocracy and any form of inherited political power.

- When it is republicanism that expects citizens to perform their civic duties with independence.

There has never been a “very libertarian US.” It has always been a very republicanism US that represents our particular form of government.

Moreover, republicanism has been a way of life evolving from a core ideology to an uncompromising commitment to liberty today.

Libertarians continually try to rewrite American political history and through their pursuit of blissful ignorance impose a sanitized historical political ideology.

But it ain’t happening …

Gatlin  posted on  2017-07-08   9:04:01 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#84. To: Gatlin, nolu chan (#83) (Edited)

Ok, so we really don't have a working definition of “libertarian” as a concept. The definition offered by NC, “fiscally conservative, socially liberal”, is too fraught with modern context to be useful, as it brings to mind the current cultural and political issues rather than a political philosophy. Moreover, Gatlin is confusing the form of government with a political philosophy. “Republicanism” is a form of government, not a political philosophy. A republic, even a constitutional republic may be totalitarian in its political philosophy, eg, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, which had a constitution.

So we have a categorical problem right up front. We are not comparing apples and oranges – libertarian and republican are not in the same category, as apples and bowls are not in the same category. A republic is a form of government that is administered primarily by representatives. It may be (by degrees) totalitarian, authoritarian, or libertarian in political philosophy. A monarchy is another form of government, which may govern more by one of these political philosophies than the others. The British Monarchy was to some degree libertarian towards the colonies in America until about the time that George III took the throne in 1760 (some Whigs accused him of having autocratic ambitions, although it was Parliament that was largely to blame for the imposition of authoritarian governance that provoked the American Revolution).

It is important to understand that prior to George III, the colonies enjoyed very low taxes, by any standard, to encourage economic development; and they had a high degree of independence from Royal government due to the original formation of them by “Proprietary Charter”. The supplanting of those charters by “Royal Charters” was at the base of the conflicts that provoked the revolution. The rapid growth of the colonies under the original charters contributed empirical observation to the libertarian philosophy of the uniquely brilliant John Locke who subsequently wrote “Two Treatises of Government” in which he developed his ideas on “natural rights” which trace back through St. Albertus Magnus, St. Thomas Aquinas, Cicero, the Stoics, and Jesus.

Natural rights are distinct from legal rights. Natural rights are bestowed by virtue of the Creator and are not subject to the laws or customs of any particular culture or government, they are universal and inalienable – can not be repealed or obviated by legislated laws. They are the foundation of liberty. Political philosophies describe the relationship between an individual and the government which affects him. Totalitarian government denies men natural rights; authoritarian government infringes them, and libertarian government honors the natural rights of men.

Because the USA had a libertarian political philosophy, thanks to the founders' knowledge of and respect for natural rights, the people were able to be productive and thrive. Indeed, slavery in the southern states led to slower economic growth and debased the character of men and of the culture as described by Tocqueville:

"For the first time we have had the chance to examine the effect that slavery produces on a society. On the right bank of the Ohio everything is activity, industry, labor is honored, there are no slaves. Pass to the left bank and the scene changes so suddenly that you think yourself on the other side of the world. The enterprising spirit seems gone. There work is not only painful, it's shameful, and you degrade yourself in submitting yourself to it. To ride, to hunt, to smoke like a Turk in the sunshine, there's the destiny of the white man. To do any other kind of manual labor is to act like a slave."

To the extent we are allowing the government to become more authoritarian, treating us more as subjects than as freemen, is and will be the extent of our cultural and economic decline. To thrive again, both individually and as a society, we must rediscover the morality of natural rights.

Anthem  posted on  2017-07-08   22:25:45 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#85. To: Anthem, Gatlin (#84)

Natural rights are distinct from legal rights. Natural rights are bestowed by virtue of the Creator and are not subject to the laws or customs of any particular culture or government, they are universal and inalienable – can not be repealed or obviated by legislated laws.

U.S. Const., Amdt 5, "No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a grand jury, except in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or in the militia, when in actual service in time of war or public danger...."

Those capital crimes they speak of, that's where they shoot you, hang you, gas you, electrocute you, or otherwise render you dead. At such time you and all of your allegedly inalienable rights become alienated.

As expressed by John Locke, natural rights included life, liberty, and property. Since day one, the government has always had the power to take away all three.

As for property, George Washington was a slave owner until the day he died.

Thomas Jefferson wrote about all men being equal while being tended to by his slave, Jupiter.

Natural law is a creature of political philosophers and reigns supreme only in their minds. It is not the law anypace on Earth.

Black's Law Dictionary, 6th Ed.

Natural law. This expression, "natural law,” or jus naturale, was largely used, in the philosophical specula­tions of the Roman jurists of the Antonine age, and was intended to denote a system of rules and principles for the guidance of human conduct which, independently of enacted law or of the systems peculiar to any one people, might be discovered by the rational intelligence of man, and would be found to grow out of and conform to his nature, meaning by that word his whole mental, moral, I and physical constitution. The point of departure for this conception was the Stoic doctrine of a life ordered "according to nature,” which in its turn rested upon the purely supposititious existence, in primitive times, of a "state of nature;” that is, a condition of society in which men universally were governed solely by a rational and consistent obedience to the needs, impulses, and prompt­ings of their true nature, such nature being as yet undefaced by dishonesty, falsehood, or indulgence of the baser passions. In ethics, it consists in practical univer­sal judgments which man himself elicits. These express necessary and obligatory rules of human conduct which have been established by the author of human nature as essential to the divine purposes in the universe and have been promulgated by God solely through human reason,

See Oliver Wendell Holmes, Natural Law, Harvard Law Review, 1918

[excerpt]

The jurists who believe in natural law seem to me to be in that naïve state of mind that accepts what has been familiar and accepted by all men everywhere. No doubt it is true that, so far as we can see ahead, some arrangements and the rudiments of familiar institutions seem to be necessary elements in any society that may spring from our own and that would seem to us to be civilized—some form of permanent association between the sexes—some residue of property individually owned—some mode of binding oneself to specified future conduct—at the bottom of all, some protection for the person. But without speculating whether a group is imaginable in which all but the last of these might disappear and the last be subject to qualifications that most of us would abhor, the question remains as to the Ought of natural law.

It is true that beliefs and wishes have a transcendental basis in the sense that their foundation is arbitrary. You cannot help entertaining and feeling them, and there is an end of it. As an arbitrary fact people wish to live, and we say with various degrees of certainty that they can do so only on certain conditions. To do it they must eat and drink. That necessity is absolute. It is a necessity of less degree but practically general that they should live in society. If they live in society, so far as we can see, there are further conditions. Reason working on experience does tell us, no doubt, that if our wish to live continues, we can do it only on those terms. But that seems to me the whole of the matter. I see no a priori duty to live with others and in that way, but simply a statement of what I must do if I wish to remain alive. If I do live with others they tell me that I must do and abstain from doing various things or they will put the screws on to me. I believe that they will, and being of the same mind as to their conduct I not only accept the rules but come in time to accept them with sympathy and emotional affirmation and begin to talk about duties and rights. But for legal purposes a right is only the hypostasis of a prophecy—the imagination of a substance supporting the fact that the public force will be brought to bear upon those who do things said to contravene it—just as we talk of the force of gravitation accounting for the conduct of bodies in space. One phrase adds no more than the other to what we know without it. No doubt behind these legal rights is the fighting will of the subject to maintain them, and the spread of his emotions to the general rules by which they are maintained; but that does not seem to me the same thing as the supposed a priori discernment of a duty or the assertion of a preexisting right. A dog will fight for his bone.

The most fundamental of the supposed preexisting rights—the right to life—is sacrificed without a scruple not only in war, but whenever the interest of society, that is, of the predominant power in the community, is thought to demand it.

nolu chan  posted on  2017-07-09   6:37:21 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#86. To: Anthem, nolu chan (#84)

Ok, so we really don't have a working definition of “libertarian” as a concept.

Hmmm.

So “we” [libertarians] don’t have a “formal statement” [definition] of the meaning or significance of “libertarianism” as an ”abstract idea or general notion of how it should be done” [concept]….Ergo, “we” don't know what it is but “we” recognize it when "we" see it.

Gatlin is confusing the form of government with a political philosophy. “Republicanism” is a form of government, not a political philosophy. A republic, even a constitutional republic may be totalitarian in its political philosophy, eg, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, which had a constitution.
No, I am not confusing “Republicanism” as a form of government. There are any number of sources that state: “Republicanism is a ideology.” Here is but one: “Republicanism is an ideology of being a citizen in a state as a republic under which the people hold popular sovereignty.”
So we have a categorical problem right up front. We are comparing apples and oranges …
Ah….the old political trickery of shameless deflection being attempted. No apples and oranges even with Wikipedia which states: “Republicanism is an ideology of being a citizen in a state as a republic under which the people hold popular sovereignty.” It also has a nice blurb on: “Republicanism in the United States” I feel worthwhile to read. Furthermore …
In recent years a debate has developed over the role of republicanism in the American Revolution and in the British radicalism of the 18th century. For many decades the consensus was that liberalism, especially that of John Locke, was paramount and that republicanism had a distinctly secondary role.

The new interpretations were pioneered by …

You libertarians need to quit trying to shanghai history in your attempt to persuade people to your “freedom philosopy.” Your attempt to commonly place great weight on historical examples are misstating history and on historical examples you try often to draw from the early United States. You libertarians continuing to misstate history or draws obviously wrong conclusions will do nothing but discredit whatever small case your are attempting to make. Much depends on getting history right….don’t continue to try to fuck it up.

Gatlin  posted on  2017-07-09   18:35:31 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#87. To: Gatlin (#86)

"We" was a reference to you and me in this conversation. I thought that was clear. Silly me.

It is you who are using ultra modern redefinitions of republicanism and the philosophy that guided the dominant influences among the founders. I refer to their original documents. One can find "founders", or men who participated in the revolution, of varying political stripe to support all sorts of suppositions about the "founders".

Anthem  posted on  2017-07-09   18:57:22 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#88. To: Gatlin (#86)

under which the people hold popular sovereignty.

Oh, and here's another of those questions you won't answer: How do the people "hold popular sovereignty"?

Anthem  posted on  2017-07-09   19:01:07 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#89. To: Anthem, Gatlin (#84)

Ok, so we really don't have a working definition of “libertarian” as a concept. The definition offered by NC, “fiscally conservative, socially liberal”, is too fraught with modern context to be useful, as it brings to mind the current cultural and political issues rather than a political philosophy.

Of the few who have hear of, of know much of anything about libertarianism, far fewer still could offer any meaningful definition of libertarianism.

And yet, with no definition of what it is, it has been claimed that this is a very libertarian U.S.

How does a nation which is very libertarian rack up nearly $20T in debt? If we are very libertarian as a nation, who is doing that to us?

nolu chan  posted on  2017-07-10   21:33:42 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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