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Title: The Passing of the Libertarian Moment
Source: theatlantic.com/
URL Source: https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2018/04/defused/556934/
Published: Apr 2, 2018
Author: KEVIN D. WILLIAMSON
Post Date: 2018-07-05 21:45:54 by Gatlin
Keywords: None
Views: 18241
Comments: 110

The end of the Cold War and the rise of Donald Trump have left classical liberals without a political home.

Senator Rand Paul is a man out of time. It was only a few years ago that the editors of Reason magazine held him up as the personification of what they imagined to be a “libertarian moment,” a term that enjoyed some momentary cachet in the pages of The New York Times, The Atlantic, Politico (where I offered a skeptical assessment), and elsewhere. But rather than embodying the future of the Republican Party, Paul embodies its past, the postwar conservative era when Ronald Reagan could proclaim that “the very heart and soul of conservatism is libertarianism,” when National Review founder William F. Buckley Jr. could publish a conspectus of his later work under the subtitle “Reflections of a Libertarian Journalist,” and young blue- blazered Republicans of the Alex P. Keaton variety wore out their copies of Milton Friedman’s Free to Choose.

The view from 2018 is rather different. The GOP finds itself in the throes of a populist convulsion, an ironic product of the fact that the party that long banqueted on resentment of the media now is utterly dominated by the alternative media constructed by its own most dedicated partisans. It is Sean Hannity’s party now.

The GOP’s political situation is absurd: Having rallied to the banner of an erratic and authoritarian game-show host, evangelical leaders such as Jerry Falwell Jr. are reduced to comparing Donald Trump to King David as they try to explain away his entanglement with pornographic performer Stormy Daniels. Those who celebrated Trump the businessman clutch their heads as his preposterous economic policies produce terror in the stock markets and chaos for the blue-collar workers in construction firms and manufacturers scrambling to stay ahead of the coming tariffs on steel and aluminum. The Chinese retaliation is sure to fall hardest on the heartland farmers who were among Trump’s most dedicated supporters.

On the libertarian side of the Republican coalition, the situation is even more depressing: Republicans such as former Texas Governor Rick Perry, who once offered important support for criminal- justice reform, are lined up behind the atavistic drug-war policies of the president and Attorney General Jeff Sessions, whose big idea on opiate abuse is more death sentences for drug traffickers. Deficits are moving in the wrong direction. And, in spite of the best hopes of the “America First” gang, Trump’s foreign policy has not moved in the direction of Rand Paul’s mild non-interventionism or the more uncompromising non-interventionism of his father, Ron Paul. Instead, the current GOP foreign-policy position combines the self-assured assertiveness of the George W. Bush administration (and many familiar faces and mustaches from that administration) with the indiscipline and amateurism characteristic of Trump.

Some libertarian moment.

Postwar conservatism, under the intellectual leadership of Buckley, Frank Meyer, and their allies, was, famously, a “fusion”—an alliance between social and religious traditionalists, anti-Communists and national-security hawks, and libertarians ranging from ideologues and idealists such as Henry Hazlitt and Ludwig von Mises to Chamber of Commerce types with their more prosaic concerns about taxes and regulation. The libertarians have always been a junior partner in that alliance, but for many years they punched above their weight. Partly that is because libertarianism is an intellectual tendency rather than a cultural instinct, one that benefited from the rigor and prestige of the economists who have long been its most effective advocates. And libertarianism has benefited from the fact that American elites are notably more libertarian in their views than is the median American voter. That dynamic was explored by the economist Bryan Caplan under a typically bold title (“Why Is Democracy Tolerable?”) with a typically needling conclusion: “Democracies listen to the relatively libertarian rich far more than they listen to the absolutely statist non-rich … Democracy as we know it is bad enough. Democracy that really listened to all the people would be an authoritarian nightmare.”

But if libertarianism benefited from its rich friends, it surely benefited even more from its impoverished rivals: the Soviet Union, Castro’s Cuba, North Korea, Mao’s China, and other practitioners of robust étatism. Despite the best hopes of the postwar conservative fusionists, libertarianism has always been more effective in opposition than in government. President Reagan may have called himself a libertarian from time to time, but he also enacted protectionist tariffs, radically expanded the military and the federal police powers, and failed to exhibit a great deal of energy in resisting the deficit-swelling spending bills sent to his desk by Tip O’Neill. The libertarian tendency mainly provided a useful ideological foil, not only to the totalitarian socialist projects of the time but also to more liberal efforts to expand the welfare states in the Western democracies. If you are not moving in the direction of Milton Friedman, the argument went, then you are moving in the direction of Leonid Brezhnev—it’s Chairman Greenspan or Chairman Mao.

That was an effective rhetorical strategy while the Soviet Union was a going concern and while the Cold War remained fresh in the national memory. And it was enough to keep the right-wing coalition together. But as the memory of the USSR came to be replaced by the reality of NAFTA, WTO, ASEAN, etc., the fruits of globalism—everyday low prices at Walmart—turned out to be uninspiring to great masses of voters to whom those benefits are invisible for the same reason that water is invisible to fish. Ancient prejudices, including the prejudices against social relations with foreigners, began to reassert themselves, as did the expectation that government should take a paternal interest in the people rather than a merely administrative one. Libertarianism, with its emphasis on free trade, its deference to the market, and its hostility toward social-welfare programs, went quickly out of fashion. How quickly? Last week, my former National Review colleague Victor Davis Hanson published an essay calling for a stronger regulatory hand over high-tech companies, fondly recalling the “cultural revolution of muckraking and trust-busting” of the 19th century, and ending with a plea for “some sort of bipartisan national commission that might dispassionately and in disinterested fashion offer guidelines to legislators” about more tightly regulating these companies, perhaps on the public- utility model.

That from a magazine whose founders once dreamed of overturning the New Deal.

Libertarian attitudes enjoy some political support: Nick Gillespie, a true-believing libertarian, insists even in the teeth of the current authoritarian ascendancy that we still are experiencing a national— yes!—“libertarian moment,” based on Gallup polling data finding more support for broadly libertarian political sensibilities (27 percent) than for any other single group: conservative, liberal, or populist. But “libertarian” often means little more than “a person with right-leaning sensibilities who is embarrassed to be associated with the Republican Party.” (Hardly, these days, an indefensible position.) Libertarian sensibilities are popular because they enable the posture of above-it-all nonpartisanship, but libertarian policies, as Caplan and others have noted at length, are not very popular at all. Americans broadly and strongly support a rising minimum wage and oppose entitlement reform with at least equal commitment, and they are far from reliable supporters of free speech and free association or enforcing limits on police powers. Hence the peculiar fact that 2016 polling of Republican primary voters found self-identified libertarians backing the authoritarian Trump in remarkable numbers—59 percent in South Carolina—over more libertarian-leaning candidates such as Ted Cruz (17 percent in the same poll) or Marco Rubio (0 percent—ouch). By way of comparison, only 39 percent of self- identified independents backed Trump in that same South Carolina poll, 37 percent of self-identified Tea Party adherents, and 40 percent of voters in the oldest bracket (56-61). Self-described libertarians were not less likely to line up behind the authoritarian demagogue, but half-again as likely to do so. Self-professed libertarian voices such as Larry Elder have become abject Trumpists.

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 107.

#4. To: Gatlin (#0)

If the Libertarians could not obtain any traction against a GOP ticket of McCain/Palin, it seems their moment passed some time ago.

nolu chan  posted on  2018-07-05   22:54:08 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: nolu chan, tater (#4)

If the Libertarians ... [blah, blah, blah.]

The Libertarian Party is completely removed from the libertarian movement in the USA; moreover the Libertarian Party does not have the BILLIONS of dollars to run publick advertisements and commercials as both the GOP and the DEM perform.

Your argument is weak in other words. I guess you don't have a SCOTUS opinion to back your post, correct?

buckeroo  posted on  2018-07-05   23:23:48 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#13. To: buckeroo (#5)

the Libertarian Party does not have the BILLIONS of dollars to run publick advertisements and commercials as both the GOP and the DEM perform

That is because the amoral libertarians don't have much support. That is and was always my problem with libertarians. They equate moral things with immoral things. Do what thou wilt just like the satanic so called Bible.

A K A Stone  posted on  2018-07-06   6:24:00 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#73. To: A K A Stone (#13)

Amoral libertarians don't have much support. That is and was always my problem with libertarians. They equate moral things with immoral things. Do what thou wilt just like the satanic so called Bible.

Yup.

At its limits, "Libertarianism" = Total Anarchy. Moral (and otherwise) Laws unto themselves.

Liberator  posted on  2018-07-07   9:46:51 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#82. To: Liberator (#73)

At its limits, "Libertarianism" = Total Anarchy. Moral (and otherwise) Laws unto themselves.

A common misconception is that libertarians want to abolish government. But that is the anarchist, not libertarian philosophy. Libertarians recognize the need for government, but that it should be much smaller than it is today in the USA.

Pinguinite  posted on  2018-07-07   10:11:28 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#89. To: Pinguinite (#82)

A common misconception is that libertarians want to abolish government. But that is the anarchist, not libertarian philosophy. Libertarians recognize the need for government, but that it should be much smaller than it is today in the USA.

I understand that concept...

The problem is that Libertarian activism is led by its extremist strain. *They* support a radical reduction in common sense laws while lacking solutions for contemporary problems.

We can certainly quibble over the definition of "Libertarian" and to what extent or size and scope of gummint a Libertarian-controlled machination would run things...

In my opinion the radical elements would win that day, which is fundamentally anarchist. Ideally it wouldn't be.

Liberator  posted on  2018-07-07   10:49:02 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#96. To: Liberator (#89)

The problem is that Libertarian activism is led by its extremist strain. *They* support a radical reduction in common sense laws while lacking solutions for contemporary problems.

Liberator, I always appreciate our ability to discuss issues amicably and constructive even if they often result in animosity with others. It speaks well for both of us!

Yes, the problem is that unlike the R & D platforms where the various planks are generally have little to no direct relation to one another (i.e. the R platform has both a strong military and is pro life), the Libertarian party is based on a philosophy where the various planks ARE much more related to one another. That relation is freedom. Everything is based on the concept that each person's circle of freedom should be expanded as much as possible, limited only when it begins to overlap another person's like circle of freedom. It's as simple as that.

In practice, yes, there are areas where the philosophy isn't workable, open borders being, IMO, one big one. Communal sharing of expenses, such as military defense & infrastructure is another. True libertarianism is NOT about getting a free ride, of course. The problem is only in how to fairly charge each member for a true cost of the benefit they receive. On roads, in theory, every road would be a toll road so everyone using a road would pay for its maintenance, while those not using it would not pay. Some libertarians argue that all taxation is theft, yet those same libertarians would not have any problem with toll roads to cover needed maintenance. It comes down to the semantics of the difference between a tax and a "use fee".

Pinguinite  posted on  2018-07-07   11:29:02 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#102. To: Pinguinite (#96) (Edited)

Liberator, I always appreciate our ability to discuss issues amicably and constructive even if they often result in animosity with others. It speaks well for both of us!

Thank you...appreciate it. The feeling is mutual.

...the Libertarian party is based on a philosophy where the various planks ARE much more related to one another. That relation is freedom.

Everything is based on the concept that each person's circle of freedom should be expanded as much as possible, limited only when it begins to overlap another person's like circle of freedom. It's as simple as that.

Thanks for your concise explanation and definition of the Libertarian Party philosophy. There's not a lot to oppose or disagree with in principle or intent there, is there?

A lot of libertarian philosophy is based on common sense respect of others -- i.e., personal privacy, liberties, movement, choice, sovereignty, etc. Those attributes were supported by most of our Founders, weren't they?

I'm repeating myself again, but where it goes off the rails and becomes fringe anarchy is when it speeds past its mid-range or moderate limits. Problem there: Who or what defines "moderate libertarianism"? I'm being rhetorical of course because we'll get a ton of definitive answers depending on the day or week. *I* know it when I see it, but how about the other 99 people?

Related: BECAUSE we have Open Border Anarchists, Authoritarians, Dem uber-Socialists and NWO Globalists all simultaneously attempting to shred common sense and Constitution apart, there's no instant solution BUT to strongly support Donald Trump for now. His policies are more libertarian-constitutional than anyone I can remember. Including Reagan.

As I see it? He is trying to hold our Founders' core together. Otherwise the entire thing implodes.

Liberator  posted on  2018-07-07   11:57:26 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#105. To: Liberator (#102)

Thanks for your concise explanation and definition of the Libertarian Party philosophy. There's not a lot to oppose or disagree with in principle or intent there, is there?

A lot of libertarian philosophy is based on common sense respect of others -- i.e., personal privacy, liberties, movement, choice, sovereignty, etc. Those attributes were supported by most of our Founders, weren't they?

I cannot understand how anyone would see the foundation of the USA being based on anything other than freedom. But it seems some here do.

I'm repeating myself again, but where it goes off the rails and becomes fringe anarchy is when it speeds past its mid-range or moderate limits. Problem there: Who or what defines "moderate libertarianism"? I'm being rhetorical of course because we'll get a ton of definitive answers depending on the day or week. *I* know it when I see it, but how about the other 99 people?

On the "expanding circle of freedom" description I gave, in spite of the concept being simple, there's always room for debate on what constitutes "overlapping". Permissable home improvements being one area. If I wanted to make my home into a 30 story high rise, would my neighbors have a just concern that their right in preserving their home value is being unjustly reduced due to my project?

Related: BECAUSE we have Open Border Anarchists, Authoritarians, Dem uber-Socialists and NWO Globalists all simultaneously attempting to shred common sense and Constitution apart, there's no instant solution BUT to strongly support Donald Trump for now. His policies are more libertarian-constitutional than anyone I can remember. Including Reagan.

I have always scored Trump with low marks on the civil rights side, believing he has personally never had to endure a loss of rights. Having money, he could always try to lawyer his way to obtain his wishes. It was one of the criticisms against him pre-election, bullying unwilling residents into selling homes for Trump's real estate development projects.

As I see it? He is trying to hold our Founders' core together. Otherwise the entire thing implodes.

He certainly has a strong patriotic core to him, obviously. We see that at multiple levels continuously.

Pinguinite  posted on  2018-07-07   12:15:19 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#107. To: Pinguinite (#105)

I cannot understand how anyone would see the foundation of the USA being based on anything other than freedom. But it seems some here do.

I know. Un-believable. What I find worrisome is people here (and out "there") who *should* know better. They're getting confused about our history, mankind's history, priorities...and how easily freedom slips away. Much of it as we know began on 9/12 before the ink from the un-read "Patriot Act" was dry, erasing many of our taken-for-granted liberties (as the border remained an inexplicable open floodgate.)

Today? It's a mano a mano situation now. Far more precarious than some are willing to admit...and even realize.

The Socialist-Left and Globalists Authoritarians are going gonzo, pulling out all the stops (given they own most of the airwaves). They are hammering people with lying narratives and policies that are counter-liberty, counter-common sense and counter-intuitive. And have you noticed how similar the streets of Frisco look to the street of Paris (along the Seine) recently? "Homeless" armies ready to leap into action and join "Operation Total Anarchy".

On the "expanding circle of freedom" description I gave, in spite of the concept being simple, there's always room for debate on what constitutes "overlapping". Permissable home improvements being one area. If I wanted to make my home into a 30 story high rise, would my neighbors have a just concern that their right in preserving their home value is being unjustly reduced due to my project?

Interesting example -- I realize it's purposely extreme. Your (Your "expanding circle of freedom" was/is btw a really good visual metric).

Common sense and mutual respect used to count heavily in many individual decisions. And then there grew community consensus (and their decisions). It all mostly worked well UNTIL legal SJW behemoths like the ACLU began swooping in with fleets of Leftist lawyers and overruling via technicality, obliterating the spirit of the law. This is still now THE case.

Most towns already have zoning ordinances for real estate example. And exceptions via variance of certain local boards. But I get the gist -- there must be room and accommodation for reasonable debate, fairness and personal freedom. Seems the larger gummint gets the more petty, over-officious and authoritarian things get -- especially targeting certain "traditional" select demos. Whether it's the 1A, 2A, 4A, 10A, etc.

We are getting squeezed of liberty by the Authoritarian-Left coin -- both now increasingly over-lapping into fascism as *their* respective sphere of influence increases. The uber-Left, Authoritarians and Anarchists are actually elitists, believing they have the "right" to re-define and infringe on the *rest* of OUR "Circle of Freedom".

The big problem: MSM have framed and promoted this view of an *earned* LARGER "more deserved" over-lapping circle of "freedom" of at the expense of others -- aka Whitey, conservatives, Christians, men, straights/normals, rural citizen/fly-over-country "in-sophisticates", etal. THIS is what the current CW2 is being fought over.

I have always scored Trump with low marks on the civil rights side, believing he has personally never had to endure a loss of rights. Having money, he could always try to lawyer his way to obtain his wishes. It was one of the criticisms against him pre-election, bullying unwilling residents into selling homes for Trump's real estate development projects.

I'd have assumed you may be right at one time of Trump's life. It's no secret he was raised in money, used to getting his way with few obstacles.

However in time it appears (to me anyway) that he's embraced a wisdom by observing and learning about fairness from those below his "class". He's also apparently learned to frown upon the unprincipled and ironically the "bullying" of the political and business class while having to deal with those who were his "peers".

I mean how far into Trump's past real estate transactions are we going to hang the man? How proportional is his "sin" compared to others (whose sins are not only NOT tallied but case UNTOLD. Frankly, if Trump's biggest most "heartless" real estate "sins" are the case of one old lady/man who refused to sell at far more than market-price near the Trump Towers....or a few contrasted with thousands of positive real estate transactions, well...I'M not convinced his "sins" in this regard are heinous to any degree of fair proportion.

Moreover, there ARE differences between coercion, leaning on someone in real estate dealings, and dealing fairly. IF Trump truly was "dirty" to any real degree, THAT story would have been exposed.

But if we were going there, I'd like to scrutinize the 0bama's shady real estate deals/arrangements, the Clintons, McConnells, the Bushes dealing (with the Arabs) to within 1% of Trump. (People have *died* in some of their respective cases, but I've droned on too long already.

So no, I don't believe in broad-brushing Donald Trump as the cold-blooded widow/tenant-bully he was portrayed as a matter of a political assassination.

IF the man were truly the cold-blood mercenary capitalist the LEFT and GOPe would like to hang on him, he'd have merely ignored running for President and NOT put up with tolerating the threats and smear of himself and his family. It would have been MUCH safer and easier to have just steam-rolled all his opponents, become an even bigger mega-billionaire, and continued kissing the azzes of the REAL bullies and fascists: The Political and Hollywood elite.

Instead Donald Trump cared enough about America to sacrifice all. He DOES indeed relate to Middle Class America and IS a Patriot. He is not that good or patient an actor to fake his sincerity, his love for freedom and the USCON. For what he's done and does I am grateful.

Liberator  posted on  2018-07-07   19:33:18 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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