8,939 of the 9,176 voted. I respect that. A lot.
11/3/2010 12:38:45 AM
...how did you know how many Libertarians there were?
11/3/2010 12:42:49 AM
Early voting results, updated Nov 2, so its the most current number around:ftp://www.app.sboe.state.nc.us/ENRS/absentee11xx02xx2010_Stats.pdf
11/3/2010 12:56:01 AM
11/3/2010 10:41:54 AM
I'm a registered libertarian.However, just like the elephants and jackasses, I agree with a subset of their stances on issues, and generally perceive libertarians to be tinfoil hat wearing neckbeards.That said, I registered as a libertarian just to show support for a third party, and voted for anyone who wasn't the incumbent. THATS RIGHT MAHFAHS I VOTED FOR CHANGE.
11/3/2010 10:45:11 AM
11/3/2010 10:51:36 AM
11/3/2010 11:02:17 AM
can someone give me a rundown of libertarian or libertarian minded candidates that were elected or are actually serving in congress.They don't have to be big L libertarians, just more libertarian than the average Republican.so far Ill include Ron Paul and Rand Paul
11/3/2010 11:04:53 AM
i prefer the Libertarian Unicorn Party. it's more realistic.
11/3/2010 11:48:42 AM
wait... Rand Paul is a libertarian??He proudly opposes abortion even in the cases of rape and incest. He opposes same-sex marriage He opposes medical marijuana.i guess you must mean the fundamentalist teabagger libertarians.[Edited on November 3, 2010 at 11:57 AM. Reason : ]
11/3/2010 11:57:16 AM
well yeah you might be right. Thats what I want to take a long look at him and any others that are running similar campaigns.It might not be evident from some of my post but the truth is I actually support SOME libertarian ideas and have voted as such in the past.Over the past few years I've gotten more skeptical. I personally think that some running as "libertarian-minded" are just using it as a front for the same old corporatism we have come to expect from normal politicians. So I really want to watch these candidates to see how they vote and how legit they are.
11/3/2010 12:03:52 PM
11/3/2010 12:12:13 PM
11/3/2010 1:00:46 PM
11/3/2010 1:01:47 PM
11/3/2010 1:17:15 PM
^^Thanks for playing.The part you're missing is that I'm talking about "private and personal" non-universal views.
11/3/2010 1:35:40 PM
Sounds exactly like:
11/3/2010 1:50:01 PM
^Not exactly.The difference being that with libertarianism, no personal and private beliefs are forced onto everyone.Saying "my way is the right way and ...everyone else can fuck off" as a Republican means forcing abortion bans, homosexuality bans, and creationism onto everyone.Saying "my way is the right way and ...everyone else can fuck off" as a Democrat means forcing gun bans, mandatory health insurance, and welfare taxes onto everyone.Saying "my way is the right way and ...everyone else can fuck off" as a Libertarian means forcing murder bans, theft bans, and cultural freedom onto everyone.Yeah, libertarians are so horrible... If Democrats are chicken noodle soup,and Republicans are steak with mashed potatoes,and Greens are tofu with sprouts,....then Libertarians are the grocery/farmGet it?
11/3/2010 2:01:21 PM
Libertarian =/= Tea Party
11/3/2010 2:05:16 PM
11/3/2010 2:12:42 PM
11/3/2010 2:31:50 PM
^before your edit, you said something like, "This is why nobody takes libertarians seriously."I'm not sure why...Look at the quote in context. What do you not understand?
11/3/2010 2:51:17 PM
it's not "the one true ideology"it is "the one most basic and pure ideology" We get it (or at least I do) - You are still trying to give me a lesson on what being a libertarian means to you. What I am trying to point out to you is the fallacy of some of your statements.While intentions are good - puting anything on a pedestal like that is exactly what leads to extremism as an ideology grows. You keep repeating that your's is the only way - with the caveat of "practicality" of course otherwise there would be no theft/murder/etc.But when you get into what's practical - you are moving back towards personal private beliefs.I don't have a problem with what you believe - ideally it makes sense.What I do have a problem with, is calling it "the best system" or "the one anything""best" is not a universal concept - it is personal and private.thus my opinion that you have trolled yourself.
11/3/2010 2:55:54 PM
I'm a Libertarian, and I agree with Norin Radd here. Indy, you are embarrassing yourself at this point.
11/3/2010 3:10:44 PM
^^^FailThat's only if I force the [libertarian] belief on others. I want others to choose it on their own.Forcing cultural freedom is still forcing something -- I accept that.Some Democrats may not want cultural freedom, because they may oppose gun culture and want to ban it.Some Republicans may not want cultural freedom, because they may oppose gay culture and want to ban it.If libertarians "have their way", then people wouldn't be engaging in culture war/dominance.Oh well for them.(I know I'm right. I don't need your support.)
11/3/2010 3:42:44 PM
I think they imagine a system where we "force everyone to be free. " Freedom comes by virtue of our humanity though, not because anyone permits it. It's like I said to Kris in another thread: if you want to make a shitty little socialized community, go for it. It's not my place to tell you not to. The problem comes about when you say to everyone living in this country: "participate in this system. In fact, we're going to force you to." That's not freedom by any definition. If you believe in freedom - that is, the ability to do what you want as long as you don't infringe upon someone else's rights - then you're a libertarian. All it is is the absence of coercion. That's why it is, undoubtedly, better than any other ideology. You can be a libertarian and whatever other party affiliation/ideology you want, as long as you acknowledge that people should be able to opt out.[Edited on November 3, 2010 at 4:06 PM. Reason : ]
11/3/2010 4:05:37 PM
How am I gonna opt-out of the US?
11/3/2010 4:13:19 PM
11/3/2010 4:15:35 PM
11/3/2010 5:20:53 PM
11/3/2010 5:32:12 PM
11/3/2010 6:19:01 PM
so, if there is no choice, why make laws? after all, it'll all just happen anyway, right?
11/3/2010 6:45:47 PM
why hit a dog when he does something wrong?
11/3/2010 6:50:10 PM
if it's not a choice, then yeah, you are correct
11/3/2010 6:50:48 PM
a dog doesn't choose, but is still able to learn[Edited on November 3, 2010 at 6:53 PM. Reason : ]
11/3/2010 6:53:44 PM
what good is learning when there is still no choice to be made
11/3/2010 6:55:34 PM
It still effects the outcome. Your illusion of choice is based off of the environment around you, prison is one part of shaping that.
11/3/2010 6:57:41 PM
Libertarians like to live in their little fantasy world where everyone is a good person and does the right thing, information is 100% transparent, and corporations don't have evil intentions. The fact is, we don't live in that world and in many instances, government is the one thing keeping a lot of these things from happening. If every person in the world was good, and they worked completely for the betterment of humanity, then yes, libertarianism would be the best form of government and would work. Kind of the same way where if we could get communism to work perfectly, then it too would be the best form of government. Or the way if we could get democracy to function perfectly, then it would be the best form of government.Just own up to it and admit that libertarianism (in practice) is just as fucked up and unjust as any other form of government. It's stupid to strictly adhere to any one form of government or ideology. There needs to be more flow between ideologies because certain solutions may work in some cases and not others. There is no black and white, which is what these labels attempt to force us into.And stop saying libertarianism is the one pure ideology. It's so easy to refute you based on what you posted. Say I think it's perfectly fine to steal from someone just because I can. Because I'm free to do it. Well, turns out I'm just more libertarian than you are. Boom. Argument destroyed. Go read another Ayn Rand novel, faggot.
11/3/2010 7:07:18 PM
how? if action X will always occur at Time T, what good does learning do? it won't affect anything
11/3/2010 7:07:22 PM
11/3/2010 7:44:06 PM
11/3/2010 7:52:14 PM
^^ You completely ignored the other parts of my post.So you're basically saying that you think city-states should make a return? What about national defense? Hell, what would stop the city-states from warring with each other? Sounds like some apocalypse shit.
11/3/2010 8:25:06 PM
No.... IMStoned420 isn't making straw-man fallacies... not at all...
11/3/2010 8:57:58 PM
Vee believe in nuzzing
11/3/2010 9:08:19 PM
The rights of children are libertarian ideology's bane.
11/3/2010 9:30:30 PM
You don't get rights by belonging to a group. You get rights as an individual. Children don't deserve "special rights" aka government stealing based privileges like SCHIP legislation.
11/3/2010 10:06:56 PM
11/4/2010 12:23:35 AM
On some very fundamental level, I agree with Kris. We're basically just monkeys who have learned to quit throwing shit at each other (arguably) and stop playing with ourselves in public (thanks a lot, humanity).I think he is wrong in thinking that we can be reprogrammed, however.There's nearly seven billion of us. All it takes is one lone voice in the wilderness shouting, "You can do better than you're currently doing!" Most people will respond to that. They will abandon the dictatorship of the proletariat, or communism, or whatever. They will flock to the idea of making more money/stuff/bullshit they don't need. That is my fundamental problem with Kris' position: it requires perfection. He labors under the delusion that people can be conditioned as one whole mass -- or, perhaps, that the "few" people who don't "get it" can be eliminated or reconditioned. History doesn't back this up. Soviet leaders used their system to their benefit. Chinese leaders aren't exactly living in poverty. Castro isn't begging for food aid for himself (Raul or Fidel, I don't give a shit). People are animals. And as such, they want to get what they can.
11/4/2010 2:14:35 AM
^You don't think our immortal metaphysical components can overcome that?
11/4/2010 2:27:10 AM
I am religious but not entirely unreasonably. Although I'm sure indy will say I'm an asshole for even having religious beliefs, I am able to differentiate those from what I believe politically. The God I believe in said "rend unto Caesars" and I do that. What I believe personally is very different from what I believe spiritually. In the latter regard I believe that the spirit goes where the spirit wants. I'm not it's fucking boss.So, as a man of science, we're a bunch of hairless fucking monkeys. From a religious perspective we're only slightly better than that (and, arguably, a lot worse by and large). Either way, we're lucky to not all be dead.
11/4/2010 2:44:44 AM