The infamous Super Koch Bros. are finally cashing in their chips, assimilating long-standing libertarian thinktank Cato Institute into their web of astroturfy pseudo-conservative job-creator cult organizations.http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/06/us/cato-institute-and-koch-in-rift-over-independence.html
3/6/2012 10:12:32 AM
3/6/2012 10:21:35 AM
being unyielding in their support for warrantless wiretaps, the patriot act, TSA, and other privacy violations, the democratic party is quick to rebuff any related attacks as more republican fearmongering
3/6/2012 10:29:21 AM
He didn't say "all libertarians" he said "our country's libertarian movement".It's not your fault your ideological label has been co-opted by the "tea party" brand of mouth-breathing conservatism disguised as libertarianism.
3/6/2012 10:31:07 AM
3/6/2012 10:37:07 AM
3/6/2012 10:40:33 AM
Resistance is Futile.
3/6/2012 10:49:04 AM
Wait... The uber rich are spending money on influencing others to further their personal agenda? Fundamentalists are infiltrating groups to spread their message?No. Fucking. Way.
3/6/2012 10:53:54 AM
It's not really an infiltration, Koch was one of the founding members of Cato. He's just consolidating power over it.
3/6/2012 10:56:28 AM
"HEH! You guys are PAID to be anti-government! We're government stooges for free! :smug:" - democrats
3/6/2012 11:02:43 AM
I have a very tough time trusting and agreeing with people who are overtly religious and politically active at the same time.The libertarians who are also jesus freaks scare me just as much as any other fanatical group.I am attracted to libertarianism because, among other things, it views people and grants them rights as individuals, not groups.When someone is overtly religious, it seems that they tend to label others or viewpoints outside of their group as hostile or inferior. And this label is not based on rational or logical reasoning; more on what their peer group tells them to think.
3/6/2012 11:07:20 AM
If you look into the history of these organizations, you'll see that there's no single faction or libertarian "establishment", which is to be expected considering that consolidation of libertarians is similar to herding cats.If you had to split the broader libertarian movement into factions, there is the Astroturf/Kochtopus/"Tea Party" libertarian faction, and there is the Austrian/Mises/Rothbard/Ron Paul faction. On the surface, they largely advocate the same policies. If you look a little closer, you'll find that the former pays lip service to libertarian ideals, while the latter actually believes in them. I know many, many people that consider themselves part of the "liberty movement", and almost all view the Koch brothers as disingenuous.A good Democratic party strategy would be to lump the Ron Paul/Austrian economics crowd in with the Koch brothers. This allows them to avoid any debate on economics, which from their perspective, is for the best. Both party establishments are better served if the people don't realize they're on a sinking ship.A pretty good rundown of the history between Rothbard and the Koch brothers can be found here: http://www.economicpolicyjournal.com/2010/12/understanding-rothbard-koch-break.html[Edited on March 6, 2012 at 11:10 AM. Reason : ]
3/6/2012 11:08:18 AM
Democrats are at least honest about their intentions. GOP has been claiming for decades that they're all about smaller government, lower debt, blah blah blah, all while doing the complete opposite every fucking time they get their majorities. Yet still libertarians, despite claiming to be non-partisan, almost strictly buy into GOP rhetoric on those issues; that is, believing the GOP is better than the Dems from a fiscal perspective (Even though Ron Paul would be even better!) when history says otherwise.
3/6/2012 11:09:23 AM
yeah thats great. lets all vote for the party that's anti-personal freedom because they said they're anti-personal freedom. that makes it better.
3/6/2012 11:12:01 AM
obama is TOOOTALLY different!!! he reauthed the patriot act! he installed full body scanners in airports! bush would NEVER have done those thing! this is the change i believe in!
3/6/2012 11:13:08 AM
also obama is a BIG FAN OF SCIENCE!!! he gave all this money to hsi friends failed solar businesees!! it doesnt matter that solar is a dead end and a terrible waste of everyones time! he knows better becuase hes the president and government is never wrong!
3/6/2012 11:14:21 AM
Well, to be fair, Obama has behaved like a Republican since taking office. Just about every self-identified Democrat on the street is just as upset about the PATRIOT reauth, detention, gitmo, drug war, iraqistan wars, iran sabre rattling, etc. Meanwhile, every self-identified Republican chooses not to talk about these issues because they agree with Obama's positions that are continuations of Bushes.
3/6/2012 11:15:09 AM
3/6/2012 11:15:17 AM
3/6/2012 11:17:59 AM
3/6/2012 11:26:42 AM
3/6/2012 11:34:57 AM
3/6/2012 12:39:36 PM
I know a lot of Libertarians who view themselves as being "above" the left-right paradigm, but that's just not true. They always make the mistake of equating the Democratic party as the "left" even though that's not even remotely true. There is no left in American politics. Have any Libertarians ever voted for a Democrat? They almost always align themselves with the Republican party, which is bizarre to me. Especially considering the current state of the Republican party, which has become a party of squashing liberty at every turn, and putting big-government all up in your vagina and internet.Libertarians and Progressives agree on about 50% of the issues, but I never see a Libertarian defend or support a progressive. Libertarians seemingly vote Republican every time just because the Republican party pays fealty to "liberty" even though it's become an authoritarian theocracy at this point -- and for the record, Progressives do the same with the Democratic party as well.Seriously, Libertarians need to exit the Republican Party. It's not going to bend to your will. It has too much old money protecting the interests of the very few, mega wealthy, and your Ron Paul stickers are not powerful enough to reverse that political inertia.
3/6/2012 12:54:37 PM
For a minute, it looked like Occupy Wall Street was bringing the Ron Paul crowd and the progressives together, but everyone has pretty much backed out of that now besides the drum circlers.
3/6/2012 12:57:06 PM
naw, that was just because of winter.things will pick back up....it'll probably be the G8 summit or the DNC that galvanizes the movement again for 2012.
3/6/2012 12:58:40 PM
or an attack on Iran....
3/6/2012 1:00:48 PM
3/6/2012 1:25:22 PM
3/6/2012 1:33:12 PM
3/6/2012 1:41:57 PM
I think a progressive/libertarian party would be pretty powerful. They pretty much agree on social issues and economic issues would receive healthy debate.I don't see why libertarians are so completely, 100% against compromising on economic policy. It's either total conservative or nothing at all. Is there not one instance you can think of where government inserting itself into the economy helped rather than harmed? I honestly don't know if you would come up with anything, ideological as most of you are. Where you lose me on economic issues is that you can ignore history and fail to admit that without some applied structuring of the economy, a free market is guaranteed to not exist. Is it worse to have the government creating the boundaries of what is acceptable in a free market or to let private entities control and tweak the market to their will? There is literally no way you can debate that this hasn't happened. Ever since the mid-1800s and the rise of corporations, this has happened when government failed to step in and police against unethical manipulation. It is a fact proven by history that once a market is controlled by one player, it ceases to be a free market in the most basic sense of the term. But libertarians are totally against this in every way. In my opinion, this is because admitting even one ounce of government interference would completely shatter their entire world view. There is room for compromise, but libertarians constantly back themselves into a corner with no room to maneuver politically. Our entire political system is based on compromise to which libertarians are totally opposed. Bringing the rationality many of you apply to economics would be great for the national debate, but it requires give and take.
3/6/2012 3:06:38 PM
libertarian != anarchistBut to a lower point, what do you mean by "100% against compromising on economic policy"? Let me phrase it another way. I want to eliminate federal regulatory powers...how about we compromise and just slash the federal registry in half? I'd be fine with that. I assume you wouldn't.
3/6/2012 5:19:19 PM
let's just get one thing out in the openanybody against libertarianism is a lazy motherfuckeror an uneducated motherfuckerlet's at least agree on the basics.
3/6/2012 5:23:18 PM
^I can never tell if you are trolling.
3/6/2012 7:24:40 PM
^he's always trolling. I don't know why people respond to him, at this point. I also don't know why he gets his jollies to this, but whatever keeps him happy, I guess.
3/6/2012 7:32:27 PM
https://jacobinmag.com/2018/03/libertarian-property-ownership-capitalism
3/16/2018 12:24:58 PM
I'm not sure ^ really matters. We don't live in a world without property ownership, so why would a system of general thought for today's society be required to bother with going from no ownership to ownership? It would seem that libertarianism, in that regard, is not worried with that dilemma, nor does it need to be. Basically, this guy is assuming, a priori, that it matters, then dissing libertarianism for not giving a fuck about it.
3/20/2018 11:17:12 PM