Their stance on legalization is far from my only reason for supporting the Libertarians. However, I do feel that the magnitude of the civil liberties violations committed in the name of the War on Drugs (largest prison population in the world, mostly non-violent drug offenders, they probably don't think that this issue is peripheral), if not the growing prison population crisis, earns it a little more focus than "peripheral issue".[Edited on April 13, 2006 at 4:01 PM. Reason : is]
4/13/2006 3:58:41 PM
i say make it a peripheral issue for several reasons:1. They chose to break the law, fully knowing the potential consequences.2. The prison population of "victimless" drug offenders is still a small minority of the population. work on stuff that affects more people.3. You aren't going to get anything accomplished any time soon other than chilling out on marijuana, and that's an uphill battle4. you don't go to prison for getting caught with some pot. you generally have to be a real dumbass and screw up on a much bigger scale.
4/13/2006 4:06:46 PM
4/13/2006 8:25:57 PM
i think that most americans have a large libertarian streak within them. that is why communists have never gained ground here, as opposed to almost every other nation.look at someone like me who agrees with a lot of what marx has to say, yet rejects his solution because i do not think communism is implementable.[Edited on April 13, 2006 at 8:33 PM. Reason : which makes the libertarian party's complete lack of success more surprising and distrubing.]
4/13/2006 8:32:04 PM
I hear ya.Our education system shares a big part of the blame. Go'vt schools have almost drummed out our heritage of liberty. They are trying to eliminate the very basic symbol of our flag from the classroom. 8th grade science class students are lectured on liberal politics. College classes are taught that America is the most evil country ever to exist. If the teachers could pull themselves away long enough from having sex with the students, they could teach them about the Constitution and the love of liberty and the tradition of limited gov't.
4/13/2006 9:09:17 PM
of course the solution is...the privatization of schools. REFORM IS FOR PUSSIES.here is a question: forget about sacred documents for a second. how practical and logical are the Libs in the cosmic sense?
4/13/2006 9:13:54 PM
where the fuck did you go to school?the only "liberal bullshit" ive encountered in classrooms has been from college professors who admitted at the start of the semester to being liberal, and followed that by allowing conservatives to speak. maybe i was just lucky.
4/13/2006 9:15:12 PM
in Libertarian world, the thought of taxes is "too liberal"
4/13/2006 9:16:42 PM
Exibit B: "Rush is a Moron.."
4/13/2006 9:43:13 PM
1.im not using my threads as selling points for a political party.2. raped by current taxes? really?3. please tell me how privatization will make kids care enough to raise their education standard.[Edited on April 13, 2006 at 9:48 PM. Reason : .]
4/13/2006 9:47:26 PM
oh the teachers union argumentnorth carolina is a right to work state. the teachers union here is almost powerless.
4/13/2006 9:50:40 PM
4/13/2006 10:47:34 PM
one of the things talked about in an econ class was that the market will not provide universal services because it has no incentive. yes i know thtas a simplification, but still. I find it doubtful that the market would provide quality education.
4/13/2006 10:54:35 PM
^^ If the money needed to operate a school were an on-demand linear function of the number of kids enrolled in that school, that would work great. Too bad the real world is different.
4/13/2006 11:02:11 PM
4/13/2006 11:43:15 PM
i dont think private schools really exist in competition with public schools. its kinda like saying that hummer is competing against honda, except taken to a greater extreme.
4/13/2006 11:50:17 PM
^^my college econ class was definitely taught by a free marketeer
4/14/2006 12:06:55 AM
^^ Well, I hate to say, but they are in competition. If the universe consisted of only hummer and honda and honda went out of business, what would everyone be driving? On a similar note, if the public system ceased to exist then nearly everyone would be sending their kids to a private school.
4/14/2006 12:19:53 AM
yes. if there are two choices and one is not a choice anymore then almost everyone will choose the choice that is left.except i dont think its true with education. if you dont offer free public education how can you require that people send their kids to school?[Edited on April 14, 2006 at 12:29 AM. Reason : buy it? wtf was i thinking]
4/14/2006 12:29:03 AM
4/14/2006 12:32:32 AM
4/14/2006 12:34:02 AM
Vouchers are a terrible idea. Why take money out of a system that needs money to fix the problems that make it shitty in the first place?
4/14/2006 12:36:19 AM
CAR INSURANCE = SCHOOL.
4/14/2006 12:40:19 AM
Gov't Requirement doesn't mean Gov't-Provided[Edited on April 14, 2006 at 1:00 AM. Reason : .]
4/14/2006 12:59:29 AM
fair enough.but the children are our future.
4/14/2006 1:03:50 AM
Teach them well and let them lead the wayand buy a lottery ticket to-day...
4/14/2006 1:20:10 AM
i love the "dont throw more money at the problem" line of thinking.how do we teach them better?we decrease class sizepay teachers a real wagechange the curriculum(maybe) implement more testinghow can you do any of that with LESS money?
4/14/2006 1:49:04 PM
4/15/2006 1:28:48 AM
4/15/2006 2:05:46 AM
4/15/2006 10:51:09 AM
Yeah. That would never happen if we privatized schools...
4/15/2006 12:51:06 PM
4/15/2006 11:09:50 PM
There are usually signs before-hand. However, because of teachers unions you cannot fire people just for suspicion (and being fired is sufficient suspicion to prevent someone else from hiring you).
4/15/2006 11:37:39 PM
rofl did this really turn into a debate about child molestation?
4/16/2006 12:10:22 AM
I marvel at libertarians' undying faith in the private sector. It's so 1920s.
4/16/2006 1:28:17 AM
The static or oversimplified dynamic equilbrium imposed by current/typical legislation will only approximate the optimal equilibrium between labor and capital in passing, whereas a free market will generally close on the optimal equilibrium. Considering the complexity of solving for the cumulative actions of an entire society, I think it's safe to say ANY legislation would be an oversimplification. An unregulated market might be more prone to fluxation (favorable and unfavorable) than a highly regulated market, but intuition leads me to believe that an unreglated market would be more efficient in the long run than a regulated (but less irregular) market. Particularly, I think America is responding very irrationally to the global economy problem, prolonging it and magnifying its intensity, where I think a free market would adapt quickly (if unfavorably to the majority of the American constituency. The Chinese would probably be thrilled for a decade or two until the market returned to equilbrium.) I think they key to understanding this problem is that, yes, the market WILL NOT ALWAYS FAVOR YOUR INDIVIDUAL INTERESTS, and you might not like that, but the market will reflect majority consensus more accurately and directly than any form of representative legislature.Disclaimer: this post sounded fairly rational when I wrote it, but I was drunk at the time. Your individual interpretation may vary. I probably don't care.
4/16/2006 2:54:06 AM
4/16/2006 2:56:59 AM
I can see it now.Privatize Schools and then 30% of the population recieves no school and then lots of rich white guys get killed by hoards of brown people.seems ok with me.
4/16/2006 10:34:25 AM
4/16/2006 10:53:50 AM
so I should go to Walmart-HighNEIN!!!!!!!!!!
4/16/2006 11:04:31 AM
4/16/2006 11:32:07 AM
i might be wrong but a large portion of the population would just not go to school or would not have access to one. Without manditory school enforced by the government I believe a large portion of the US would not go to school. Thus leading to lots of even dumber rednecks and minorities killin rich white people.
4/16/2006 11:34:45 AM
yeah, some hard line Libertarians do think that school should not be required, but I think that's retarded (and I'm guessing mine is the prevailing viewpoint, even in the capital-"L" Libertarian Party).the "privatization" of schools that most people talk about isn't what it sounds like you're thinking, though. The voucher system is the most common solution that people offer. I didn't like the idea for a while, but I'm getting behind it more and more, with the caveat that there be a curriculum that must be followed (I wouldn't want a kid getting nothing but shop class, or an extremist Christian or Muslim school to be depriving kids of a well-rounded, respectable education.)I DO think, though, that the competition of what would amount to a market of sorts would be good, as well as the ability for parents/kids to be able to tailor their education a little more (i.e., make vocational education something more than what you do if you're a dumbass and want to skate through highschool as easily as possible).
4/16/2006 11:47:06 AM
4/16/2006 2:24:57 PM
my problem with the whole theory of free markets is that a completely free market tends towards consilidation. this eventually leads to monopolies, which are decidely non-free market, since a free market depends upon the ability for people to enter the market at will. i actually think that a more free market could be created by an increase in regulation. what i mean is that by breaking apart some of these huge corporations we would arrive at a more free market.
4/16/2006 2:25:25 PM
4/16/2006 8:23:56 PM
I'm not going to assign an arbitrary value that I think are necessary. The vast majority of them aren't terribly hard to comply with (most are covered by this: "Don't lie, don't omit material facts, and don't do shit with people's money they don't want you to") and the rest are other fairly reasonable limits of risk to investors.I don't see how any of the regulations I've seen exist to protect the IRS. What do you mean by that?
4/16/2006 8:33:06 PM
4/16/2006 8:39:19 PM
A free society opposes consolidation in a free market that is to the disadvantage of labor by way of unions, no?
4/16/2006 10:09:57 PM
im not sure if company size greatly effects wages or not.im inclined to say that the more competitive the market the more incentive there is to lower or maintain wages in an effort to increase your profit margins, or at least maintain profit levels while lowering prices. one reason that increased competition could increase wages would be because workers would have more oppurtunities to find other jobs, or to go into business themselves.but im not really sure how consilidation affects labor.
4/16/2006 10:20:21 PM