10/18/2008 8:41:40 PM
ahh yes. let the government get involved, practically run an investment bank, watch the whole shit collapse, and then blame it on the free market. That makes perfect sense
10/18/2008 8:49:27 PM
Wow, a left-wing site lumps conservative economics into libertairan theory in general, then proceeds to dance upon its grave.Let's forget the whole host of, oh, I don't know, social issues that libertarians have been way better on than liberals. Things like civil liberties, the war on drugs - you know, shit liberals have proven that when push comes to shove, they really don't give a shit about. So it's a little fitting to see yet another left-winger trumpet "The death of Libertarianism!"But yeah. Dancing on the grave of libertarianism/capitalism. The strange rituals liberals go to in order to reassure themselves each and every time a financial crisis looms - despite the fact that since Marx, capitalism has proven to be the beast that just won't die.Trust me - like every claim before it, this one too is going to be revealed to be just as premature and sophomoric as the rest. But hey, don't let me stop the party.
10/18/2008 8:53:16 PM
Libertarianism in its pure form is a stupid ideology, just like practically anything else in its pure form.But, we could definitely go for some more true civil liberty advocates in our government.
10/18/2008 9:18:05 PM
and we aint gonna get any this election, that's for damned sure. one candidate is against queers, the other will sue a fucking TV station for broadcasting a commercial they don't like
10/18/2008 9:27:00 PM
"Let's forget the whole host of, oh, I don't know, social issues that libertarians have been way better on than liberals."I'm calling BS. Most libertarians I know, granted its not a large pool, and from some I've observed online on various political sites, talk a good game on social issues, then vote conservative republican and screw those very social issues over. I was almost starting to like BJ Lawson, until I met him & had a conversation with him about gay marriage where his position was he is somewhere in between opposing it and making it a states right, but he'd rather not talk about it too much. There were other things I didn't like too, I agree with him that some times less government makes sense, but when you think federal involvement & funding in education, social security, federal funding for the research triangle, college aid/grants, and the like are unconstitutional then you are kind of missing the point of government.
10/18/2008 9:37:49 PM
government meddling in the mortgage industry set the stage for this collapse.
10/18/2008 9:38:53 PM
You only have to ask an average american if they: wish the government would be more fiscally conservativewish the government would lower their taxesand wish the government protected individual rights moreto realize that Libertarianism is not dead
10/18/2008 9:47:09 PM
^ that still doesn't capture with libertarianism is.All those fall under conservative ideology as well, but conservatism and libertarianism are still distinct ideologies.And I don't think people really know what "individual rights" are, because most people are on board with the reforms post 9/11 than trample these rights. Most people (by a slim margin) don't care if the gov. erodes their rights for the perception of security.cue quote on rights/security
10/18/2008 9:49:31 PM
actually, federal funding of education is a bad thing. It allows bullshit mandates by bureaucrats in washington who don't understand a damned thing about education to mess up choices that need to be made by those "on the ground" in the cities where those mandates are wreaking havoc. It wastes money that could be going to education by forcing it to be funneled through numerous hands, all of which take their little share.social security? ha!and yes, my dear, all of those, save for federal research grants, are blatantly unConstitutional. Find me the lines in the Constitution where they are allowed, and I would accept it, but those lines don't exist
10/18/2008 9:51:39 PM
10/18/2008 9:54:13 PM
ahh yes, the preamble. The thing that states the purpose of the Constitution. ie, "doing the following will promote these things." By following the Constitution, you promote the general welfare.
10/18/2008 9:57:59 PM
I actually knew you were going to say that, but i'm too lazy right now to read the constitution looking for the info you request.Plus, it would have fooled a n00b soap-boxer.I bet its in there though.[Edited on October 18, 2008 at 10:04 PM. Reason : ]
10/18/2008 10:03:22 PM
ahaha. nice retraction
10/18/2008 10:04:14 PM
10/18/2008 10:09:37 PM
10/18/2008 10:15:50 PM
It always amazes me the mental gymnastics it takes to claim on the one hand, these series of government regulations and interferences had an effect on the behaviors of people, either by legislating that behavior directly or indirectly encouraging it, and all for the positive, but on the other hand, deny that they could have had anything at all to do with encouraging the destructive behaviors that brought this economic crisis about.
10/18/2008 10:53:53 PM
how can something that was never alive die?
10/18/2008 11:21:15 PM
10/18/2008 11:56:21 PM
I love how liberals bitch and bitch and bitch and bitch and whine and cry like a little fucking girl about how bad the government is.but they still want to give them more money and power.
10/19/2008 12:02:31 AM
^ that's why the govt is so bad. it lacks $ and power
10/19/2008 12:03:26 AM
10/19/2008 12:04:06 AM
well whatever it is you embrace is batshit insanity.you should work on avoiding that first.
10/19/2008 12:05:45 AM
Thank you, but I'm sticking with batshit insanity. (I get that description wherever I go, so it must be an accurate label.)To the point, I find self-righteous moderates rather annoying. "Look at those idiots on the extremes. I'm not dumb enough to fall for that. Clearly the answer lies in the middle."
10/19/2008 12:10:32 AM
I never said it lies in the middle, but it's clearly not on the extremes.
10/19/2008 1:16:54 AM
That you use clearly in your response blows my mind.Needless to say, I do not accept your assumption that the extremes are automatically wrong.
10/19/2008 1:19:30 AM
I'll concede the point if you can list a single example of a rational extremist philosophy.
10/19/2008 1:35:15 AM
The main reason that most Libertarians vote conservative when a Libertarian candidate is unavailable is that it's a hell of a lot easier to ignore government intrusion into your private life than it is in your fiscal life. I can pretty much do whatever I want as long as I don't get caught (like smoke pot were I so inclined, practice an unpopular religion, fuck whoever I want, etc.) whereas there's no getting around higher taxes.
10/19/2008 1:39:26 AM
^ except Obama at least is not proposing raising taxes on the vast majority of people.And libertarian philosophy is against corporations anyway.
10/19/2008 1:42:53 AM
since when do republicans not intrude on your private life?
10/19/2008 1:43:49 AM
^ he's saying the DO intrude on your private life, but it's easier to ignore.It's not realistic for the gov. to bust ALL pot users, for example, but it's much easier for the gov. to bust tax dodgers.
10/19/2008 1:47:10 AM
For me, that's a long list. Libertarianism, the various forms of anarchism, primitivism, technocracy, transhumanism, radical feminism, white nationalism, and so on. I've found extremist positions to be the most logically consistent. Even extreme religious doctrines often follow predictably from the initial principles and goals. I try not to dismiss things I disagree with as irrational. I suspect you consider all of the above to be stupid. I'll have to use a different tactic to get anywhere. So note that many of the systems and values Americans respect today started as fringe movements. Those crazy democrats, abolitionists, and feminists!
10/19/2008 1:53:35 AM
10/19/2008 1:55:15 AM
You know, here's the other half of it:If Democrats even offered someone who had the balls to say, "Hey. I'd like to speak to some libertarian-ish rhetoric on social issues. End - or at least scale back - the War on Drugs. Restore civil liberties. Get the government out of the marriage game" - I'd probably vote for this person in a heartbeat.But in all of my years of voting, I have yet to once ever encounter a Democrat like that running for office. So what does that say about Democrats, exactly?
10/19/2008 1:57:03 AM
Personally I'm more of an anarcho-capitalist than anything else. It's pretty close to the pure form of Libertarianism that is not even really espoused by the Libertarian party anymore.From a realistic standpoint I think I actually favor either a benevolent dictatorship (absolute power exercised only when absolutely necessary to ensure the continued free exchange of money and ideas) or a much more limited form of our current Republic. I think way, way, way too many people are allowed to vote. There really should be some sort of requirement for franchise other than being 18 and not a felon.
10/19/2008 1:59:33 AM
There's really only 1 party, just a few variations on trivial details. Both parties are in favor of more government, more taxes, and more spending, they only vary on who and how much more they want to tax and what they want to spend the shit on. How is it possible that we continue to vote for people who don't care or don't understand the idea of spending less than you take in?
10/19/2008 2:01:20 AM
^^^^ Corporations can only exist because of special laws that allow them to be treated as a separate individual, libertarians would have no such laws, and therefore corporations as we know them wouldn't exist.That's not to say that massive corporate-like entities couldn't exist, just that what we know a corporation to be wouldn't exist.[Edited on October 19, 2008 at 2:01 AM. Reason : ]
10/19/2008 2:01:30 AM
Well, specifically, the legal fiction of a liability-limiting institutional barrier between shareholders in an enterprise and the actions of that enterprise would be gone. I've heard arguments both way on the issue, but as I've gotten older, I've become much more favorably disposed toward doing away with the corporate legal entity.
10/19/2008 2:07:13 AM
I suppose that's true. I'm sure it would still be quite easy for something like Sony to exist in much the same form as it has now with minor modifications. I guess I'm just used to people screaming about evil corporations that I didn't realize you meant it in the actual, legal definition, and in that case, yes, it is true that corporations in their present form would likely not exist in a Libertarian state.
10/19/2008 2:08:05 AM
10/19/2008 2:16:29 AM
I am far from a libertarian, but JW kinda undermines his own argument in the piece.
10/19/2008 2:29:34 AM
^^Pure water tastes flat and bland. There's no such thing as "pure" food.To imply that anything but your kind of purity is infected with a kind of poison sounds pretty crazed. [Edited on October 19, 2008 at 2:30 AM. Reason : ]
10/19/2008 2:30:10 AM
10/19/2008 7:12:54 AM
most people that say they are libertarians aren't anyway. I mean it sounds cool I guess.
10/19/2008 7:20:15 AM
10/19/2008 9:48:34 AM
And the alternative is what? Your idiology calls for a regulated free market? Really? Your idiology assumes private property and free enterprise, how is that not a victory for libertarianism when compared to the idiology of 50 years ago which called for state ownership of the means of production?Classical socialism has been defeated. Even the enemies of liberty admit it. [Edited on October 19, 2008 at 10:41 AM. Reason : .,.]
10/19/2008 10:41:01 AM
10/19/2008 11:58:49 AM
10/19/2008 12:00:00 PM
I ignored the Federalist quote because I assumed almost two centuries of Supreme Court precedent trumped anonymously-signed Op-Ed pieces. Was I wrong?I mean, ask yourself why the Federalist Papers were even written-- to convince guys like you (Anti-Federalists) to adopt the Constitution. Now given that, is it really the best source we have for interpreting a clause that may or may not grant the government more power?Can you not accept that a broad interpretation of the Elastic Clause is certainly not unconstitutional, and the Supreme Court has certainly accepted it as Constitutional?If not, I think you can make a name for yourself if you have a strong case against a loose interpretation of the Elastic Clause. Just think! Dr. Steve v. US!
10/19/2008 12:25:26 PM
10/19/2008 12:34:06 PM