UppityProle
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Libertarianism is based upon the concept of human liberty. I guess we know where you stand on that issue.
Let's take a look at some of the most salient qualities of the libertarian movement:
(1) Selfishness. This is a virtue. A dog-eat-dog, every-man-for-himself, capitalistic free-for-all is the best of all possible societies.
(2) Greed. You can never have enough money. Even if you're a billionaire you shouldn't be taxed. Everyone "deserves" his wealth, even if it derives from tricking people with "sales strategies" or exploiting needless complexity in the so-called "financial services".
(3) Shallowness. The most deliberate and cynical exploitation of human fickleness is to be extolled. Our heroes should be "self-made men" who trick others out of money. Having a slightly niftier smartphone is the most important thing in the universe.
(4) Ego. I am completely self-made. Environment and chance didn't play a role. Anybody less successful than me is less hard-working, less ready to "bleed", and all-around less deserving of success than I am.
(5) **** the poor and working poor. Bunch of scroungers and/or perennial "victims of circumstance". More like victims of potato chips, heh. Did I mention that I deserve everything good that's ever happened to me and chance and environment never played a role?
Libertarian schools of thought differ over the degree to which the state should be reduced. Anarchistic schools advocate complete elimination of the state. Minarchist schools advocate a state which is limited to protecting its citizens from aggression, theft, breach of contract, and fraud. Some schools accept public assistance for the poor.[5] Additionally, some schools are supportive of private property rights in the ownership of unappropriated land and natural resources while others reject such private ownership and often support common ownership instead.[6][7][8] Another distinction can be made among libertarians who support private ownership and those that support common ownership of the means of production; the former generally supporting a capitalist economy, the latter a socialist economic system. Contractarian libertarianism holds that any legitimate authority of government derives not from the consent of the governed, but from contract or mutual agreement, though this can be seen as reducible to consequentialism or deontologism depending on what grounds contracts are justified.[9][10][11] Some Libertarian socialists reject deontological and consequential approaches and use historical materialism to justify direct action in pursuit of liberty.[12]
It is only in the United States that the term libertarian is commonly associated with those who have conservative positions on economic issues and liberal positions on social issues, going by the common meanings of "conservative" and "liberal" in the United States.[14]
14 is slightly over simplified. Libertarians tend to be liberal on most, but not all social issues. Gun rights are the exception to the rule. This gives libertarians more in common with conservatives than liberals by a small margin.if you go by [14] they have more ideology in common with Today's democrats than conservatives and Republicans, which only mean even libertarians certainly many on this forum even don't really have slightest idea what libertarian is all about!
Diving Mullah
Which is patently a stupid and ignorant idea. The whole point of having laws is that human society can't work if we're free to do whatever we like. Certain freedoms, like freedom of speech, have proved crucial in advacing civilization. If it weren't for freedom of speech, presumably most of Europe would still be under the thumb of the Catholic Church. I'm just as passionate about these vital freedoms as any libertarian (and I started a thread a short while back on freedom of speech). Other freedoms, like freedom from taxation or freedom to own land or freedom to have a monopoly or freedom to bully your underlings, have not been established at all.Yeah, o contemptible freedom. O foul personal choice. Some people hate it, I guess. Or, more to the point, hate it when others make different choices from what they'd like.
Sorry, but I think it's a good bet that libertarians tend to know what the **** libertarianism is about. :roll:Sadly regardless what is the text book definition of the Libertarian...most are republicans who are too embarrassed to admit it.. And if you go by [14] they have more ideology in common with Today's democrats than conservatives and Republicans, which only mean even libertarians certainly many on this forum even don't really have slightest idea what libertarian is all about!
Indeed, there isn't a lot of common ground between liberals and libertarians even on social issues. Roughly half of libertarians are pro-choice, and some of them are pro-gay marriage while others just want government out of marriage altogether. IMO, the left's overall paternalistic instinct makes any sort of liberal-libertarian alliance on anything but a couple issues impossible without one side or the other abandoning their principles.14 is slightly over simplified. Libertarians tend to be liberal on most, but not all social issues. Gun rights are the exception to the rule. This gives libertarians more in common with conservatives than liberals by a small margin.
Let's take a look at some of the most salient qualities of the libertarian movement:
(1) Selfishness. This is a virtue. A dog-eat-dog, every-man-for-himself, capitalistic free-for-all is the best of all possible societies.
(2) Greed. You can never have enough money. Even if you're a billionaire you shouldn't be taxed. Everyone "deserves" his wealth, even if it derives from tricking people with "sales strategies" or exploiting needless complexity in the so-called "financial services".
(3) Shallowness. The most deliberate and cynical exploitation of human fickleness is to be extolled. Our heroes should be "self-made men" who trick others out of money. Having a slightly niftier smartphone is the most important thing in the universe.
(4) Ego. I am completely self-made. Environment and chance didn't play a role. Anybody less successful than me is less hard-working, less ready to "bleed", and all-around less deserving of success than I am.
(5) **** the poor and working poor. Bunch of scroungers and/or perennial "victims of circumstance". More like victims of potato chips, heh. Did I mention that I deserve everything good that's ever happened to me and chance and environment never played a role?
So you compare people who don't initiate or accept force and who keep their word to those who commit sadistic violence towards innocents? Apples and cinderblocks, my friend.Sadistic violence directed towards innocents is worse than libertarianism. But just by a little given it is more immediate.
So you compare people who don't initiate or accept force and who keep their word to those who commit sadistic violence towards innocents? Apples and cinderblocks, my friend.
Libertarianism has two fundamental rules: 1) don't initiate, or accept, force, and 2) keep your word. With which of these ethical principles do you have a problem?
Good. So we agree that refusing to initiate force and keeping one's word are noble and desirable modes of interpersonal behavior.I said libertarians were not as bad as sadists who willfully hurt innocents. We are on the same side on this question.
The non-aggression axiom is a foundational principle upon which libertarian philosophy is built. It is the common thread among all libertarian thinkers. Feel free to produce evidence to the contrary.One cannot help but notice how you have established yourself as some sort of self appointed Papal Authority on the subject and have issued decrees spelling out proper libertarian dogma.
One can go to any number of sources and discover that there are at least a dozen variations on what a libertarian is and what they believe. Some are serious - some are humorous but with a valid point just the same.
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