“The radical of one century is the conservative of the next. The radical invents the views. When he has worn them out, the conservative adopts them.” ~ Mark Twain
“The most radical revolutionary will become a conservative the day after the revolution.” ~ Hannah Arendt
That given, I'm young & new... but obviously I recognise anarcho-capitalism.. massive pill to swallow... Libertarianism, smaller govt, more liberty in every area... tis what I will work towards![]()
I believe it was Hamilton that proposed and advocated tarriffs. Jefferson reluctantly agreed, as it was the least intrusive method of funding on the average American. It would be a vast improvement if we could go back to a flat, untargeted tarriff, instead of the joke we have today with an incomprehensible tax code that no one can understand, yet every single American has to deal with. Jefferson would lead a revolt against what we have today.
I..I think there must be some level of protectionism..to kind of keep a level playing field, and to try to remain sovereign...or else we get a global New World ORder and lose our civil rights. tones
Well yes..but they did agree on the trade issue. Jefferson was limited government and Hamilton was big government. I learn so much from people on this forum..especially about economics..and I read a lot of Pat Buchanan. His book "The Great Betrayal" outlines step by step what happened to our economy. I think ya'll would enjoy it even if some of you wildly disagree with him. tones
But once again, it's the story of unintended consequences. From the "seed" of libertarian thought, we ended up with the following perversions:
- adopting and allowing massive legal/illegal immigration (reducing wages),
"free trade" which was really centrally managed trade,
- outsourcing of industries and jobs that further destroyed the American wage base,
- consolidation of industries until they were "too big to fail",
- and Alan Greenspan.
One could argue that libertarianism did work it's way into the system and became the "accepted norm".
But once again, it's the story of unintended consequences. From the "seed" of libertarian thought, we ended up with the following perversions:
- adopting and allowing massive legal/illegal immigration (reducing wages),
- "free trade" which was really centrally managed trade,
- outsourcing of industries and jobs that further destroyed the American wage base,
- consolidation of industries until they were "too big to fail",
- and Alan Greenspan.
As usual, the Oligarchy is more than happy to adopt any portion of any system that they can pervert to their benefit.
Not true. Most Libertarians are for open borders and competition even in Labor.
Incorrect. Employers have the absolute right to manage their businesses .
Yes, that is the libertarian seed. And the elite used that as justification for legal/illegal immigration. They implemented "open borders" for cheap labor.
Once again, you are making my point. The "absolute right to manage their business" was the rationalization used to outsource and move industry overseas. Another perverted implementation of "libertarian" theory.
The Founding Fathers believed everyone should come here for the same freedoms we are supposed to have...but even Jefferson made it clear...a few at a time and wait till those assemilate to our system. He warned about allowing too many immigrants in at one time. tones