Were they pure enough by Lew Rockwell standards?There did used to be.
Were they pure enough by Lew Rockwell standards?There did used to be.
I think he came up with his freedom gene manifesto on his own as he is really proud of it. Probably has roots in the supper race ideas.Thanks for the recap. I'm not asking for that though. I'm aware of how you think for the most part and I disagree with it.
I'm asking what the foundation is for your belief. I disagree with PaleoLibertarian as well, and with numerous religious people on here, but at least Paleo and others are forthcoming with where they got their ideas from. I'm asking where you read what you read to come to your conclusions.
Were they pure enough by Lew Rockwell standards?
Do you have the right to live and defend yourself? If not why not?
It means that individuals, and groups of individual (cultures, nations, races, etc) have the right to exist...
http://dna.ancestry.com/?s_kwcid=an...d=58712&o_lid=58712&o_sch=Paid+Search+–+Brand
http://shop.nationalgeographic.com/...002ng genome&gclid=CMHErreljskCFcdgfgodtk4AXQ
I turned out to have more Scottish/ English than I thought. I expected mostly German. Seems I got more from my Mother's side than my Father's side. One of my ancestors fought for the British during the Revolutionary War and was captured.
No, that's very much an anti-liberty position. Liberty, through freedom of association, affords an in-nation person the right to invite anyone (pro-liberty or anti-liberty) into their property as a guest or renter/lessee. Liberty affords an in-nation person the right to employ anyone (pro-liberty or anti-liberty).
Ok, so you let us know when you have the means to transport someone from their source of origin to "your" property and keep them there; where you will be held 100% responsible for their well-being and actions.![]()
Consider a village near a lake. It is common for the villagers to walk down to the lake to go fishing. In the early days of the community it's hard to get to the lake because of all the bushes and fallen branches in the way. But over time the way is cleared and a path forms – not through any coordinated efforts, but simply as a result of all the individuals walking by that way day after day. The cleared path is the product of labor – not any individual's labor, but all of them together. If one villager decided to take advantage of the now-created path by setting up a gate and charging tolls, he would be violating the collective property right that the villagers together have earned
That is how your world works, because you are a nationalist racist. That is not even how America works, because where is this "right" you speak of in the Bill of Rights?
How the moderators allow this kind of blatant racism and statism on these boards I don't understand. There aren't even libertarians on this board anymore.
Would there not be commons for these people to traverse? Could they not negotiate with the property owners between where they currently are and where they are going? I know many libertarians like the idea that all property would be owned, but it would be pretty costly to own a lot of property without a large state, and it makes sense that there would be commons (albeit sparsely used ones.)
This is what Roderick Long has to say about common property:
In your mind, is the common not owned by anyone, or any government?
It is initially not owned by anyone. But if somebody homesteads it or multiple people homestead it then it is owned by that individual or individuals until it returns to its natural state (due to abandonment) at which point it can be homesteaded again.
Where do you believe such land exists?
Let us know when you are able to transfer someone from their source of origin directly onto your property and keep them there, where you will assume 100% responsibility for their actions.
Exactly. It is claimed by the government. How do you figure you can claim it for "commons"?
"Locke starts by stating that, whether by natural reason or the word of the Bible, the earth can be considered the property of people in common to use for their survival and benefit. He then posits a key question: if the earth and everything on it is the common property of humankind, how does one come upon individual property?
Locke starts out with the idea of the property of person--each person owns his or her own body, and all the labor that they perform with the body. When an individual adds their own labor, their own property, to a foreign object or good, that object becomes their own because they have added their labor. He uses the simple example of picking an apple--the apple becomes mine when I pick it, because I have added my labor to it and made it my property. This appropriation of goods does not demand the consent of humankind in general--each person has license to appropriate things in this way by individual initiative."
Hey, wait a minute-
The Scots were the only white men the Indians trusted. They kept their word and wore a skirt.(Truth)
Property Rights are not based on "claims" they are based on the labor theory of property and the homestead principle. This is classical liberalism 101.
The government doesn't own that land because the people in government have not mixed their labor with the land or traded for it, and therefore it is in a state of commons (which is the natural state of land.)
It belongs to the people who toiled to pay for it. Which includes me. You do not have permission to transfer illegal aliens.
So figure out how to get them to your property another way and keep them there.