I'm not saddened about those who question themselves if they can vote / support Gary Johnson, but I'm saddened about those who try to make you believe Trump is better than Johnson and call themselves libertarians.
I'm not saddened about those who question themselves if they can vote / support Gary Johnson, but I'm saddened about those who try to make you believe Trump is better than Johnson and call themselves libertarians.
What if the prostitute had just eaten a sandwich for lunch?
I'm not saddened about those who question themselves if they can vote / support Gary Johnson, but I'm saddened about those who try to make you believe Trump is better than Johnson and call themselves libertarians.
Gary is much more a libertarian, overall, than the Donald. Fact.
Donald is getting much more accomplished for liberty, overall, than Gary. Fact.
Gary is much more a libertarian, overall, than the Donald. Fact.
Pray tell, I forgot who I am reporting to and must find my handler. It's about time for another steak dinner. Which major party candidate am I shilling for?
Trump is not a globalist. That would be Johnson and Hillary.
Donald is getting much more accomplished for liberty, overall, than Gary. Fact.
The only reason I see Trump winning the nomination as a net positive is because I believe he's weakened the GOP, which can either make it easier for a 3rd party, present an opening in the fractured GOP or both. But there's nothing to gain for the liberty movement by actively supporting him in the general election, especially since if he wins, the GOP will more likely be reinvented in Trump's image as a populist, nationalist, authoritarian party, not a libertarian party.
The big fallacy of trump supporters is simple - strong executive. They seem to have not learned from Bush and Obama.
The shift in the balance of power to the Executive Branch that happened prior to Obama allowed him to cram Obamacare down our throats. It's somewhat miraculous that Americans can still own guns, because Bush and congress gave Obama just about everything he needed to outlaw anything.
So imagine trump beats Clinton (unlikely) - is he going to grow the executive or shrink it? Answer: He's going to grow it. And the next progressive or neocon president will be equipped to go all the way with gun control, surveillance, war, police militarization, health care, socialization of groceries, you name it.
Who's talking about actually shrinking government and executive branch military action? “The future is small government, the future is no one dying in foreign interventions.” - Gary Johnson
Your mind is made up about Trump, that is clear. So, set him aside, is the larger issue of how our movement needs to advance---namely building the coalitions needed to win elections and defeating establishment obstacles to liberty---something you can support? Can you compose long posts about that, instead of just long posts against Trump?
Coalitions will be dependent on candidates. I was hopeful Rand would have a coalition of libertarians and other, younger Ron Paul supporters who are less ideological in addition to mainstream conservatives and some who lean Democrat, but are anti-war and pro-civil liberties. It just never materialized and while part of it was weak fundraising, which we should all realize can't be overlooked the way Rand's campaign did, but he was also a victim of fear-mongering. People seemed to be hysterical over Paris and San Bernardino, which made libertarianism and a non-interventionist foreign policy a tougher sell with people irrationally demanding safety over liberty. I worry the GOP is still plagued with too many neocons and the base is too poisoned by foolish loyalty to Bush and years of his false patriotism and Cheney's fear-mongering.
Liberty candidates have proven they can win a few senate seats in the GOP like Rand Paul and Mike Lee did as well as some congressional wins, but there's been no real progress since 2010. The Tea Party as a whole turned out to be a disappointment and now the GOP doesn't even seem to be moving in that direction, much less the more liberty-minded direction of Rand, Lee, Amash and Massie. And as far as a presidency, it doesn't look likely for a liberty-minded candidate to win the GOP nomination.
So that brings me to the LP. They obviously can't win the election either, so at the moment I'm hoping for them to make the biggest dent in the election for a 3rd party since Ross Perot in the popular vote with between 5-10% and possibly even win a state like Utah. It's why I'm trying to hold my nose and put up with Weld as VP since I think the LP's only hope to grow and become viable is to present credible, experienced candidates to disgruntled voters who may not be ideologues. But I'm frustrated with that since I think Gary should be reaching out to the right more than the left. Not enough of the left has an anti-government sentiment, and most of the Bernie or bust guys will go to Jill Stein or stay home. And the outreach to Bernie voters is already alienating some libertarians and conservatives. I have to admit that I'm still considering Darrell Castle. The only reasons I'm not there at the moment is because the LP has an actual chance to make a significant dent while the Constitution Party does not, and I'm a little wary of the party since it's a bit ambiguous whether they support theocracy or not, and I'd at least like to be sure Castle doesn't. Then again, isidewith.com did say Castle was most similar to me on social issues and I don't consider myself a social conservative or a social liberal.
Really, I think the LP needs to run more serious campaigns for lower office and some of the candidates elected with the Libertarian Party to state legislatures should make serious bids for congress. I'm hopeful Tom Davis accepts the LP's offer to run for governor in 2018 and I'll look into Larry Sharpe and his potential run for governor here in NY. But the bottom line is I think the LP has to focus on that rather than inexperienced candidates running for president as their first elective office, unless they're well known national figures. I would love to see Judge Napolitano run for office, although he's said he's not interested. He'd be perfect because he's a true libertarian. but could appeal to all constitutional conservatives, he's a very likable person, he'd have some built in support from Fox viewers and like Pat Buchanan, he's an outstanding orator.
But again, coalitions will depend on that candidate. Some will more naturally reach out to conservative Republicans who actually do care about the constitution and limited government, while some will naturally appeal more to the anti-war/civil liberties contingent on the left. Ideally, we'll have someone who can attract both.
I could go along with something like the Rothbard/Buchanan coalition, but sadly, that didn't last long either. Just like the LP wasn't able to grow from 1987-1991 even with a leader as strong as Ron Paul. Although I'd definitely avoid ill-advised strategies like Rothbard's "outreach to rednecks."
Strategic candidacies who are not in our camp ideologically, but did reach out to voting blocs as we should have done, indirectly help the movement by showing us how to do likewise.
Coalitions will be dependent on candidates. I was hopeful Rand would have a coalition of libertarians and other, younger Ron Paul supporters who are less ideological in addition to mainstream conservatives and some who lean Democrat, but are anti-war and pro-civil liberties. It just never materialized and while part of it was weak fundraising, which we should all realize can't be overlooked the way Rand's campaign did, but he was also a victim of fear-mongering. People seemed to be hysterical over Paris and San Bernardino, which made libertarianism and a non-interventionist foreign policy a tougher sell with people irrationally demanding safety over liberty. I worry the GOP is still plagued with too many neocons and the base is too poisoned by foolish loyalty to Bush and years of his false patriotism and Cheney's fear-mongering.
Liberty candidates have proven they can win a few senate seats in the GOP like Rand Paul and Mike Lee did as well as some congressional wins, but there's been no real progress since 2010. The Tea Party as a whole turned out to be a disappointment and now the GOP doesn't even seem to be moving in that direction, much less the more liberty-minded direction of Rand, Lee, Amash and Massie. And as far as a presidency, it doesn't look likely for a liberty-minded candidate to win the GOP nomination.
So that brings me to the LP. They obviously can't win the election either, so at the moment I'm hoping for them to make the biggest dent in the election for a 3rd party since Ross Perot in the popular vote with between 5-10% and possibly even win a state like Utah. It's why I'm trying to hold my nose and put up with Weld as VP since I think the LP's only hope to grow and become viable is to present credible, experienced candidates to disgruntled voters who may not be ideologues. But I'm frustrated with that since I think Gary should be reaching out to the right more than the left. Not enough of the left has an anti-government sentiment, and most of the Bernie or bust guys will go to Jill Stein or stay home. And the outreach to Bernie voters is already alienating some libertarians and conservatives. I have to admit that I'm still considering Darrell Castle. The only reasons I'm not there at the moment is because the LP has an actual chance to make a significant dent while the Constitution Party does not, and I'm a little wary of the party since it's a bit ambiguous whether they support theocracy or not, and I'd at least like to be sure Castle doesn't. Then again, isidewith.com did say Castle was most similar to me on social issues and I don't consider myself a social conservative or a social liberal.
Really, I think the LP needs to run more serious campaigns for lower office and some of the candidates elected with the Libertarian Party to state legislatures should make serious bids for congress. I'm hopeful Tom Davis accepts the LP's offer to run for governor in 2018 and I'll look into Larry Sharpe and his potential run for governor here in NY. But the bottom line is I think the LP has to focus on that rather than inexperienced candidates running for president as their first elective office, unless they're well known national figures. I would love to see Judge Napolitano run for office, although he's said he's not interested. He'd be perfect because he's a true libertarian. but could appeal to all constitutional conservatives, he's a very likable person, he'd have some built in support from Fox viewers and like Pat Buchanan, he's an outstanding orator.
But again, coalitions will depend on that candidate. Some will more naturally reach out to conservative Republicans who actually do care about the constitution and limited government, while some will naturally appeal more to the anti-war/civil liberties contingent on the left. Ideally, we'll have someone who can attract both.
I could go along with something like the Rothbard/Buchanan coalition, but sadly, that didn't last long either. Just like the LP wasn't able to grow from 1987-1991 even with a leader as strong as Ron Paul. Although I'd definitely avoid ill-advised strategies like Rothbard's "outreach to rednecks."
That's ridiculous.
You could say that about any campaign, no matter how horrible the candidate; they all teach us something about politics and the electorate.
Hell, I guess Lindsey Graham was advancing liberty by showing us how to reach out to hardcore neocons...
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