Libertarianism 101 — Prof. Walter Block

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Libertarianism 101 — Prof. Walter Block

Back to the RPF site mission, I though this would be a good opportunity to post this again:





Professor Walter Block speaking about Libertarianism 101 at the Australian Mises Seminar 2012. For more information see: http://www.mises.org.au/seminar-2012
 
Good idea. [MENTION=28857]juleswin[/MENTION] needs this.

First few minutes, Walter Block is listing the different grades of libertarian. But instead f watching a 1hr video to obtain the definition of libertarianism, I did one better. I went to the mises website and found this

Libertarians tend to agree on a wide array of policies and principles. Nonetheless, it is not easy to find consensus on what libertarianism's defining characteristic is, or on what distinguishes it from other political theories and systems.

Various formulations abound. It is said that libertarianism is about individual rights, property rights,1 the free market, capitalism, justice, or the nonaggression principle. Not just any of these will do, however. Capitalism and the free market describe the catallactic conditions that arise or are permitted in a libertarian society, but do not encompass other aspects of libertarianism. And individual rights, justice, and aggression collapse into property rights. As Murray Rothbard explained, individual rights are property rights.2 And justice is just giving someone his due, which depends on what his rights are.3

The nonaggression principle is also dependent on property rights, since what aggression is depends on what our (property) rights are. If you hit me, it is aggression because I have a property right in my body. If I take from you the apple you possess, this is trespass — aggression — only because you own the apple. One cannot identify an act of aggression without implicitly assigning a corresponding property right to the victim.

After reading that, I would still say that it the respect of individual rights and property rights and you cannot respect those rights while violating the NAP. So like my previous definition, a Libertarian is any person who does not violate the non aggression principle. They can choose to do anything else with their lives and still be a libertarian.

Your definition about being an individualist, taking personal responsibility for him/her self etc is the definition of a good responsible person who is also a libertarian. I can imagine a mama's boy who moochies on his parents, he is in a cult of like minded losers, he smokes, does drugs, spends all his money on prostitutes and after he is out of money, sick and lonely, crawls back to his parents for help. But at no point does he use force or violate anyone's property rights. Is this irresponsible loser not a liberterian because he is not an individualist and a collectivist?
 
I can imagine a mama's boy who moochies on his parents, he is in a cult of like minded losers, he smokes, does drugs, spends all his money on prostitutes and after he is out of money, sick and lonely, crawls back to his parents for help. But at no point does he use force or violate anyone's property rights. Is this irresponsible loser not a liberterian because he is not an individualist and a collectivist?

Crawling back to his parents for help does not violate his parents rights. If the parents choose to help him that would be voluntary. A case could be made and debated whether that is due to poor parenting. If the parents refuse to help, then nobody has been violated. If his parents refuse to help and then the mamma's boy forces the situation, at that point the boy is in violation.
 
Crawling back to his parents for help does not violate his parents rights. If the parents choose to help him that would be voluntary. A case could be made and debated whether that is due to poor parenting. If the parents refuse to help, then nobody has been violated. If his parents refuse to help and then the mamma's boy forces the situation, at that point the boy is in violation.

I was replying to his definition of libertarianism

Item one: A libertarian is an individualist. Individual rights, individual responsibility, equal individual opportunity, individual property. A libertarian hasn't got a collectivist bone in his or her body.
 
Walter Block...wasn't he the fellow that made that utterly cringe worthy speech about "evictionism" with regard to abortion at the Rally for the Republic?
 
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