A Son of Liberty
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- Joined
- Feb 26, 2010
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What is a "thick" or "thin" libertarian?
A "thin" libertarian is one who thinks that libertarian theory should be kept as minimal (and hence, as "thin") as possible. This is to be done by restricting the body of libertarian theory itself to the most basic and fewest necessary axioms, along with the "theorems" (such as the Non-Aggression Principle) which can be derived from that minimal set of basic axioms.
A "thick" libertarian, on the other hand, is one who thinks that libertarian theory should be expanded (and hence, "thickened") to formally include things like opposition to racism and support for "equality" (whatever that might mean).
For example, a "thin" libertarian may hate and denounce racism and will, of course, oppose racist policies that violate the NAP. But as a libertarian, he will oppose such racist policies as "unlibertarian" because they violate the NAP - not because they are racist. He might also oppose racist policies that do not violate the NAP because they are racist, but he will consider his opposition to them to be separate from his identity as a libertarian. He is willing to consider NAP-supporting racists to be libertarians, despite the fact that they are racists.
A "thick" libertarian, on the other hand, will insist that in order to be libertarian one must always hate and denounce racism and racist ideas and attitudes. As a libertarian, he will oppose any and all racist policies as "unlibertarian" regardless of whether they violate the NAP - because they are racist. He will consider his opposition to them to be part of his identity as a libertarian. He is not willing to consider NAP-supporting racists to be libertarians, because of the fact that they are racists.
"Thick" libertarians tend to be of the leftist variety, and some of them even support things like "universal basic income" in the name of "equality."
I don't know to what extent the "thin" vs. "thick" angle plays into this, but my impression is that the "insurgents" (the Mises Caucus, Dave Smith, Tom Woods, et al.) are motivated by impatience with the LP's attempts to win acceptance from the Cathedral (and the dubious "respectability" that comes with that acceptance). They want more of no-holds-barred, fire-breathing opposition to lockdowns, the police state, wars & foreign aid/entanglements, etc. - and less of simping milquetoastery, bland and inoffensive appeals to lowest common denominators, and the playing of footsie with things like identity politics. (Given the latter, "thick" libertarians don't seem likely to be enthused by their program, for whatever that might be worth.)
Any hints then...?I just had a phone conversation on Friday with a well-known LP activist who told me about the plan for 2024. He did ask that I not breathe a word of what I was told and I will honor that. In the past couple of weeks I have bought memberships in both the national and state LP as well as joined and donated to the Mises Caucus. I would recommend that anyone interested in libertarianism do the same.
I'm definitely the furthest thing from a leftarian, at least within libertarian circles.
What is it that you think constitutes a "leftarian"? I wonder if your answer may prove the point I made above.
Any hints then...?
I am not ignoring you. I am going to start a thread in the next day or two and approach it more respectfully than I did in my post that you quoted. It will be more from a philosophical perspective than accusatory.
Overall I think the divide on this forum comes down to those who want to be left alone at any cost vs those who stick to principles at any cost.
Overall I think the divide on this forum comes down to those who want to be left alone at any cost vs those who stick to principles at any cost.
I don't know to what extent the "thin" vs. "thick" angle plays into this, but my impression is that the "insurgents" (the Mises Caucus, Dave Smith, Tom Woods, et al.) are motivated by impatience with the LP's attempts to win acceptance from the Cathedral (and the dubious "respectability" that comes with that acceptance). They want more of no-holds-barred, fire-breathing opposition to lockdowns, the police state, wars & foreign aid/entanglements, etc. ...
- and less of simping milquetoastery, bland and inoffensive appeals to lowest common denominators, and the playing of footsie with things like identity politics. (Given the latter, "thick" libertarians don't seem likely to be enthused by their program, for whatever that might be worth.)
For example, a "thin" libertarian may hate and denounce racism and will, of course, oppose racist policies that violate the NAP. But as a libertarian, he will oppose such racist policies as "unlibertarian" because they violate the NAP - not because they are racist. He might also oppose racist policies that do not violate the NAP because they are racist, but he will consider his opposition to them to be separate from his identity as a libertarian. He is willing to consider NAP-supporting racists to be libertarians, despite the fact that they are racists.
A "thick" libertarian, on the other hand, will insist that in order to be libertarian one must always hate and denounce racism and racist ideas and attitudes. As a libertarian, he will oppose any and all racist policies as "unlibertarian" regardless of whether they violate the NAP - because they are racist. He will consider his opposition to them to be part of his identity as a libertarian. He is not willing to consider NAP-supporting racists to be libertarians, because of the fact that they are racists.
"Thick" libertarians tend to be of the leftist variety, and some of them even support things like "universal basic income" in the name of "equality."
There’s rumblings about a takeover of the L.P. by the Mises Caucus/Ron Paul types. Many of the people with large followings and influence are talking about starting up the Ron Paul Revolution 2.0.
They seem to be tired of the LP pandering to the left and trying to win influence by adapting to the current system. They’re all about purging the so called “left libertarians” and restoring an idealistic plank. They haven’t said exactly what the plan is but have mentioned that something big is in the works.
End the lockdowns
End the Fed
End all corporate Welfare
End the warfare state etc
Dave Smith is in,
Pete Quinones
Eric July
Angela McArdle
I’m guessing Tom Woods and Jeff Diest are advising as well?
If anybody has more info on who or what is going on please clue us in and I’ll add the info to this post.
There’s rumblings about a takeover of the L.P. by the Mises Caucus/Ron Paul types. Many of the people with large followings and influence are talking about starting up the Ron Paul Revolution 2.0.
They seem to be tired of the LP pandering to the left and trying to win influence by adapting to the current system. They’re all about purging the so called “left libertarians” and restoring an idealistic plank. They haven’t said exactly what the plan is but have mentioned that something big is in the works.
[...]
If anybody has more info on who or what is going on please clue us in and I’ll add the info to this post.
The Mises Caucus is trying to take over the LP and make it a vehicle for continuing the Ron Paul Revolution - and they have the blessing of Ron Paul himself.
And ironically, they're getting the same kind of pushback and shenanigans from the LP establishment that Ron Paul supporters got from the Republicans - denunciations from "woke" leftarians and "libertarian socialists", resistance and dirty tricks from the "big fish in a little pond" types, and so forth. (I might start a thread cataloging these if there is enough interest and I can find the time.)
I quit the LP in the '90s, too, and for much the same reason (the Perry Willis scandal was the straw that broke my camel's back).
The situation now. though, is very different from (and much more dire than) the situation in the '90s.
The Libertarian Party is just a subset of libertarians. The majority of libertarians never have been and never will be members. And there's nothing wrong with that. But for better or worse, the Libertarian Party is one of the chief "public faces" of libertarianism, and given the present situation, we simply cannot afford to allow such a venue to be run by leftarians, self-styled "libertarian socialists", and the likes of those who are intent on pandering to and seeking to win a never-to-be-granted acceptance from SJWs and progressives. These are not the kind of people who should (or even can) be "unified" with: https://i.imgur.com/jtoNmNI.jpg
(They were routed by the "goons" in a clean sweep, by the way. The Mises Caucus won every elected position and now controls the Nevada state party.)
Given the opportunities afforded by COVID tyranny, rampant wokeness, regnant inflation, looming economic disaster, etc., the lackadaisical, milquetoast, Gary-Johnson-esque messaging and bland appeals to the "lowest common denominator" historically favored by the LP are simply unconscionable. The Ron Paul Revolution has been slowly fizzling out ever since 2012, and if someone doesn't actually do something about it, it's apt to die once and for all, without even a whimper. The Mises Caucus is resolved to prevent that from happening, and whatever its chances may be, with members and spokesmen like Tom Woods, Scott Horton, Michael Boldin, and Dave Smith, those chances are at least as good as any other opportunity we have available.
In other words, the Ron Paul Revolution needs to "take over" the LP, and if the other factions and caucuses can't accept and come to terms with that, then they are useless ballast that should be dumped - and good riddance! The LP needs to stop being a philosopher-heavy social club for do-nothings who want to jealously guard their "big fish in a little pond" status, and it needs to start being an active vehicle for keeping the ideas and ideals of the Ron Paul Revolution alive. Everyone should be welcome in the party - except those who wish to obstruct or interfere with that purpose. And if that means a smaller[1] and more focused Libertarian Party ... well, then, so much the better.
[1] And it doesn't necessarily mean that at all. In fact, it seems that quite the opposite is the case. One of the reasons the Nevada "takeover" was so successful was that so many new people joined the Nevada LP via the Mises Caucus, as a direct result of the obnoxiousness of the Nevada party establishment. This lesson was well-learned by the Pennsylvania party's establishment when later, at their own state convention, they had to pull shenanigans in order to prevent the Mises Caucus from "taking over" there, as well. After crowing proudly about all the new members who joined the PA state party (as a result of the Mises Caucus' recruitment efforts, no less), they had the gall to then prevent those new members from voting at the state convention (contrary to long-established custom), thereby forestalling their doom until next year's convention.