Peace&Freedom
Member
- Joined
- Nov 29, 2007
- Messages
- 5,123
faux libertarianism ? Libertarianism is an offshoot of Objectivism, which is implicitly moral and Atheist.
You win no points by being ignorant, and claiming that people who don't follow your book of fantasys has no morals.
I have explicit, logical, universally defined morals, based on reality.
I do not believe in your secular religion of "universallly defined morals," or the humanist myth of government neutrality on matters of God (either the state will at least acknowledge God is God, or else by default will treat Man as God). I note with amusement how you wax tyrannically against the 95% of us who hold a view of reality that includes God, while claiming to be tolerant and anti-tyranny. As for your fact-free, post-Rand-only concept of liberty, from Wikipedia, on 'libertarianism':
"The modern meaning of the term "libertarian" is disputed. Because the definition of liberty relies on the definition of freedom, and because freedom means different things to different people, the word "libertarian" has more than one political connotation. It could be anything from more freedom as compared to current affairs, to the minimal level of government in a practical society, to anarchism. This section gives a brief historical review of the term's usage.
The term "libertarian" in a metaphysical or philosophical sense was first used by late-Enlightenment free-thinkers to refer to those who believed in free will, as opposed to determinism...Libertarianism in this sense is still encountered in metaphysics in discussions of free will. The first recorded use was in 1789 by William Belsham in a discussion of free will and in opposition to "necessitarian" (or determinist) views....
Anarchist communist Joseph Déjacque was the first person to describe himself as a libertarian...in May 1857, in an 11-page pamphlet De l'Etre Humain mâle et femelle'...("Concerning the Human Male and Female")... Déjacque accused Proudhon of being "libéral et non LIBERTAIRE" (liberal but not libertarian), that is, the neologism was coined specifically as a distinction from the classical liberalism that Proudhon advocated in relation to economic exchange, in contrast to the more communist approach advocated by Déjacque. Since the 1890s from France,... the term "libertarianism" has often been used as a synonym for anarchism and was used almost exclusively in this sense until the 1950s in the United States;..."
So, since your first point was not remotely accurate, and the rest redundant and ironic reinforcement of the very points I was making, I will simply say I stand by my comments.