Wesker1982
Member
- Joined
- Feb 23, 2010
- Messages
- 1,807
Yeah it was at the top of the philosophy forum, but unbumpable in general...
QFT. There is also a difference between people voluntarily governing themselves and the State.
I define the state as that institution which possesses one or both (almost always both) of the following properties: (1) it acquires its income by the physical coercion known as "taxation"; and (2) it asserts and usually obtains a coerced monopoly of the provision of defense service (police and courts) over a given territorial area. An institution not possessing either of these properties is not and cannot be, in accordance with my definition, a state.-Murray Rothbard
(1) If we as a nation continue to believe that that paying for civilization through taxation is a wise purchase and the only way to achieve civilization, we are doomed. -Ron Paul
Ron Paul may support completely voluntary governance but this is very different than supporting the State. As shown in my earlier post, (2) Ron Paul not only advocates the private production of a select few defense services, but advocates the private production of all defense services.
Ron Paul + his beliefs on (1) and (2) = voluntaryist.
The climate here is far more hospitable to Voluntaryism than it was during the height and denouement of the '08 campaign, and I think our presence has increased a good deal (both from new forum members and seasoned ones who eventually shed the last vestiges of uncertainty). Old resentments may resurface now that campaign '12 is rolling (though I certainly hope they don't), but we've enjoyed a great few months generally free from drama.
I had just heard horror stories, they scared me lol. It seems pretty friendly around here. I noticed your post on this subject on the mises.org forum, I lurk/sometimes post there.
conza's been back 2 days and so far not one single wall-o-text-copy-paste from mises?
not one single ranting video from that crazy bald guy?
you're losin' your touch brother.
but welcome home![]()
Sure, Ron Paul calls himself voluntaryist, but that doesn't mean for him that there should be no government, because he specifically rejected that idea.
YOUUU'RE BAAAAAAAAAAAAACK!!!!
You said you don't know if you'll keep posting, but it'd be nice if you did.
Vindication.
I do hope you stick around...
Wow, conza is absolutely pwning this thread.
Conza, welcome back man!
Being on the side of truth makes it so much easier.
I bet Congressman Paul wasn't a voluntarist when it came to raising his kids.![]()
In other news, just wondering if there has been a recent poll anywhere on the forums about self-government versus constitution? Would be interested, cheers.
For longtime students of the libertarian movement, Ron Paul and his followers represent something several libertarians have predicted but is still very hard to believe has actually arisen: an eager mass populist movement of almost-anarchist Middle Americans. (Paul never gets explicit about it, but you can easily glean from this book a complete opposition to any taxation on the grounds that it is essentially theft and a belief that a free market can meet every conceivable human social need.) While very different in polemical style and approach, in ideas Ron Paul is the successor to the controversial libertarian economist, philosopher, journalist, and activist Murray Rothbard, to whom he frequently tips his hat.
Given how radical Rothbard could be, it is surprising that the biggest sparkplug in the present or foreseeable future of libertarianism would be a politician pushing a largely Rothbardian vision.
I came across this in Reason magazine, apparently we aren't the only ones who have come to this conclusion:
http://reason.com/archives/2011/06/09/ron-pauls-radical-vision
It is interesting to see Reason publish this. I wonder how much freedom the writers are allowed to write about anarcho-capitalism? According to wiki, Brian Doherty "supports capitalist anarchism". And also Katherine Mangu-Ward from Reason made pretty clear that she is an anarcho-capitalist one time on Freedom Watch. I wonder how much they could write about it before the CATO guys put their foot down? JW...
Given how radical Rothbard could be, it is surprising that the biggest sparkplug in the present or foreseeable future of libertarianism would be a politician pushing a largely Rothbardian vision.
Conservative and minarchist supporters of RP on this forum weep.
Market Anarchists & Voluntaryists nod.
I believe he was equating anarchism with how 99.9% of Sean Hannity's audience understands the term (chaos). So that would mean I do not think he was lying. I do not believe Ron Paul advocates lawlessness, chaos, violence, etc.
If by Ron Paul saying he isn't an anarchist he was referring to anarcho-capitalism, then yes, I think he lied.
Since he was talking to an audience who overwhelmingly believes anarchy=chaos, and has no idea what anarcho-capitalism is, I conclude Ron Paul was not talking about anarcho-capitalism. To think he was talking about free-market anarchy is to assume Ron Paul is dumb enough to think Sean Hannity's audience is well read in Rothbard or free-market statelessness.
To think he was talking about free-market anarchy is to assume Ron Paul is dumb enough to think Sean Hannity's audience is well read in Rothbard or free-market statelessness.
He actually clarified what he meant by anarchist... those who advocate no government, that's what he said. So he wasn't referring to the definition of anarchy as chaos.
Yeah... like when RP says capitalism. RP must be dumb to think people know what they mean. Ron Paul is really, really dumb.
Or when he says "Austrian Economics". A lot of people think it's about the economy from Austria. How dumb is Ron Paul.
You are falsely assuming that the level of difficulty in teaching people the meaning of capitalism and Austrian Economics is on par with explaining the meaning of anarchy. If you honestly believe this then I don't think I can help you.
There are various degrees of difficulty to explain various things
and you arbitrarily draw the line on anarchy.
He would go so far as to muddle language and encourage confusion on the word that actually describes his political beliefs.
And he would do all this umprompted, on his own initiative, as Hannity didn't even ask him anything about anarchy.
If you would go so far as to believe that Ron Paul will change the way he usually acts and become someone who isn't like Ron Paul