The Real Libertarian Platform—Abolition

Yet another good one that belongs in this thread.

Yesterday's Mashed Potatoes
by L. Neil Smith
[email protected]
Publisher and Senior Columnist


Attribute to L. Neil Smith's The Libertarian Enterprise

As I have said and written on many occasions, I don't mind so much that relative newcomers to the Libertarian Party and movement insist on reinventing the wheel, as much as that they keep reinventing it square. Regrettably, ours is a community with absolutely no provision for recording its own history or for educating its latest initiates.

Development of a cogent, coherent philosophy of liberty represents intellectual progress that constantly replaying the dead past deprives us of. Issues and policies long settled between and among libertarians keep getting exhumed and rehashed, preventing the movement's advancement.

Case in point: a would-be Libertarian Party Presidential candidate named Austin Wade Peterson (I would refrain from mentioning his name at all, but it's important to put a warning label on this particular vial of poison) criticizes his rival, former New Mexican Republican Governor and previous Libertarian Party candidate Gary Johnson, over his tax policy. Johnson wants, says this Peterson, a national sales tax, whereas he, Peterson, simply wants to reduce taxes across the board.

This is the kind of non-argument libertarians have been having since the mid-1970s. Given the choice, would you rather be shot or hanged? How about "None Of The Above"? It's long past time we adopted positions consistent with the moral principles that we claim to adhere to.

Consider: taxation is theft: taking wealth away from unwilling individuals using threatened violence. Very few individuals would object to that definition, and those who would object, have to screw themselves into bizarre, laughable intellectual pretzel-shapes to do so. Those who would keep the fruits of their labor understandably have little interest in a political party that condones some robbery at gunpoint.

Consider: taxation is slavery. Each of us is forced by government minions to labor from January to Tax Freedom Day each year (this year, April 21) just to pay the taxes they calculate we owe them. That's called involuntary servitude, and it violates the Thirteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which outlawed such practices in the 19th century. If you believe you have some moral obligation to financially support the parasites at the top of the pyramid, feel free to chip in. Me, I'm tired of paying for Barack and Michelle's multimiliion dollar vacations. (His interest in golf confirms everything I ever thought of it.)

Consider: taxation is the fuel of war. It was only in the 20th century, when governments discovered they could steal unlimited wealth from the Productive Class as long as they convinced them they were doing it to themselves, that so-called "world wars" killing tens of millions of innocent individuals became horrifyingly possible. If governments were limited to what they could collect on street-corners in tin cups, and from bake sales, we could enjoy peace forever. If levying 20th century-style taxes (as well as conscription) were seen by other states as an act of war-preparation, that peace would be assured.

Taxation is an ancient, evil vice, as ancient, in fact, as government itself. The first written records made (clay tablets from Babylon) were tax rolls. Humanity would be a thousand years more advanced—possibly ten thousand—if resources hadn't been stolen from us to feed the ambitions, the swollen bellies, of politicians, bureaucrats, inbred aristocracies, and their genetically impoverished spawn.

So why are Gary Johnson and Austin Peterson fighting over how much of this vile social disease is acceptable? No amount of theft, no amount of slavery, none of the fuel of war is acceptable to genuine libertarians. It ought to be the official position of the Libertarian Party (and is the official position of the libertarian wing of the libertarian movement) that even if it takes hundreds of years, as it did Queen Isabella and her fellow anti-slavery advocates—we are nonetheless committed to putting an end to this millennia-old atrocity.

Peterson is reported to disdain the "Non-Aggression Principle" which others regard as the very heart and soul of the movement. We would maintain, however, that once an individual becomes aware of what we call the Zero-Aggression Principle—and explicitly rejects it—he is announcing to the world around him that he can't be trusted, and that all those in his vicinity must be on high defensive alert at all times.

Never forget the following; tattoo it on your stomach upside-down so you can read it any time you need to: the only reason somebody would avoid the Zero Aggression Principle is that he's planning to exercise a right he falsely imagines he has to do something to you he wouldn't be able to do in the presence of the Zero Aggression Principle.

Because it's important, I repeat: the only reason somebody avoids the Zero Aggression Principle is that he plans to do something to you he wouldn't be able to do in the presence of the Zero Aggression Principle.

Peterson claims not to be a Republican in libertarian clothing. But, judging from the faux-libertarian positions he takes, if it disgustingly quacks like a duck, and waddles like a duck ... He says, in a brief fawning interview with the El Paso County (Colorado Springs) Libertarian Party—in which he deliberately misinterprets to suit his purposes the ideas of Party Founder David F. Nolan—that he plans to teach his children not to hit others and take their stuff. On what principle?, we would like to know. If you reject the ZAP, then what keeps you from being a Stirnerite and doing anything to anybody you want? You sound very much like a Republican to us, Austin, of the kind we've been contending with for four endless decades. Perhaps you should withdraw from the race and study your Rand, Rothbard, and LeFevre.

Get back to us when you've learned something.

To other libertarians, to real libertarians, I would say, show this essay, this issue of The Libertarian Enterprise to your friends and comrades. We were sadly unable to stop the bought-and-paid-for candidacy of Bob Barr, but perhaps we can stop this particular little travesty.

Get the word out.

http://www.ncc-1776.org/tle2016/tle865-20160327-02.html
 
What then is to be done? Friends of the slave, the question is not whether by our efforts we can abolish slavery, speedily or remotely for duty is ours, the result is with God; but whether we will go with the multitude to do evil, sell our birthright for a mess of pottage, cease to cry aloud and spare not, and remain in Babylon when the command of God is "Come out of her, my people, that ye be not partakers of her sins, and that ye receive not of her plagues." Let us stand in our lot, "and having done all, to stand." At least, a remnant shall be saved. Living or dying, defeated or victorious, be it ours to exclaim, "No compromise with slavery! Liberty for each, for all, forever! Man above all institutions! The supremacy of God over the whole earth!"
[h=5]William Lloyd Garrison[/h]


Garrison was a real revolutionary in his time.
 
Frederick Douglass

irony-anarchist-statist.jpg


I really love the part before that


"What, to the American slave, is your Fourth of July? I answer: a day that reveals to him, more than all other days of the year, the gross injustice and cruelty to which he is a constant victim. To him, your celebration is a sham; your boasted liberty, an unholy license; your national greatness, swelling vanity; your sounds of rejoicing are empty and heartless; your denunciation of tyrants, brass fronted impudence; your shouts of liberty and equality, hollow mockery; your prayers and hymns, your sermons and thanksgivings, with all your religious parade and solemnity, are, to Him, mere bombast, fraud, deception, impiety, and hypocrisy—a thin veil to cover up crimes that would disgrace a nation of savages. There is not a nation of the earth guilty of practices more shocking and bloody than are the people of these United States at this very hour." -Fredrick Douglass

Seriously, it is long but it is entirely worth reading "What to the Slave is 4th of July?"
 
What's wrong with conservatives?

My main problem with conservatives has always been that they just don't follow their ideas to their logical conclusion, that they're not radical enough in their policies nor deep and drastic enough in their cuts [which universally are actually "cuts" that don't actually cut at all, they're just hyped as doing so by both sides of the aisle -- see for prominent examples the saga of Scott Walker (budget actually went up) and the spinning of Gary Johnson (budget went way up)]. To me, libertarians are like uber-conservatives: we agree with their rhetoric and their ideas, and we're consistent about it. We actually want to do it sometime in this lifetime. Huge tax cuts, now; huge spending cuts, now; a balanced budget, now!

So I think one can be simultaneously:

• A conservative
• A libertarian
• Not funny-looking

The issue is thinking conservatives mean anything. I think the Alt. Left is idiotic. But Vox Day is right about one thing, conservatism has no ideology. It has no meaning and no purpose. The Alt. Left does, to conserve what always had been. Unfortunately what they are conserving is an oppressive central government. There is nothing small government about the movement. They are just like the Democrats in action, just different in form. They both want to use the power of a strong central state to manipulate, dominate, control, and create the culture they want. They want to violate your rights to force you to be like them and they want to violate the rights of everyone who won't be forced to be like them or cannot be like them (say because they're Catholic Mexicans) to expel them from the country.
 
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The issue is thinking conservatives mean anything.
This seems to be the only part of your post that has anything to do with my post. (If there are other relevancies, please explain them to me).

But you are wrong: conservatives do mean things. We all mean things. Everyone's life has meaning to himself. Everyone's political views have meaning and purpose. Everyone forms opinions based on factors important to himself, and those opinions do mean something. Further, not just to himself but out in the external world. These opinions have real, tangible results.

For example, a tangible result of the conservative mindset might be the war on drugs. Now that was a very bipartisan effort, but I think the perception is generally that the right is more fervently in favor of it, and that perception is probably true. Another example of a tangible effect of the conservative mindset would be the reforms against government unions enacted in Wisconsin under Scott Walker.

Here is the sad thing: there are virtually no tangible results of the conservative mindset in the form of enacted policy on the national level. Actually, I can think of none, as far as the wanting-generally-smaller-government component of conservatism. For the last fifty years the left has seen many, many of the things they want enacted. But the average Joe conservative, what has he got? Zip. What has he seen happen that he wanted? Zilch. What part of his agenda has succeeded? None.

There are tons of results in the form of noise. Lots and lots of noise. Sound and fury. But the "leadership" corrupt, sneering elites of the GOP have totally failed and betrayed their constituency. Absolutely nothing that any common-man conservative wants has happened for fifty years, maybe longer. There are a lot of conservatives in this country. But none in Washington. 50% of the country has no voice, no representation, no influence whatsoever.

So what does it mean to be a conservative? To be a loser. To utterly, perpetually lose for fifty years straight. That has been the meaning of being a conservative: LOSER.

I am not a big fan of losing, by the way. Not a fan. I like my way to win.

They want to violate your rights to force you to be like them and they want to violate the rights of everyone who won't be forced to be like them or cannot be like them (say because they're Catholic Mexicans) to expel them from the country.
Is it safe to say that you are a one-issue guy; that your only issue that you care about right now is immigration?
 
Jeff Deist: The Trouble with Conservatives

Audio at link.

Conservatives once stood for judicious use of government power and minding our own business in foreign affairs. Today, 100 years after the beginning of the progressive revolution, conservatives don't conserve anything. They vote for big-government schemes, favor globalism over real capitalism, and advocate an aggressive foreign policy that installs American troops around the globe. They've lost any claim to the mantle of "limited government," and lost every battle concerning abortion and social issues. Worst of all, Republicans have created a bloated jobs programs for themselves—Conservatism, Inc.—that shows nothing but contempt for its own voting base.

Is the GOP the next Whig party, consigned to history?

For further reading, see Murray Rothbard's The Betrayal of the American Right, Justin Raimondo's Reclaiming the American Right, and "The Coming Conservative Dark Age" by Matthew Continetti.

See also the Mises Institute's online archives of The American Mercury (1936–1943).

https://mises.org/library/trouble-conservatives
 
Jeff Deist: The Trouble with Conservatives

That really seems to be better titled "The Trouble With the GOP Power Bosses". None of these "troubles" are things actual everyday, Main Street conservatives have done.

On Main Street, conservative support for smaller government and free market capitalism is as strong as ever. Take a poll of conservatives and you will see their support for these libertarian issues is still very strong. They just don't get anything they want, because the people at the top of the GOP are total losers and, based on their actions, demonstrably care nothing for the agenda of the conservatives who elect them and in fact probably support the opposite. It is "Conservatism, Inc.", as Deist calls this corrupt sham. Too true.
 
That really seems to be better titled "The Trouble With the GOP Power Bosses". None of these "troubles" are things actual everyday, Main Street conservatives have done.

On Main Street, conservative support for smaller government and free market capitalism is as strong as ever. Take a poll of conservatives and you will see their support for these libertarian issues is still very strong. They just don't get anything they want, because the people at the top of the GOP are total losers and, based on their actions, demonstrably care nothing for the agenda of the conservatives who elect them and in fact probably support the opposite. It is "Conservatism, Inc.", as Deist calls this corrupt sham. Too true.

Where were all the Main Street conservatives come election time in 08/12? Were they voting for Ron Paul?
 
Where were all the Main Street conservatives come election time in 08/12? Were they voting for Ron Paul?
Well, millions of them were and did. More millions would have had he not been eliminated from contention relatively early. He got almost 30% in Iowa, remember. If he could have won Iowa, it would have been a different race. Of course a very different race.

As it was, even though by the time they were voting he had no chance, they still voted for him! That's remarkable -- how many votes did Jim Webb win in May primaries this year? And it's not because they agreed with him on everything -- conservatism is not libertarianism -- but they saw him as the best candidate in the field.
 
T

But you are wrong: conservatives do mean things. We all mean things. Everyone's life has meaning to himself. Everyone's political views have meaning and purpose. Everyone forms opinions based on factors important to himself, and those opinions do mean something. Further, not just to himself but out in the external world. These opinions have real, tangible results.

Sort of? Conservatism isn't a successful system. All it wants to do is hold on to the things that were. The mainstream GOP wants to hold things as they were 20 years ago, maybe 30 if you want to go back to Reagan. The Alt. Left wants to push things farther back, to the 50s socially and politically. The mainstream doesn't really have an ideology on this, they just are afraid of change and want to keep things as they were. The Alt. Left has an ideology, one that would use teh government to try and remake society as they think it should be.

Is it safe to say that you are a one-issue guy; that your only issue that you care about right now is immigration?

I am a one issue guy. But it isn't immigration.

My issue is Liberty.

All people have inalienable rights, not just white native born Americans. The Leviathan necessary to violate the rights of millions of people here in a manner that is against the law but which is not in violation of natural rights, indeed it is the law which violates their and our natural rights, will be a machine powerful enough to suppress and oppress everyone else.

You do not have a right to use the violence of the state to force everyone else to live and think as you do. No one does. Not you. Not me. Not Vox Day. To the direct amount that you attempt to control the bodies, minds, and property of others you are an enemy to Liberty in all its forms.

That, by the way, is the problem with Conservatism. The past was a place that sucked in regards to Liberty. There is no reason to preserve that. Instead we should be striving to realize the radical truths of the Declaration of Independence, that all people are created equal, with equal inalienable rights. Not try and preserve the injustices and evils of the past because they gave us more power over others.
 
Well, millions of them were and did. More millions would have had he not been eliminated from contention relatively early. He got almost 30% in Iowa, remember. If he could have won Iowa, it would have been a different race. Of course a very different race.

As it was, even though by the time they were voting he had no chance, they still voted for him! That's remarkable -- how many votes did Jim Webb win in May primaries this year? And it's not because they agreed with him on everything -- conservatism is not libertarianism -- but they saw him as the best candidate in the field.

Ron stayed in longer than anyone besides Romney, obviously. Main Street had plenty of opportunities to vote for him and didn't.
 
The past was a place that sucked in regards to Liberty.
And Thus We See:

All people's political opinions -- all the political opinions you will ever encounter, during your entire life -- are based on what people think they know about history.
 
Ron stayed in longer than anyone besides Romney, obviously. Main Street had plenty of opportunities to vote for him and didn't.

That's what I'm saying: they did. By the hundreds of thousands and indeed millions. I'm only saying it because it's true. Everyone can look at the numbers himself.

We all would have preferred that they would have done so even more and, ultimately, that Ron Paul would have won. But what that really means in practical terms, what we're really saying, is that: we wish Ron Paul would have won Iowa. Iowa was where Ron Paul won or lost. Rand too, BTW. You can't really blame the conservative in Missouri or California for Ron Paul's loss. The fact that *any* of them voted for Ron Paul when he had completely, utterly lost and had no chance and was in last place shows you how highly they thought of him and how impressed they were by him. How many votes did Ben Carson get in Nevada this year?
 
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