Originally posted by: zendari
Originally posted by: Rainsford
Originally posted by: zendari
Basically leftwingers who know economics.
Or rightwingers who've read the constitution![]()
Well, if you call leftwingers' bypassing of the 2nd amendment and other "outdated" parts reading.
Originally posted by: Perknose
Libertarians have an almost infinite optimism in the wisdom and altruism of their fellow man, despite mountains of evidence to the contrary.
Scratch a libertarian and you will find a person whose ideology gleefully embraces the notion that such things as traffic lights are an unneccessary imposition of a dark and arbitrary facistic government power -- a tri-hued symbol of the dead hand of bureaucracy, if you will -- on the self sufficent yeoman spirit of the American individual.
Meanwhile, those of us stuck here on the endlessly messy and unnervingly uncategorizable miasma that is planet Earth, those of us who have lived here long enough to have actually tried to cross a busy intersection with a non-functioning traffic light put these earnest young ideologues in the same remainder bin with all the other angry, insistent ideologues -- communists, neocons, flat-earthers, Reaganites, dittoheads, neo-nazis, creationists -- and gladly if wearily accept a country where our meat is inspected.
Mention Hobbes to a libertarian and they will tell you Calvin was the real star of that comic strip, and mourn its short, brutal existence. Libertarians yearn for a return to a past that never was.
Originally posted by: Hayabusa Rider
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
I guess I am less interested in a word definition as what it is that makes them tick. What about traditional right and left causes them not really to fit, not that I really know what the left and right are. What do libertarians feel? That sort of thing if indeed that makes any sense. What are a libertarian's basic assumptions? How do they see the world...etc.
I took one of those political alignment tests, and it said I am a Liberal Libertarian. I don't know what that is, but let's run with it.
I view govt as a needed evil. There is nothing inherently evil about govt in the abstract, however the present administration shows why I do not trust it. Whoever wields the One Ring of governmental power must be watched closely. I therefore want a government who interferes minimally, however when it does so it needs to represent the interests of the people, and not just the favored.
I like social safety nets, however there are limits. Arguing that one is entitled to a monthly check when there is no need goes no where with me. On the other hand there are those who need a hand. I'll pay taxes to get people on their feet, to build roads, to do what needs to be done. I'll do so for the poor, the ailing, the elderly.
I don't like the idea of governments forcing people to think in the "favored" way. If people are ignorant, then so be it as long as they don't seek to use their free speech to incite violence. What good is free speech if the only speech allowed is what is popular? It has been said that a free country is one where it is safe to hold unpopular views, and that would be ones I disagree with.
It's sort of a golden rule. How would I want to be treated? What do I want out of a society? That is what I would have for others.
Does that make me a liberal libertarian? I have no idea. It's what seems right to me.
Originally posted by: zendari
Originally posted by: Rainsford
Originally posted by: zendari
Basically leftwingers who know economics.
Or rightwingers who've read the constitution![]()
Well, if you call leftwingers' bypassing of the 2nd amendment and other "outdated" parts reading.
Originally posted by: IdaGno
Naive.
Originally posted by: DonVito
Originally posted by: zendari
Well, if you call leftwingers' bypassing of the 2nd amendment and other "outdated" parts reading.
Hey Zendari:
When are you going to return to this thread???
"Libertarians believe the answer to America's political problems is the same commitment to freedom that earned America its greatness: a free-market economy and the abundance and prosperity it brings; a dedication to civil liberties and personal freedom that marks this country above all others; and a foreign policy of non-intervention, peace, and free trade as prescribed by America's founders."
Originally posted by: Perknose
Libertarians have an almost infinite optimism in the wisdom and altruism of their fellow man, despite mountains of evidence to the contrary.
Scratch a libertarian and you will find a person whose ideology gleefully embraces the notion that such things as traffic lights are an unneccessary imposition of a dark and arbitrary facistic government power -- a tri-hued symbol of the dead hand of bureaucracy, if you will -- on the self sufficent yeoman spirit of the American individual.
Meanwhile, those of us stuck here on the endlessly messy and unnervingly uncategorizable miasma that is planet Earth, those of us who have lived here long enough to have actually tried to cross a busy intersection with a non-functioning traffic light put these earnest young ideologues in the same remainder bin with all the other angry, insistent ideologues -- communists, neocons, flat-earthers, Reaganites, dittoheads, neo-nazis, creationists -- and gladly if wearily accept a country where our meat is inspected.
Mention Hobbes to a libertarian and they will tell you Calvin was the real star of that comic strip, and mourn its short, brutal existence. Libertarians yearn for a return to a past that never was.
Originally posted by: 3chordcharlie
Originally posted by: Perknose
Libertarians have an almost infinite optimism in the wisdom and altruism of their fellow man, despite mountains of evidence to the contrary.
Scratch a libertarian and you will find a person whose ideology gleefully embraces the notion that such things as traffic lights are an unneccessary imposition of a dark and arbitrary facistic government power -- a tri-hued symbol of the dead hand of bureaucracy, if you will -- on the self sufficent yeoman spirit of the American individual.
Meanwhile, those of us stuck here on the endlessly messy and unnervingly uncategorizable miasma that is planet Earth, those of us who have lived here long enough to have actually tried to cross a busy intersection with a non-functioning traffic light put these earnest young ideologues in the same remainder bin with all the other angry, insistent ideologues -- communists, neocons, flat-earthers, Reaganites, dittoheads, neo-nazis, creationists -- and gladly if wearily accept a country where our meat is inspected.
Mention Hobbes to a libertarian and they will tell you Calvin was the real star of that comic strip, and mourn its short, brutal existence. Libertarians yearn for a return to a past that never was.
You forgot 'solitary, poor, and nasty'. But well said![]()
Originally posted by: shortylickens
Impractical dream?
I suppose the Democrats and Republicans must be doing well in the real world.
(Insert annoying roll eyes icon here.)
Originally posted by: Worlocked
Originally posted by: zendari
Originally posted by: Rainsford
Originally posted by: zendari
Basically leftwingers who know economics.
Or rightwingers who've read the constitution![]()
Well, if you call leftwingers' bypassing of the 2nd amendment and other "outdated" parts reading.
What the hell? Are you trying to say Libertarians are FOR gun control?
http://www.lp.org/issues/gun-rights.shtml
Sorry, but no.
To OP: The LP webpage has all you need to know. It doesn't cover EVERYONE who is a libertarian, just as with any party, but you'll get a much better idea of what one is from there than the ignorant drivel that's being spewed in this thread.
EDIT: Or you could always just do some reading on the founding fathers of America. Particularly Thomas Jefferson.
Originally posted by: IdaGno
Naive.
:roll:
Originally posted by: Frackal
Yup, I'm surprised that so many of the pundits here are this unfamiliar with libertarianism
Originally posted by: Dissipate
Originally posted by: 3chordcharlie
Originally posted by: Perknose
Libertarians have an almost infinite optimism in the wisdom and altruism of their fellow man, despite mountains of evidence to the contrary.
Scratch a libertarian and you will find a person whose ideology gleefully embraces the notion that such things as traffic lights are an unneccessary imposition of a dark and arbitrary facistic government power -- a tri-hued symbol of the dead hand of bureaucracy, if you will -- on the self sufficent yeoman spirit of the American individual.
Meanwhile, those of us stuck here on the endlessly messy and unnervingly uncategorizable miasma that is planet Earth, those of us who have lived here long enough to have actually tried to cross a busy intersection with a non-functioning traffic light put these earnest young ideologues in the same remainder bin with all the other angry, insistent ideologues -- communists, neocons, flat-earthers, Reaganites, dittoheads, neo-nazis, creationists -- and gladly if wearily accept a country where our meat is inspected.
Mention Hobbes to a libertarian and they will tell you Calvin was the real star of that comic strip, and mourn its short, brutal existence. Libertarians yearn for a return to a past that never was.
You forgot 'solitary, poor, and nasty'. But well said![]()
It makes sense that you would call that huge blundering straw man 'well said.'
Originally posted by: Dissipate
Originally posted by: Frackal
Yup, I'm surprised that so many of the pundits here are this unfamiliar with libertarianism
I'm not. The intellectual sloth here is simply amazing.
Originally posted by: Dissipate
Here is an animated primer on libertarianism.
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
Originally posted by: Dissipate
Originally posted by: Frackal
Yup, I'm surprised that so many of the pundits here are this unfamiliar with libertarianism
I'm not. The intellectual sloth here is simply amazing.
Why surprised? I was merely interested, in passing, in the subject as a result of a discussion in another thread and thought I'd get others thoughts on this. And now what?, suddenly, because answers vary or conflict on a subject somewhat dear to you but to which the American people, judging by their vote for libertarian candidates, manifest clearly to all that they don't give a rats ass about libertarianism, that means, all of a sudden, that because some are not too well informed on the minutia of minuscule party that everybody is suddenly an unacquainted or ill informed intellectual sloth?
But then again, I am sure that the world's leading authorities on ingrown hair are equally tempted to laugh at the ordinary mortals lack of comprehension.
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
Originally posted by: Dissipate
Originally posted by: Frackal
Yup, I'm surprised that so many of the pundits here are this unfamiliar with libertarianism
I'm not. The intellectual sloth here is simply amazing.
Why surprised? I was merely interested, in passing, in the subject as a result of a discussion in another thread and thought I'd get others thoughts on this. And now what?, suddenly, because answers vary or conflict on a subject somewhat dear to you but to which the American people, judging by their vote for libertarian candidates, manifest clearly to all that they don't give a rats ass about libertarianism, that means, all of a sudden, that because some are not too well informed on the minutia of minuscule party that everybody is suddenly an unacquainted or ill informed intellectual sloth?
But then again, I am sure that the world's leading authorities on ingrown hair are equally tempted to laugh at the ordinary mortals lack of comprehension.
Originally posted by: hscorpio
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
Originally posted by: Dissipate
Originally posted by: Frackal
Yup, I'm surprised that so many of the pundits here are this unfamiliar with libertarianism
I'm not. The intellectual sloth here is simply amazing.
Why surprised? I was merely interested, in passing, in the subject as a result of a discussion in another thread and thought I'd get others thoughts on this. And now what?, suddenly, because answers vary or conflict on a subject somewhat dear to you but to which the American people, judging by their vote for libertarian candidates, manifest clearly to all that they don't give a rats ass about libertarianism, that means, all of a sudden, that because some are not too well informed on the minutia of minuscule party that everybody is suddenly an unacquainted or ill informed intellectual sloth?
But then again, I am sure that the world's leading authorities on ingrown hair are equally tempted to laugh at the ordinary mortals lack of comprehension.
The failure of the LP gives about as much insight into americans general attitude towards libertarianism as the failure of the green party does for our attitude towards the environment.
Originally posted by: Aelius
P.S. Last I checked the Libertarian Party in the US was the 3rd largest party in the country. Although last I checked was during the 2000 elections.
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
Originally posted by: Dissipate
Originally posted by: Frackal
Yup, I'm surprised that so many of the pundits here are this unfamiliar with libertarianism
I'm not. The intellectual sloth here is simply amazing.
Why surprised? I was merely interested, in passing, in the subject as a result of a discussion in another thread and thought I'd get others thoughts on this. And now what?, suddenly, because answers vary or conflict on a subject somewhat dear to you but to which the American people, judging by their vote for libertarian candidates, manifest clearly to all that they don't give a rats ass about libertarianism, that means, all of a sudden, that because some are not too well informed on the minutia of minuscule party that everybody is suddenly an unacquainted or ill informed intellectual sloth?
But then again, I am sure that the world's leading authorities on ingrown hair are equally tempted to laugh at the ordinary mortals lack of comprehension.