Originally posted by: Cerb
Originally posted by: Amused
Originally posted by: Cerb
Q]I don't support all of them, but unless they get a majority, that means little. The biggest boon getting several into offices could have would be to start trimming the scope of many agencies and laws. The full effect of the LP's goals would devolve into anarchy. However, getting most of the way there would be a good thing.
I think you are mistaken. The Libertarian ideal is far from anarchy. Was the US in a state of anarchy in it's first 100 years?
No, but it partly that level of freedom that led to the Civil War. With all the corporations and people with blinders on today, it won't work. I'm not saying it couldn't in 50 years (I desperately hope it can, as I'd like to see things get better before I croak!), and I think change needs to be done, but the way things are now, we would be in economic turmoil (I think it would be deserved, mind you, because of the corporate control allowed by the government). I'd welcome it--but the vast majority would rather be safe and sound, with a good Christian leader, rather than leaders who actually cared about the people for more than their future votes.
Realistically, it wouldn't work, however good it would be. You'd be taking people away from their safety nets. Moving the nation towards liberal ideals (look up liberal in a dictionary, for those of you who think mainstream Democrats are at all liberal) all but necessitates that those people with voting power become individualistic. That each person take full control of his or her life, with only enough strings attached to protect his neighbor from basic rights violations.