Ron Beats Rudy in NH?

[quote]BostonBarrister wrote:
Professor David Bernstein has some excellent advice for libertarians here:

http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2008_01_06-2008_01_12.shtml#1200092167

[i]More Ron Paul Fallout:

Sensible comments, with which I largely agree, from David Boaz of Cato ( http://www.cato-at-liberty.org/2008/01/11/ron-pauls-ugly-newsletters/ ), former VC contributor Jacob Levy ( Jacob T. Levy ), Prof. Steven Horwitz ( http://hnn.us/blogs/entries/46313.html ), Prof. Glen Whitman ( Agoraphilia: The Libertarian Small Sample Problem ), “Rightwatch” ( http://rightwatch.tblog.com/ ), and Tim Sandefur ( Freespace: The libertarian repudiation of Pauline Paleoconservatism ).

The consensus is, basically, that libertarianism needs to more aggressively disassociate itself from right-wing fringe loonies who use libertarianism as a mask to disguise other agendas, or who support libertarianism only because they adhere to some bizarre conspiracy theory or other involving the federal government. Those of us who long ago (as I did) made a decision not to associate with the creepy-paleocons-disguising themselves-as-libertarians in the Lew Rockwell circle–Rockwell being, among other things, the primary suspect as the author of the offensive passages in Ron Paul’s newsletters, though he denied it to the New Republic’s James Kirchik–need to exert peer pressure on our libertarian friends to follow suit.

Speaking of which, why would otherwise respectable libertarians such as Doug Bandow and Alan Bock write for, and allow themselves to be listed as columnists for, Justin Raimondo’s Antiwar.com? Raimondo, one might recall, is best-known for such illuminating commentary ( The Franklin Affair:A Spreading Treason - Antiwar.com Original ) as, “If we observe how we were lied into war with Iraq, and by whom, the whole affair looks more like an Israeli covert operation by the day” (and read the whole thing, not to mention his bizarre book ( http://www.amazon.com/Terror-Enigma-11-Israeli-Connection/dp/0595296823/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1200092048&sr=8-1 ), to get the full flavor). Perhaps it’s not just elements of the Left that became unhinged by the Iraq War.[/i] [/quote]

Boston, this is really good stuff - and really important. Just as libertarianism begins gaining some traction - a presidential candidate making the stage for the GOP - its momentum gets jerked into the ditch by right-wing, race war paranoiacs.

Some commentator made a good point a few days ago (I forget who): there are people who are libertarians, and there are people who hate/fear/loathe the federal government as their lodestar principle. They are not the same - while both, on paper, like the idea of smaller government, they have entirely different agendas. And we should never lose sight of that crucial distinction.

More desperation from the Lew Rockwell division of excuse making, trying to unring the bell:

[i]A New Conspiracy Theory from the Mises Institute Crowd:

Prof. Thomas DiLorenzo at LewRockwell.com argues that the Ron Paul newsletter scandal was the result of a plot by “beltway libertarians” headquartered at the Cato Institute (where, full disclosure, I am an adjunct fellow, and which is co-publishing my next book), and encouraged by the Kansas-based Koch family (major donors to libertarian causes) to discredit Ron Paul. Here’s the kicker: “The author [of the New Republic piece detailing the newsletters’ outrageous statements] claims to have retrieved the newsletters from the University of Kansas library, the university where Charles Koch, CATO funder, is a major patron. How on earth would a kid just out of college know to go to a library in Kansas, of all places, to dig up such stuff?”

Well, one theory is that Charles Koch and the leaders of the Cato Institute forwarded the newsletters, or at least the information on where to find them, to the New Republic at the precise right moment to discredit Ron Paul. A rather simpler theory is that James Kirchick, author of the TNR piece, simply went to a well-known Internet database called Worldcat, which tells you which libraries hold which books and periodicals. When I type “Ron Paul” into Worldcat’s “Title” tab, I find that the University of Kansas is the only library reported to hold Dr. Ron Paul’s Special Report (see for yourself) and one of five libraries to hold Ron Paul’s Freedom Report. Several other Ron Paul newsletters are held only by the Wisconsin Historical Society. Even “kids just out of college” often know how to use the Internet, I believe.

Lo and behold, James Kirchick, author of the TNR piece, reported that “finding the pre-1999 newsletters was no easy task, but I was able to track many of them down at the libraries of the University of Kansas and the Wisconsin Historical Society.”

Funny? Pathetic? Both?[/i]

http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2008_01_06-2008_01_12.shtml#1200185008

It’s always a conspiracy…

[quote]thunderbolt23 wrote:

It’s always a conspiracy…[/quote]

What else would you call it when people act together to further their agenda, in this case to discredit a political enemy?

[quote]JeffR wrote:
Mick28 wrote:
Sloth wrote:
Mick28 wrote:

Maybe I write in “Sloth”.

:wink:

Nice! The first member of my new Grassroots movement.

And I promise not to act crazy and vote 50 times in online polls.

Mick,

Don’t promise that in advance.

Remember, if you spam enough sites, fleece the angry, young male, you might (barely) be able to squeeze yourself into a Fox debate.

However, I urge you to part ways with ron paul when you actually get on the stage. Pleasue use YOUR podium time to improve your standing.

JeffR

[/quote]

No worries JeffR. I’ve already dropped my support for the man, though not many of the positions he ran on. Besides, I could’ve done worse. Like, support Rudy.

[quote]Varqanir wrote:

What else would you call it when people act together to further their agenda, in this case to discredit a political enemy?[/quote]

An agreement to perform together an illegal, wrongful, or subversive act.

What is wrongful about doing “due diligence” in an interview for the most powerful job in the world?

Read the post above. DiLorenzo whines that “pretend libertarians” cooked up some secret plan to bring down Ron Paul by unearthing “secret” information on Paul and supplying it to someone else so as to keep the “pretend libertarians” out of the muck of the criticism.

As the law professor points out, any fool with access to WorldCat can locate the damning documents. No secret plan, no cabal.

Ron Paul has trafficked in some nasty, nasty stuff - but apparently, his supporters think no one should point that out or examine him critically. What is funny is that Paul has not pulled any punches in his criticism of his political enemies - why doesn’t he deserve the same savaging? Paul’s supporters never seem to explain this double standard. But then, they don’t actually like the rigors of political debate and the thick skin required for it - they enjoy the “dish”…the “take”, not so much.

Look, the guy is an embarrassment. He is coming apart like a cheap coat in the rain, Varq. And that is the problem with conspiracy theories - they are fantasies designed to keep their believers from having to face the real world - in this case, a deeply flawed and very fringe candidate who has sullied the libertarian cause.

A bright public light has been shined under the rocks lifted up at the Church of Lew Rockwell and Ron Paul - and it ain’t pretty.

[quote]thunderbolt23 wrote:
LIFTICVSMAXIMVS wrote:

Semantics, indeed. We could argue about this all day but as you stated why would we waste our time. Let’s just agree to disagree.

See, there is your problem - it isn’t available for disagreement. Relativism, as you state it, refutes itself. The simple example refutes your claim, and you have offered no means of saving it.
[/quote]

So when the State executes someone that isn’t an example of relative morality? Life isn’t an absolute right if the State can legally take it from you nor is liberty an absolute right if the State can also take it from you.

[i][center]Myth and Truth About Libertarianism

by Murray N. Rothbard[/center]

Myths

  1. Libertarians believe that each individual is an isolated, hermetically sealed atom, acting in a vacuum without influencing each other.
  2. Libertarians are libertines: they are hedonists who hanker after “alternative lifestyles.”
  3. Libertarians do not believe in moral principles; they limit themselves to cost-benefit analysis on the assumption that man is always rational.
  4. Libertarianism is atheistic and materialist, and neglects the spiritual side of life.
  5. Libertarians are utopians who believe that all people are good, and that therefore state control is not necessary.
  6. Libertarians believe that every person knows his own interests best.

Libertarianism is the fastest growing political creed in America today. Before judging and evaluating libertarianism, it is vitally important to find out precisely what that doctrine is, and, more particularly, what it is not. It is especially important to clear up a number of misconceptions about libertarianism that are held by most people, and particularly by conservatives. In this essay I shall enumerate and critically analyze the most common myths that are held about libertarianism. When these are cleared away, people will then be able to discuss libertarianism free of egregious myths and misconceptions, and to deal with it as it should be on its very own merits or demerits.

Myth #1: Libertarians believe that each individual is an isolated, hermetically sealed atom, acting in a vacuum without influencing each other.

This is a common charge, but a highly puzzling one. In a lifetime of reading libertarian and classical liberal literature, I have not come across a single theorist or writer who holds anything like this position.

The only possible exception is the fanatical Max Stirner, a mid-19th-century German individualist who, however, has had minimal influence upon libertarianism in his time and since. Moreover, Stirner’s explicit “Might Makes Right” philosophy and his repudiation of all moral principles including individual rights as “spooks in the head,” scarcely qualifies him as a libertarian in any sense. Apart from Stirner, however, there is no body of opinion even remotely resembling this common indictment.

Libertarians are methodological and political individualists, to be sure. They believe that only individuals think, value, act, and choose. They believe that each individual has the right to own his own body, free of coercive interference. But no individualist denies that people are influencing each other all the time in their goals, values, pursuits and occupations.

As F.A. Hayek pointed out in his notable article, “The Non-Sequitur of the ‘Dependence Effect,’” John Kenneth Galbraith’s assault upon free-market economics in his best-selling The Affluent Society rested on this proposition: economics assumes that every individual arrives at his scale of values totally on his own, without being subject to influence by anyone else. On the contrary, as Hayek replied, everyone knows that most people do not originate their own values, but are influenced to adopt them by other people.[1]

No individualist or libertarian denies that people influence each other all the time, and surely there is nothing wrong with this inevitable process. What libertarians are opposed to is not voluntary persuasion, but the coercive imposition of values by the use of force and police power. Libertarians are in no way opposed to the voluntary cooperation and collaboration between individuals: only to the compulsory pseudo-“cooperation” imposed by the state.

Myth #2: Libertarians are libertines: they are hedonists who hanker after “alternative lifestyles.”

This myth has recently been propounded by Irving Kristol, who identifies the libertarian ethic with the “hedonistic” and asserts that libertarians “worship the Sears Roebuck catalogue and all the ‘alternative life styles’ that capitalist affluence permits the individual to choose from.”[2]

The fact is that libertarianism is not and does not pretend to be a complete moral or aesthetic theory; it is only a political theory, that is, the important subset of moral theory that deals with the proper role of violence in social life.

Political theory deals with what is proper or improper for government to do, and government is distinguished from every other group in society as being the institution of organized violence. Libertarianism holds that the only proper role of violence is to defend person and property against violence, that any use of violence that goes beyond such just defense is itself aggressive, unjust, and criminal. Libertarianism, therefore, is a theory which states that everyone should be free of violent invasion, should be free to do as he sees fit, except invade the person or property of another. What a person does with his or her life is vital and important, but is simply irrelevant to libertarianism.

It should not be surprising, therefore, that there are libertarians who are indeed hedonists and devotees of alternative lifestyles, and that there are also libertarians who are firm adherents of “bourgeois” conventional or religious morality. There are libertarian libertines and there are libertarians who cleave firmly to the disciplines of natural or religious law. There are other libertarians who have no moral theory at all apart from the imperative of non-violation of rights. That is because libertarianism per se has no general or personal moral theory.

Libertarianism does not offer a way of life; it offers liberty, so that each person is free to adopt and act upon his own values and moral principles. Libertarians agree with Lord Acton that “liberty is the highest political end” �?? not necessarily the highest end on everyone’s personal scale of values.

There is no question about the fact, however, that the subset of libertarians who are free-market economists tends to be delighted when the free market leads to a wider range of choices for consumers, and thereby raises their standard of living. Unquestionably, the idea that prosperity is better than grinding poverty is a moral proposition, and it ventures into the realm of general moral theory, but it is still not a proposition for which I should wish to apologize.

Myth #3: Libertarians do not believe in moral principles; they limit themselves to cost-benefit analysis on the assumption that man is always rational.

This myth is of course related to the preceding charge of hedonism, and some of it can be answered in the same way. There are indeed libertarians, particularly Chicago-school economists, who refuse to believe that liberty and individual rights are moral principles, and instead attempt to arrive at public policy by weighing alleged social costs and benefits.

In the first place, most libertarians are “subjectivists” in economics, that is, they believe that the utilities and costs of different individuals cannot be added or measured. Hence, the very concept of social costs and benefits is illegitimate. But, more importantly, most libertarians rest their case on moral principles, on a belief in the natural rights of every individual to his person or property. They therefore believe in the absolute immorality of aggressive violence, of invasion of those rights to person or property, regardless of which person or group commits such violence.

Far from being immoral, libertarians simply apply a universal human ethic to government in the same way as almost everyone would apply such an ethic to every other person or institution in society. In particular, as I have noted earlier, libertarianism as a political philosophy dealing with the proper role of violence takes the universal ethic that most of us hold toward violence and applies it fearlessly to government.

Libertarians make no exceptions to the golden rule and provide no moral loophole, no double standard, for government. That is, libertarians believe that murder is murder and does not become sanctified by reasons of state if committed by the government. We believe that theft is theft and does not become legitimated because organized robbers call their theft “taxation.” We believe that enslavement is enslavement even if the institution committing that act calls it “conscription.” In short, the key to libertarian theory is that it makes no exceptions in its universal ethic for government.

Hence, far from being indifferent or hostile to moral principles, libertarians fulfill them by being the only group willing to extend those principles across the board to government itself.[3]

It is true that libertarians would allow each individual to choose his values and to act upon them, and would in short accord every person the right to be either moral or immoral as he saw fit. Libertarianism is strongly opposed to enforcing any moral creed on any person or group by the use of violence �?? except, of course, the moral prohibition against aggressive violence itself. But we must realize that no action can be considered virtuous unless it is undertaken freely, by a person’s voluntary consent.

As Frank Meyer pointed out:

Men cannot be forced to be free, nor can they even be forced to be virtuous. To a certain extent, it is true, they can be forced to act as though they were virtuous. But virtue is the fruit of well-used freedom. And no act to the degree that it is coerced can partake of virtue �?? or of vice.[4]

If a person is forced by violence or the threat thereof to perform a certain action, then it can no longer be a moral choice on his part. The morality of an action can stem only from its being freely adopted; an action can scarcely be called moral if someone is compelled to perform it at gunpoint.

Compelling moral actions or outlawing immoral actions, therefore, cannot be said to foster the spread of morality or virtue. On the contrary, coercion atrophies morality for it takes away from the individual the freedom to be either moral or immoral, and therefore forcibly deprives people of the chance to be moral. Paradoxically, then, a compulsory morality robs us of the very opportunity to be moral.

It is furthermore particularly grotesque to place the guardianship of morality in the hands of the state apparatus �?? that is, none other than the organization of policemen, guards, and soldiers. Placing the state in charge of moral principles is equivalent to putting the proverbial fox in charge of the chicken coop.

Whatever else we may say about them, the wielders of organized violence in society have never been distinguished by their high moral tone or by the precision with which they uphold moral principle.

Myth #4: Libertarianism is atheistic and materialist, and neglects the spiritual side of life.

There is no necessary connection between being for or against libertarianism and one’s position on religion. It is true that many if not most libertarians at the present time are atheists, but this correlates with the fact that most intellectuals, of most political persuasions, are atheists as well.

There are many libertarians who are theists, Jewish or Christian. Among the classical liberal forebears of modern libertarianism in a more religious age there were a myriad of Christians: from John Lilburne, Roger Williams, Anne Hutchinson, and John Locke in the seventeenth century, down to Cobden and Bright, Frédéric Bastiat and the French laissez-faire liberals, and the great Lord Acton.

Libertarians believe that liberty is a natural right embedded in a natural law of what is proper for mankind, in accordance with man’s nature. Where this set of natural laws comes from, whether it is purely natural or originated by a creator, is an important ontological question but is irrelevant to social or political philosophy.

As Father Thomas Davitt declares: “If the word ‘natural’ means anything at all, it refers to the nature of a man, and when used with ‘law,’ ‘natural’ must refer to an ordering that is manifested in the inclinations of a man’s nature and to nothing else. Hence, taken in itself, there is nothing religious or theological in the ‘Natural Law’ of Aquinas.”[5]

Or, as D’Entrèves writes of the seventeenth century Dutch Protestant jurist Hugo Grotius:

[Grotius's] definition of natural law has nothing revolutionary. When he maintains that natural law is that body of rule which Man is able to discover by the use of his reason, he does nothing but restate the Scholastic notion of a rational foundation of ethics. Indeed, his aim is rather to restore that notion which had been shaken by the extreme Augustinianism of certain Protestant currents of thought. When he declares that these rules are valid in themselves, independently of the fact that God willed them, he repeats an assertion which had already been made by some of the schoolmen�?�[6]

Libertarianism has been accused of ignoring man’s spiritual nature. But one can easily arrive at libertarianism from a religious or Christian position: emphasizing the importance of the individual, of his freedom of will, of natural rights and private property. Yet one can also arrive at all these self-same positions by a secular, natural-law approach, through a belief that man can arrive at a rational apprehension of the natural law.

Historically, furthermore, it is not at all clear that religion is a firmer footing than secular natural law for libertarian conclusions. As Karl Wittfogel reminded us in his Oriental Despotism, the union of throne and altar has been used for centuries to fasten a reign of despotism on society.[7]

Historically, the union of church and state has been in many instances a mutually reinforcing coalition for tyranny. The state used the church to sanctify and preach obedience to its supposedly divinely sanctioned rule; the church used the state to gain income and privilege.

The Anabaptists collectivized and tyrannized Münster in the name of the Christian religion.[8]

And, closer to our century, Christian socialism and the social gospel have played a major role in the drive toward statism, and the apologetic role of the Orthodox Church in Soviet Russia has been all too clear. Some Catholic bishops in Latin America have even proclaimed that the only route to the kingdom of heaven is through Marxism, and if I wished to be nasty, I could point out that the Reverend Jim Jones, in addition to being a Leninist, also proclaimed himself the reincarnation of Jesus.

Moreover, now that socialism has manifestly failed, politically and economically, socialists have fallen back on the “moral” and the “spiritual” as the final argument for their cause. Socialist Robert Heilbroner, in arguing that socialism will have to be coercive and will have to impose a “collective morality” upon the public, opines that: “Bourgeois culture is focused on the material achievement of the individual. Socialist culture must focus on his or her moral or spiritual achievement.”

The intriguing point is that this position of Heilbroner’s was hailed by the conservative religious writer for National Review, Dale Vree. He writes:

Heilbroner is �?� saying what many contributors to NR have said over the last quarter-century: you can't have both freedom and virtue. Take note, traditionalists. Despite his dissonant terminology, Heilbroner is interested in the same thing you're interested in: virtue.[9]

Vree is also fascinated with the Heilbroner view that a socialist culture must “foster the primacy of the collectivity” rather than the “primacy of the individual.” He quotes Heilbroner’s contrasting “moral or spiritual” achievement under socialism as against bourgeois “material” achievement, and adds correctly: “There is a traditional ring to that statement.”

Vree goes on to applaud Heilbroner’s attack on capitalism because it has “no sense of ‘the good’” and permits “consenting adults” to do anything they please. In contrast to this picture of freedom and permitted diversity, Vree writes that “Heilbroner says alluringly, because a socialist society must have a sense of ‘the good,’ not everything will be permitted.” To Vree, it is impossible “to have economic collectivism along with cultural individualism,” and so he is inclined to lean toward a new “socialist-traditionalist fusionism” �?? toward collectivism across the board.

We may note here that socialism becomes especially despotic when it replaces “economic” or “material” incentives by allegedly “moral” or “spiritual” ones, when it affects to promoting an indefinable “quality of life” rather than economic prosperity.

When payment is adjusted to productivity there is considerably more freedom as well as higher standards of living. For when reliance is placed solely on altruistic devotion to the socialist motherland, the devotion has to be regularly reinforced by the knout. An increasing stress on individual material incentive means ineluctably a greater stress on private property and keeping what one earns, and brings with it considerably more personal freedom, as witness Yugoslavia in the last three decades in contrast to Soviet Russia.

The most horrifying despotism on the face of the earth in recent years was undoubtedly Pol Pot’s Cambodia, in which “materialism” was so far obliterated that money was abolished by the regime. With money and private property abolished, each individual was totally dependent on handouts of rationed subsistence from the state, and life was a sheer hell. We should be careful before we sneer at “merely material” goals or incentives.

The charge of “materialism” directed against the free market ignores the fact that every human action whatsoever involves the transformation of material objects by the use of human energy and in accordance with ideas and purposes held by the actors. It is impermissible to separate the “mental” or “spiritual” from the “material.”

All great works of art, great emanations of the human spirit, have had to employ material objects: whether they be canvasses, brushes and paint, paper and musical instruments, or building blocks and raw materials for churches. There is no real rift between the “spiritual” and the “material” and hence any despotism over and crippling of the material will cripple the spiritual as well.

Myth #5: Libertarians are utopians who believe that all people are good, and that therefore state control is not necessary.

Conservatives tend to add that since human nature is either partially or wholly evil, strong state regulation is therefore necessary for society.

This is a very common belief about libertarians, yet it is difficult to know the source of this misconception. Rousseau, the locus classicus of the idea that man is good but is corrupted by his institutions, was scarcely a libertarian. Apart from the romantic writings of a few anarcho-communists, whom I would not consider libertarians in any case, I know of no libertarian or classical liberal writers who have held this view.

On the contrary, most libertarian writers hold that man is a mixture of good and evil and therefore that it is important for social institutions to encourage the good and discourage the bad. The state is the only social institution which is able to extract its income and wealth by coercion; all others must obtain revenue either by selling a product or service to customers or by receiving voluntary gifts. And the state is the only institution which can use the revenue from this organized theft to presume to control and regulate people’s lives and property. Hence, the institution of the state establishes a socially legitimatized and sanctified channel for bad people to do bad things, to commit regularized theft and to wield dictatorial power.

Statism therefore encourages the bad, or at least the criminal elements of human nature. As Frank H. Knight trenchantly put it: “The probability of the people in power being individuals who would dislike the possession and exercise of power is on a level with the probability that an extremely tenderhearted person would get the job of whipping master in a slave plantation.”[10]

A free society, by not establishing such a legitimated channel for theft and tyranny, discourages the criminal tendencies of human nature and encourages the peaceful and the voluntary. Liberty and the free market discourage aggression and compulsion, and encourage the harmony and mutual benefit of voluntary interpersonal exchanges, economic, social, and cultural.

Since a system of liberty would encourage the voluntary and discourage the criminal, and would remove the only legitimated channel for crime and aggression, we could expect that a free society would indeed suffer less from violent crime and aggression than we do now, though there is no warrant for assuming that they would disappear completely. That is not utopianism, but a common-sense implication of the change in what is considered socially legitimate, and in the reward-and-penalty structure in society.

We can approach our thesis from another angle. If all men were good and none had criminal tendencies, then there would indeed be no need for a state, as conservatives concede. But if on the other hand all men were evil, then the case for the state is just as shaky, since why should anyone assume that those men who form the government and obtain all the guns and the power to coerce others, should be magically exempt from the badness of all the other persons outside the government?

Tom Paine, a classical libertarian often considered to be naïvely optimistic about human nature, rebutted the conservative evil-human-nature argument for a strong state as follows: “If all human nature be corrupt, it is needless to strengthen the corruption by establishing a succession of kings, who be they ever so base, are still to be obeyed�?�” Paine added that “NO man since the fall hath ever been equal to the trust of being given power over all.”[11]

And as the libertarian F.A. Harper once wrote:

Still using the same principle that political rulership should be employed to the extent of the evil in man, we would then have a society in which complete political rulership of all the affairs of everybody would be called for�?�. One man would rule all. But who would serve as the dictator? However he were to be selected and affixed to the political throne, he would surely be a totally evil person, since all men are evil. And this society would then be ruled by a totally evil dictator possessed of total political power. And how, in the name of logic, could anything short of total evil be its consequence? How could it be better than having no political rulership at all in that society?[12]

Finally, since, as we have seen, men are actually a mixture of good and evil, a regime of liberty serves to encourage the good and discourage the bad, at least in the sense that the voluntary and mutually beneficial are good and the criminal is bad. In no theory of human nature, then, whether it be goodness, badness, or a mixture of the two, can statism be justified.

In the course of denying the notion that he is a conservative, the classical liberal F.A. Hayek pointed out: “The main merit of individualism [which Adam Smith and his contemporaries advocated] is that it is a system under which bad men can do least harm. It is a social system which does not depend for its functioning on our finding good men for running it, or on all men becoming better than they now are, but which makes use of men in all their given variety and complexity�?�”[13]

It is important to note what differentiates libertarians from utopians in the pejorative sense. Libertarianism does not set out to remold human nature. One of socialism’s major goals is to create, which in practice means by totalitarian methods, a New Socialist Man, an individual whose major goal will be to work diligently and altruistically for the collective.

Libertarianism is a political philosophy which says: Given any existent human nature, liberty is the only moral and the most effective political system.

Obviously, libertarianism �?? as well as any other social system �?? will work better the more individuals are peaceful and the less they are criminal or aggressive. And libertarians, along with most other people, would like to attain a world where more individuals are “good” and fewer are criminals. But this is not the doctrine of libertarianism per se, which says that whatever the mix of man’s nature may be at any given time, liberty is best.

Myth #6: Libertarians believe that every person knows his own interests best.

Just as the preceding charge holds that libertarians believe all men to be perfectly good, so this myth charges them with believing that everyone is perfectly wise. Yet, it is then maintained, this is not true of many people, and therefore the state must intervene.

But the libertarian no more assumes perfect wisdom than he postulates perfect goodness. There is a certain common sense in holding that most men are better apprised of their own needs and goals then is anyone else. But there is no assumption that everyone always knows his own interest best. Libertarianism rather asserts that everyone should have the right to pursue his own interest as he deems best. What is being asserted is the right to act with one’s own person and property, and not the necessary wisdom of such action.

It is also true, however, that the free market �?? in contrast to government �?? has built-in mechanisms to enable people to turn freely to experts who can give sound advice on how to pursue one’s interests best. As we have seen earlier, free individuals are not hermetically sealed from one another. For on the free market, any individual, if in doubt about what his own true interests may be, is free to hire or consult experts to give him advice based on their possibly superior knowledge. The individual may hire such experts and, on the free market, can continuously test their soundness and helpfulness.

Individuals on the market, therefore, tend to patronize those experts whose advice will prove most successful. Good doctors, lawyers, or architects will reap rewards on the free market, while poor ones will tend to fare badly. But when government intervenes, the government expert acquires his revenue by compulsory levy upon the taxpayers. There is no market test of his success in advising people of their own true interests. He only need have ability in acquiring the political support of the state’s machinery of coercion.

Thus, the privately hired expert will tend to flourish in proportion to his ability, whereas the government expert will flourish in proportion to his success in currying political favor. Moreover, the government expert will be no more virtuous than the private one; his only superiority will be in gaining the favor of those who wield political force. But a crucial difference between the two is that the privately hired expert has every pecuniary incentive to care about his clients or patients, and to do his best by them. But the government expert has no such incentive; he obtains his revenue in any case. Hence, the individual consumer will tend to fare better on the free market.

Conclusion

I hope that this essay has contributed to clearing away the rubble of myth and misconception about libertarianism. Conservatives and everyone else should politely be put on notice that libertarians do not believe that everyone is good, nor that everyone is an all-wise expert on his own interest, nor that every individual is an isolated and hermetically sealed atom. Libertarians are not necessarily libertines or hedonists, nor are they necessarily atheists; and libertarians emphatically do believe in moral principles.

Let each of us now proceed to an examination of libertarianism as it really is, unencumbered by myth or legend. Let us look at liberty plain, without fear or favor. I am confident that, were this to be done, libertarianism would enjoy an impressive rise in the number of its followers.

Notes

[1] John Kenneth Galbraith, The Affluent Society (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1958); F.A. Hayek, “The Non-Sequitur of the ‘Dependence Effect,’” Southern Economic Journal (April, 1961), pp. 346�??48.

[2] Irving Kristol, “No Cheers for the Profit Motive,” Wall Street Journal (Feb. 21, 1979).

[3] For a call for applying universal ethical standards to government, see Pitirim A. Sorokin and Walter A. Lunden, Power and Morality: Who Shall Guard the Guardians? (Boston: Porter Sargent, 1959), pp. 16�??30.

[4] Frank S. Meyer, In Defense of Freedom: A Conservative Credo (Chicago: Henry Regnery, 1962), p. 66.

[5] Thomas E. Davitt, S.J., “St. Thomas Aquinas and the Natural Law,” in Arthur L. Harding, ed., Origins of the Natural Law Tradition (Dallas, Tex.: Southern Methodist University Press, 1954), p. 39.

[6] A.P. d’Entrèves, Natural Law (London: Hutchinson University Library, 1951). pp. 51�??52.

[7] Karl Wittfogel, Oriental Despotism (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1957), esp. pp. 87�??100.

[8] On this and other totalitarian Christian sects, see Norman Cohn, Pursuit of the Millennium (Fairlawn, N.J.: Essential Books, 1957).

[9] Dale Vree, “Against Socialist Fusionism,” National Review (December 8, 1978), p. 1547. Heilbroner’s article was in Dissent, Summer 1978. For more on the Vree article, see Murray N. Rothbard, “Statism, Left, Right, and Center,” Libertarian Review (January 1979), pp. 14�??15.

[10] Journal of Politica1 Economy (December 1938), p. 869. Quoted in Friedrich A. Hayek, The Road to Serfdom (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1944), p. 152.

[11] “The Forester’s Letters, III” (orig. in Pennsylvania Journal, Apr. 24, 1776), in The Writings of Thomas Paine (ed. M. D. Conway, New York: G. E Putnam’s Sons, 1906), I, 149�??150.

[12] F.A. Harper, “Try This On Your Friends,” Faith and Freedom (January, 1955). p. 19.

[13] F.A. Hayek, Individualism and Economic Order (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1948), reemphasized in the course of his “Why I am Not a Conservative,” The Constitution of Liberty (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1960), p. 529.

Murray N. Rothbard (1926�??1995) was the author of Man, Economy, and State, Conceived in Liberty, What Has Government Done to Our Money, For a New Liberty, The Case Against the Fed, and many other books and articles. He was also the editor �?? with Lew Rockwell �?? of The Rothbard-Rockwell Report.

Austin, TX NAACP Chairman Defends Ron Paul

http://www.prisonplanet.com/articles/january2008/011308_not_racist.htm

Audio Interview with Alex Jones

http://prisonplanet.com/audio/130108linder.mp3

Far be it for me to stoke the failing embers of the shamed and worthless Ron Paul campaign - Paul came in third in MI in demographic of “Republicans strongly opposed to the war”, how embarrassing - but now we have more updates on the series of shameful letters published under his name. Turns out some sources are fingering none other than Lew Rockwell as the author:

[i]Ron Paul doesn’t seem to know much about his own newsletters. The libertarian-leaning presidential candidate says he was unaware, in the late 1980s and early 1990s, of the bigoted rhetoric about African Americans and gays that was appearing under his name. He told CNN last week that he still has “no idea” who might have written inflammatory comments such as "Order was only restored in L.A. when it came time for the blacks to pick up their welfare checks"�??statements he now repudiates. Yet in interviews with reason, a half-dozen longtime libertarian activists�??including some still close to Paul�??all named the same man as Paul’s chief ghostwriter: Ludwig von Mises Institute founder Llewellyn Rockwell, Jr.

Financial records from 1985 and 2001 show that Rockwell, Paul’s congressional chief of staff from 1978 to 1982, was a vice president of Ron Paul & Associates, the corporation that published the Ron Paul Political Report and the Ron Paul Survival Report. The company was dissolved in 2001. During the period when the most incendiary items appeared�??roughly 1989 to 1994�??Rockwell and the prominent libertarian theorist Murray Rothbard championed an open strategy of exploiting racial and class resentment to build a coalition with populist “paleoconservatives,” producing a flurry of articles and manifestos whose racially charged talking points and vocabulary mirrored the controversial Paul newsletters recently unearthed by The New Republic. To this day Rockwell remains a friend and advisor to Paul�??accompanying him to major media appearances; promoting his candidacy on the LewRockwell.com blog; publishing his books; and peddling an array of the avuncular Texas congressman’s recent writings and audio recordings.

Rockwell has denied responsibility for the newsletters’ contents to The New Republic’s Jamie Kirchick. Rockwell twice declined to discuss the matter with reason, maintaining this week that he had “nothing to say.” He has characterized discussion of the newsletters as “hysterical smears aimed at political enemies” of The New Republic. Paul himself called the controversy “old news” and “ancient history” when we reached him last week, and he has not responded to further request for comment.

But a source close to the Paul presidential campaign told reason that Rockwell authored much of the content of the Political Report and Survival Report. “If Rockwell had any honor he’d come out and I say, �??I wrote this stuff,'” said the source, who asked not to be named because Paul remains friendly with Rockwell and is reluctant to assign responsibility for the letters. “He should have done it 10 years ago.”

Rockwell was publicly named as Paul’s ghostwriter as far back as a 1988 issue of the now-defunct movement monthly American Libertarian. “This was based on my understanding at the time that Lew would write things that appeared in Ron’s various newsletters,” former AL editor Mike Holmes told reason. “Neither Ron nor Lew ever told me that, but other people close to them such as Murray Rothbard suggested that Lew was involved, and it was a common belief in libertarian circles.”

Individualist-feminist Wendy McElroy, who on her blog characterized the author as an associate of hers for many years, called the ghostwriter’s identity “an open secret within the circles in which I run.” Though she declined to name names either on her blog or when contacted by reason, she later approvingly cited a post naming Rockwell at the anonymous blog RightWatch.

Timothy Wirkman Virkkala, formerly the managing editor of the libertarian magazine Liberty, told reason that the names behind the Political Report were widely known in his magazine’s offices as well, because Liberty’s late editor-in-chief, Bill Bradford, had discussed the newsletters with the principals, and then with his staff. “I understood that Burton S. Blumert was the moneybags that got all this started, that he was the publisher,” Virkkala said. “Lew Rockwell, editor and chief writer; Jeff Tucker, assistant, probably a writer; Murray Rothbard, cheering from the sidelines, probably ghosting now and then.” (Virkkala has offered his own reaction to the controversy at his Web site.) Blumert, Paul’s 1988 campaign chairman and a private supporter this year, did not respond to a request for an interview; Rothbard died in 1995. We reached Tucker, now editorial vice president of Rockwell’s Mises.org, at his office, and were told: “I just really am not going to make a statement, I’m sorry. I’ll take all responsibility for being the editor of Mises.org, OK?”

The early 1990s writings became liabilities for Paul long before last week’s New Republic story. Back in 1996, Paul narrowly eked out a congressional victory over Democrat Lefty Morris, who made the newsletters one of his main campaign issues, damning them both for their racial content and for their advocacy of drug legalization. At the time, Paul defended the statements that appeared under his name, claiming that they expressed his “philosophical differences” with Democrats and had been “taken out of context.” He finally disavowed them in a 2001 interview with Texas Monthly, explaining that his campaign staff had convinced him at the time that it would be too “confusing” to attribute them to a ghostwriter.

Besides Ron Paul and Lew Rockwell, the officers of Ron Paul & Associates included Paul’s wife Carol, Paul’s daughter Lori Pyeatt, Paul staffer Penny Langford-Freeman, and longtime campaign manager Mark Elam (who has managed every Paul congressional campaign since 1996 and is currently the Texas coordinator for the presidential run), according to tax records from 1993 and 2001. Langford-Freeman did not respond to interview requests as of press time. Elam, president of M&M Graphics and Advertising, confirmed to reason that his company printed the newsletters, but said that the texts reached him as finished products.

The publishing operation was lucrative. A tax document from June 1993�??wrapping up the year in which the Political Report had published the “welfare checks” comment on the L.A. riots�??reported an annual income of $940,000 for Ron Paul & Associates, listing four employees in Texas (Paul’s family and Rockwell) and seven more employees around the country. If Paul didn’t know who was writing his newsletters, he knew they were a crucial source of income and a successful tool for building his fundraising base for a political comeback.

The tenor of Paul’s newsletters changed over the years. The ones published between Paul’s return to private life after three full terms in congress (1985) and his Libertarian presidential bid (1988) notably lack inflammatory racial or anti-gay comments. The letters published between Paul’s first run for president and his return to Congress in 1996 are another story�??replete with claims that Martin Luther King “seduced underage girls and boys,” that black protesters should gather “at a food stamp bureau or a crack house” rather than the Statue of Liberty, and that AIDS sufferers “enjoy the attention and pity that comes with being sick.”

Eric Dondero, Paul’s estranged former volunteer and personal aide, worked for Paul on and off between 1987 and 2004 (back when he was named “Eric Rittberg”), and since the Iraq war has become one of the congressman’s most vociferous and notorious critics. By Dondero’s account, Paul’s inner circle learned between his congressional stints that “the wilder they got, the more bombastic they got with it, the more the checks came in. You think the newsletters were bad? The fundraising letters were just insane from that period.” Cato Institute President Ed Crane told reason he recalls a conversation from some time in the late 1980s in which Paul claimed that his best source of congressional campaign donations was the mailing list for The Spotlight, the conspiracy-mongering, anti-Semitic tabloid run by the Holocaust denier Willis Carto until it folded in 2001.

The newsletters’ obsession with blacks and gays was of a piece with a conscious political strategy adopted at that same time by Lew Rockwell and Murray Rothbard. After breaking with the Libertarian Party following the 1988 presidential election, Rockwell and Rothbard formed a schismatic “paleolibertarian” movement, which rejected what they saw as the social libertinism and leftist tendencies of mainstream libertarians. In 1990, they launched the Rothbard-Rockwell Report, where they crafted a plan they hoped would midwife a broad new “paleo” coalition.

Rockwell explained the thrust of the idea in a 1990 Liberty essay entitled “The Case for Paleo-Libertarianism.” To Rockwell, the LP was a “party of the stoned,” a halfway house for libertines that had to be “de-loused.” To grow, the movement had to embrace older conservative values. “State-enforced segregation,” Rockwell wrote, “was wrong, but so is State-enforced integration. State-enforced segregation was not wrong because separateness is wrong, however. Wishing to associate with members of one’s own race, nationality, religion, class, sex, or even political party is a natural and normal human impulse.”

The most detailed description of the strategy came in an essay Rothbard wrote for the January 1992 Rothbard-Rockwell Report, titled “Right-Wing Populism: A Strategy for the Paleo Movement.” Lamenting that mainstream intellectuals and opinion leaders were too invested in the status quo to be brought around to a libertarian view, Rothbard pointed to David Duke and Joseph McCarthy as models for an “Outreach to the Rednecks,” which would fashion a broad libertarian/paleoconservative coalition by targeting the disaffected working and middle classes. (Duke, a former Klansman, was discussed in strikingly similar terms in a 1990 Ron Paul Political Report.) These groups could be mobilized to oppose an expansive state, Rothbard posited, by exposing an “unholy alliance of ‘corporate liberal’ Big Business and media elites, who, through big government, have privileged and caused to rise up a parasitic Underclass, who, among them all, are looting and oppressing the bulk of the middle and working classes in America.”

Anyone with doubts about the composition of the “parasitic Underclass” could look to the regular “PC Watch” feature of the Report, in which Rockwell compiled tale after tale of thuggish black men terrifying petite white and Asian women. (Think Birth of a Nation crossed with News of the Weird.) The list of PC outrages in the February 1993 issue, for example, cited a Washington Post column on films that feature “plenty of interracial sex, and nobody noticing,” a news article about black members of the Southern Methodist University marching band “engaged in mass shoplifting while in Japan,” and a sob story about a Korean shop-owner who shot a black shoplifter and assailant in the head: “The travesty is that Mrs. Du got five years probation, and must cancel a trip to Korea.”

The populist outreach program centered on tax reduction, abolition of welfare, elimination of “the entire ‘civil rights’ structure, which tramples on the property rights of every American,” and a police crackdown on “street criminals.” “Cops must be unleashed,” Rothbard wrote, “and allowed to administer instant punishment, subject of course to liability when they are in error.” While they’re at it, they should “clear the streets of bums and vagrants. Where will they go? Who cares?” To seal the deal with social conservatives, Rothbard urged a federalist compromise in their direction on “pornography, prostitution, or abortion.” And because grassroots organizing is “plodding and boring,” this new paleo coalition would need to be kick-started by “high-level, preferably presidential, political campaigns.”

The presidential campaign Rothbard and Rockwell supported in 1988 was Ron Paul’s run on the Libertarian Party ticket. In 1992, they were again ready to back Paul, until Pat Buchanan convinced the obstetrician to withdraw and back his conservative challenge to then-president Bush. “We have a dream,” Rockwell wrote in that same January 1992 edition of RRR, “and perhaps someday it will come to pass. (Hell, if ‘Dr.’ King can have a dream, why can’t we?) Our dream is that, one day, we Buchananites can present Mr. and Mrs. America, and all the liberal and conservative and centrist elites, with a dramatic choice…We can say: ‘Look, gang: you have a choice, it’s either Pat Buchanan or David Duke.’”

Carol Moore, a left-libertarian activist who opposed Rothbard, Rockwell, and Paul at the late 1980s Libertarian conventions that led to the paleo split, theorizes that the defeat made them bitter. “They had a tendency to be anti-PC,” Moore told reason, “and it was really stepped up after they lost. They were really angry and not that funny.”

They are less angry these days. Visitors to LewRockwell.com or Mises.org since 2001 are less likely to feel the need for a shower. One can almost detect what sounds like mellowing in Rockwell’s reflections on the high and heady paleo days, unburdened by ominous warnings of the looming race war. Nowadays the fiery rhetoric is directed at the “pimply-faced” Kirchick, “Benito” Guiliani, and the “so-called ‘libertarians’” at reason and Cato.

But perhaps the best refutation of the old approach is not the absence of race-baiting rhetoric from its progenitors, but the success of the 2008 Ron Paul phenomenon. The man who was once the Great Paleolibertarian Hope has built a broad base of enthusiastic supporters without resorting to venomous rhetoric or coded racism. He has stuck stubbornly to the issues of sound money, “humble foreign policy,” and shrinking the state. He wraps up his speeches with a three-part paean to individualism: “I don’t want to run your life,” “I don’t want to run the economy,” and “I don’t want to run the world.” He talks about the disproportionate effect of the drug war on African-Americans, and appeared at a September 2007 Republican debate on black issues that was boycotted by the then-frontrunners. All this and more have brought him $30 million-plus from more than 100,000 donors; thousands of campaign volunteers; and the largest rallies he’s ever spoken to, including a crowd of almost 5,000 in Philadelphia.

Yet those new supporters, many of whom are first encountering libertarian ideas through the Ron Paul Revolution, deserve a far more frank explanation than the campaign has as yet provided of how their candidate’s name ended up atop so many ugly words. Ron Paul may not be a racist, but he became complicit in a strategy of pandering to racists�??and taking “moral responsibility” for that now means more than just uttering the phrase. It means openly grappling with his own past�??acknowledging who said what, and why. Otherwise he risks damaging not only his own reputation, but that of the philosophy to which he has committed his life.[/i]

It’s becoming quite clear from the dishonesty and the refusals to discuss the matter suggest that we’ve been party to a lie all along. Looks like Paul and Rockwell had a strategy to “clean up” their act to take it on to a national stage.

Now, I am old enough to remember when we had posters around these parts insuring us that:

  1. Internet polls were accurate reflections of Ron Paul’s support

  2. Paul WOULD win, no ifs, ands or buts

  3. He would be the GREATEST. PRESIDENT. EVER.

At least we can take some joy in the comedy provided in these ludicrous claims, since the actual campaign has turned into nothing but a tragic shame.

[quote]thunderbolt23 wrote:
Far be it for me to stoke the failing embers of the shamed and worthless Ron Paul campaign - Paul came in third in MI in demographic of “Republicans strongly opposed to the war”, how embarrassing [/quote]

What do you mean “Republicans strongly opposed to the war”?

He came in third, period.

Yeah. John “100 years” McCain got the “Stongly opposed” vote…Well, ok.

[quote]lixy wrote:
thunderbolt23 wrote:
Far be it for me to stoke the failing embers of the shamed and worthless Ron Paul campaign - Paul came in third in MI in demographic of “Republicans strongly opposed to the war”, how embarrassing

What do you mean “Republicans strongly opposed to the war”?

He came in third, period.[/quote]

No, moron - Paul came in fourth overall, and in the exit polling demographic of “strongly opposed to the war”, he came in third.

http://uk.news.yahoo.com/rtrs/20080116/tpl-uk-usa-politics-results-20b2d2f.html

We’d all appreciate it if you would learn to read and at least attempt in good faith to get the facts straight. We get tired of correcting your stupidity.

[quote]Sloth wrote:
Yeah. John “100 years” McCain got the “Stongly opposed” vote…Well, ok.[/quote]

Because McCain pushed the successful surge. Even most of those strongly opposed (at least on the Republican side) know that it is better if we win the thing now. Moral opposition is fine and dandy if it helps people sleep at night but the reality is we are in a war and we should try to win.

[quote]thunderbolt23 wrote:
No, moron - Paul came in fourth overall, and in the exit polling demographic of “strongly opposed to the war”, he came in third.

http://uk.news.yahoo.com/rtrs/20080116/tpl-uk-usa-politics-results-20b2d2f.html

We’d all appreciate it if you would learn to read and at least attempt in good faith to get the facts straight. We get tired of correcting your stupidity.[/quote]

Ok. He came in fourth. There’s nothing embarrassing about that given the little airtime he gets and the non-conciliatory tone of his campaign. If anything, it’s a feat that a non-demagogue gets such consistent results across the country.

I don’t see why you call his campaign “shamed and worthless”, and I don’t see why you bring up the “strongly opposed to the war”.

[quote]lixy wrote:
I don’t see why you call his campaign “shamed and worthless”, and I don’t see why you bring up the “strongly opposed to the war”. [/quote]

They slander because they have no actual argument against any of the issues he is running on. I have stated these issues in every thread I have posted in about Paul but they are ignored. They have no argument whatsoever so they slander.

“The man has the best record in congress.”
-Pat Buchanene

“He is the most honest man in congress.”
-John McCain.

None look at the actions of this man…they instead look only at non-issues.

If Ron Paul is a racist then I am a Martian.

[quote]lixy wrote:

Ok. He came in fourth. There’s nothing embarrassing about that given the little airtime he gets and the non-conciliatory tone of his campaign. If anything, it’s a feat that a non-demagogue gets such consistent results across the country.

I don’t see why you call his campaign “shamed and worthless”, and I don’t see why you bring up the “strongly opposed to the war”. [/quote]

His campaign is shamed because of his ties to racist organizations and using racist statements as a fundraising technique in his old newsletters.

The fact that the only Republican candidate that is opposed to the war cannot get the vote of Republicans that are strongly opposed to the war speaks volumes.

[quote]Zap Branigan wrote:
His campaign is shamed because of his ties to racist organizations and using racist statements as a fundraising technique in his old newsletters. [/quote]

TB has been calling Paul’s campaign worthless well before those newletters came to light.

It speaks volumes about the priorities of Americans who are thousands of miles away from the war. It speaks volumes of the priorities of Joe six pack. Nothing more, nothing less.

In any case, for a “fringe candidate” whose “electability” is challenged all the time, I’d say he is doing pretty good.

I said it before and will say it again: Ron Paul is the only Republican who can beat the democrats in November. That Americans would vote for more-of-the-same after two terms of Bush defies common sense.

[quote]LIFTICVSMAXIMVS wrote:
lixy wrote:
I don’t see why you call his campaign “shamed and worthless”, and I don’t see why you bring up the “strongly opposed to the war”.

They slander because they have no actual argument against any of the issues he is running on. I have stated these issues in every thread I have posted in about Paul but they are ignored. They have no argument whatsoever so they slander.

“The man has the best record in congress.”
-Pat Buchanene

“He is the most honest man in congress.”
-John McCain.

None look at the actions of this man…they instead look only at non-issues.

If Ron Paul is a racist then I am a Martian.[/quote]

He voted for a war he claims he is against.

He fights for pork for his district and makes token votes against the same spending bills.

His whole campaign seems to be to bilk people like you out of their money. As long as you are happy about it keep writing him checks!

And by the way we have argued against his platform many, many times.

[quote]lixy wrote:

I said it before and will say it again: Ron Paul is the only Republican who can beat the democrats in November. That Americans would vote for more-of-the-same after two terms of Bush defies common sense.[/quote]

And you will continue to be wrong.

[quote]Sloth wrote:
… I’ve already dropped my support for the man… [/quote]

May I humbly ask why?