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Tom Cotton at Harvard: Hated Libertarians, Praised Bill Clinton
Daily Caller ^ | 08/01/2013 | Charles C. Johnson

Posted on 08/03/2013 9:35:31 PM PDT by nickcarraway

Arkansas Rep. Tom Cotton, who announced this week that he will challenge Democratic Sen. Mark Pryor, attacked alcohol vendors, called for mandatory financial disclosures of campaign donations, favored banning cigarettes, and attacked libertarianism while he was a Harvard student.

In a twice-weekly column for the Harvard Crimson, Cotton — who has been called a “Republican’s dream” by National Review and an “extraordinary figure” by the Weekly Standard — criticized politicians for not doing enough to oppose tobacco and wrote a laudatory 1996 piece praising Bill and Hillary Clinton.

In 1997, Cotton wrote a scolding op-ed on alcohol and underage drinking in which he called for more laws restricting the sale of alcohol, specifically zoning laws lest vendors “pray on the most vulnerable elements of society, the poor and the young.”

“[T]he problem is not with existing laws or their enforcement, but with the lack of laws,” Cotton wrote. “Very few cities have zoning laws that specifically affect liquor stores. Most zoning laws simply define an area as commercial, thereby allowing any type of commercial store to open in the area.”

As long as zoning wasn’t done, Cotton argued, ”vendors will turn their profits by selling their wares to those who are least likely to understand the consequences of drinking and therefore to moderate their drinking.”

Cotton rejected appeals to lower the drinking age. “If we changed the age limit, we would not get a libertarian paradise,” he wrote. “We would only get countless teenage alcoholics, even more than we have now.”

Cotton was even more reproachful in an article calling for a ban on smoking at Harvard’s campus. “The Freshman Dean’s Office knows it, the staff knows it and you know it: smoking is addictive, harmful and annoying,” he wrote. “Quit equivocating on our smoking policy and take the hard line. Harvard should not allow smoking anywhere on its property.”

“[Harvard's staff is] simply afraid to take the next step and say smoking is wrong because it enslaves and destroys the body,” Cotton wrote. Harvard “should forbid smoking by all individuals on Harvard property, for their own sake and for the sake of those around them. If students or employees want to smoke, they can go to public property. If this is too inconvenient, maybe they will break a destructive habit.” (Related: Tom Cotton demanded Harvard ban cigarettes in 1997)

Cotton also turned his sights on libertarianism, which he dismissed as frivolous.

“There are many reasons to be a libertarian. One is vanity. It is nice to think that you are responsible for all the good fortune and success you achieve,” he wrote. ”Another is naivete, for you are surely naive if you believe the immediately preceding proposition. Still another reason is selfishness: since you are fortunate and successful, you are likely to want to hoard that fortune and success. Each of these reason, and others, point to the central fact of libertarianism, which is that practically all of its adherents belong to a self-regarding and sanctimonious elite.”

Cotton continued: “Libertarianism, by its very definition, is not a political philosophy, for political philosophy entails questions about the nature and role of the public realm. Libertarianism denies legitimacy to the public realm. Thus, it cannot develop a coherent and thematic system dealing with the appropriate and tolerable mixture of law, liberty and personal responsibility.”

While Cotton disliked libertarianism, he had kind words for fellow Arkie Bill Clinton:

“Bill Clinton is the most successful campaigner of our time because he is the most sincere campaigner of our time,” Cotton wrote. He was especially taken with Hillary. “There could not be a more apposite instance for the phrase ‘Behind every good man lies a better woman.’” Hillary is “more organized, more disciplined, more thoughtful, and more faithful than he is.”

Cotton soured on Clinton’s “degeneracy” two years later, calling the president a “compulsive womanizer and a liar.” But he viewed the Monica Lewinsky affair less as a scandal limited to Clinton himself than as an object lesson for the American electorate. “This lesson speaks to the fundamental presumption of democratic self-government, that the people have wisdom and virtue enough to elect politicians wise and virtuous enough to rule,” he wrote.

He appears not to have changed his positive view of Hillary Clinton.

Cotton called for deregulating campaign finance laws but he also called for forcing donors to disclose their financial contributions, something favored by the campaign finance enthusiasts.

“We should either sharply increase contribution limits or eliminate them altogether and couple this move with more extensive disclosure requirements,” Cotton wrote. “When politicians do not feel pressured to maneuver around the law to raise money, they will not turn to their party or like-minded groups for stealth support.”


TOPICS: Extended News; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Arkansas
KEYWORDS: agitprop; arkansas; charlescjohnson; cornelwest; diabn; finos; harvard; joelbpollak; leftwing; libertarians; markpryor; medicalmarijuana; nationalreview; principlesb4party; randsconcerntrolls; respectforauthority; rino; rinokeywordcowards; tomcotton; ultrarino; underagedrinking; walterrathenau; weeklystandard
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1 posted on 08/03/2013 9:35:32 PM PDT by nickcarraway
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To: nickcarraway

Didn’t Breitbart write an article kind of debunking this.


2 posted on 08/03/2013 9:37:17 PM PDT by Viennacon
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To: nickcarraway

Huckabee on steroids.


3 posted on 08/03/2013 9:37:47 PM PDT by OddLane
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To: Viennacon
Not much of a debunking if you ask me.
4 posted on 08/03/2013 9:40:51 PM PDT by OddLane
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To: nickcarraway

Charles Johnson. heh

Why is it a big deal that he didn’t like libertarians? A lot of conservatives don’t.


5 posted on 08/03/2013 9:41:49 PM PDT by GeronL
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To: OddLane

Well, he’s better than Pryor. He’ll have my support.


6 posted on 08/03/2013 9:43:52 PM PDT by Viennacon
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To: nickcarraway

It’s called sowing FUD-—fear, uncertainty and doubt. Expect to be up to your neck, and maybe your nose, in the FUD they will be spreading about a variety of conservative candidates. If they can get conservatives taking shots against one another, those shots won’t be going in the direction of the GOPe RINO candidates such as Lindsey Graham and the Democrats such as Pryor.


7 posted on 08/03/2013 9:48:07 PM PDT by House Atreides ( D)
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To: nickcarraway
“If we changed the age limit, we would not get a libertarian paradise,” he wrote. “We would only get countless teenage alcoholics, even more than we have now.”
In all fairness, I've heard the late Harry Browne and most other Libertarians stress in no uncertain terms that they do NOT support allowing minors access to alcohol, tobacco, or drug use.
8 posted on 08/03/2013 9:52:30 PM PDT by Impala64ssa (You call me an islamophobe like it's a bad thing.)
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To: nickcarraway

Not encouraging, but.... I was a liberal Democrat in my college days, as well.


9 posted on 08/03/2013 10:08:40 PM PDT by man_in_tx (Blowback (Faithfully farting twowards Mecca five times daily).)
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To: Viennacon; GeronL; House Atreides; Impala64ssa; man_in_tx; AdmSmith; AnonymousConservative; ...

Thanks.


10 posted on 08/03/2013 10:13:20 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (It's no coincidence that some "conservatives" echo the hard left.)
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To: nickcarraway

“Still another reason (to be libertarian) is selfishness: since you are fortunate and successful, you are likely to want to hoard that fortune and success.”

Wow, how is that different from a liberal? It sounds like he would like to “spread things around a little”. It was a long time ago, but it’s not good. Maybe he was trying to ingratiate himself with the other folks there. Still better than Pryor.


11 posted on 08/03/2013 10:24:52 PM PDT by cdcdawg (Be seeing you...)
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To: nickcarraway

thanks for this post.

i fancy i can get a peek into a young man’s character from this early writing. i see a young/sharp/honest mind forming. good prose. clean. well organized/reasoned. bodes well for us. i hope he hasn’t changed much. just a bit less idealism and a bit more wise

funny, by contrast, i haven’t seen anything of obama’s student writing at the same place. and this is after 5 years as president. funny indeed.


12 posted on 08/03/2013 10:29:23 PM PDT by dadfly
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To: OddLane; nickcarraway
If Cotton had advocated that the city of Cambridge, the state of Massachusetts, or the federal government banned smoking, I would be concerned. It did nothing of the kind, here is what he advocated:

Harvard should not allow smoking anywhere on its property.” (emphasis supplied)

If one wants to argue that Harvard assumes the role of a quasi public institution because of its federal and state subsidies and privileged tax benefits, that is certainly a respectable intellectual position. But hardly one which disqualifies a Republican running against a Democrat. One can certainly take the position that the rights of private property, even Harvard's, trump a visitor's right to smoke. Many on these threads have argued that the business owner or property owner should have superior rights to regulate smoking as it chooses over the power of the state to ban smoking.

As to his endorsement of the Clintons, he has evidently recanted this nonsense written when he was young. Note: Hillary Clinton and Michelle Obama both wrote a lot of nonsense when they were young and I do not excuse them because of their age. So, cotton should be held some account but he should also be credited for recanting and, to my knowledge, neither Hillary nor Michelle have gotten any smarter.

I have no problem with the state limiting the sale of alcohol to minors.

Paleo conservatives ought to be encouraged, not discouraged, by cottons statements as quoted because it is clear that he will not confine his conservatism to a Wall Street Journal myopia which limits conservatism to opposing spending and taxes. These remarks suggest that Cotton, if elected, would be active on social issues, a tendency which should please paleos.


13 posted on 08/03/2013 11:21:35 PM PDT by nathanbedford ("Attack, repeat, attack!" Bull Halsey)
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To: nickcarraway

So he thought Clinton was a great campaigner. Uh...DUH. The rest of it seems to be a religious-borne puritanism which he may well have outgrown. In any case, a shitload better than Mark Pryor or even the phony Huckabee.


14 posted on 08/03/2013 11:34:43 PM PDT by montag813 (NO AMNESTY * ENFORCE THE LAW * http://StandWithArizona.com)
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To: man_in_tx

And I voted for Al Gore. Oops. Kids in college are still learning who they are. Their brains aren’t developed, and frankly, they haven’t lived. They go off to study abroad, and suddenly their whole word view changes for some reason.

I did all of that.

And then I grew, I found out who I was, and I became principled.

Show me what the guy has done over the past 10-years. I couldn’t care less what college looked like.


15 posted on 08/03/2013 11:35:51 PM PDT by CaspersGh0sts
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To: montag813

Oh, hell, he hates smoke. BFD. This man is war-hardened and rational. He probably still hates smoke.


16 posted on 08/04/2013 12:34:12 AM PDT by des
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To: man_in_tx

Reagan Democrat here.


17 posted on 08/04/2013 12:35:25 AM PDT by des
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To: nickcarraway
"It is nice to think that you are responsible for all the good fortune and success you achieve,” he wrote. ”Another is naivete, for you are surely naive if you believe the immediately preceding proposition. Still another reason is selfishness: since you are fortunate and successful, you are likely to want to hoard that fortune and success."

The guy sounds like your typical Democrat communist. He may as well have said, "You didn't build that!"

18 posted on 08/04/2013 12:41:08 AM PDT by Lancey Howard
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To: nickcarraway
OK. So he was jerk in college.

The operational question is, is he the best candidate on the radar to knock a Donk out of the Senate?

If the answer is yes, then send him a check. If no, then yuck up the Daily Caller.

19 posted on 08/04/2013 12:44:33 AM PDT by cynwoody
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To: montag813

“The rest of it seems to be a religious-borne puritanism which he may well have outgrown.”

Yes, it certainly does have puritanical overtones. I’d like to know more about what his views are now, because the one thing we don’t need any more of are nannies.


20 posted on 08/04/2013 4:03:51 AM PDT by jocon307
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