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Libertarians to Conservatives: Drop Dead
National Review Online ^ | Aug 6, 2007 | Carol Iannone

Posted on 08/21/2007 11:41:49 AM PDT by DesScorp

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To: A CA Guy

On thing about socoalists: is they are all victims. Nothing is every their fault. It’s always “those people who don’t do they duty to society and support us”


281 posted on 08/22/2007 6:50:10 AM PDT by Oztrich Boy (Misanthropy is a much underated vitrue)
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To: puroresu
If libertarians are correct, and we can be socially liberal but otherwise conservative, then why do socially liberal places such as San Francisco, Vermont, and Massachusetts become so socialistic and anti-military?

If Massachusetts is so anti-military, then on my commute home every day, why do I see all those signs on highway overpasses welcoming back family members from Iraq? Why do I see highway overpasses decorated with the flags of the Army, Navy, Air Force, and Marine Corps?

282 posted on 08/22/2007 6:52:25 AM PDT by Hemingway's Ghost (Spirit of '75)
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To: CatoRenasci

Take a look at an attempt by Acton to define liberty. It tracks John Paul’s definition as the right of a man to do what he ought to do.

“What did Acton mean by “liberty”? In one place he said it was “the assurance that every man shall be protected in doing what he believes his duty, against the influence of authority and majorities, custom and opinion.”

http://www.lewrockwell.com/orig6/flood2.html


283 posted on 08/22/2007 6:52:40 AM PDT by Greg F (Duncan Hunter is the conservative in the race.)
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To: roamer_1
The only real control is in whose morality one or all must embrace.

If we can believe the writings of people like Joseph Story on the subject, it was intended that such control be forever excluded from the powers exercised by the federal government, and to the extent that it is exercised it be the exclusive domain of the States. The argument seems calculated to render that an impossibility.

284 posted on 08/22/2007 6:53:54 AM PDT by tacticalogic ("Oh bother!" said Pooh, as he chambered his last round.)
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To: AwesomePossum
most people, for example, drive on the roadways at legislated speeds

You're missing the point. Speeds are set on highways because I don't have the right to put my fellow citizens in danger. It's not about, nor has it ever been, forcing people to be good. It's always been about preventing people from injuring others.

In most cases, the two concepts (legislating morality vs protecting liberties) demand the same laws. But not in every case and that's where problems start.

As I've said before, this republic will stand or fall on its people, not its laws. Having laws that reflect Christian values won't do anything per se, if the people who live under those laws don't have those same Christian values. That is a fact. I don't know if you are capable of understanding that or not.

This is a thing that is fairly insidious, when you get down to it. In the school of thought that says the law exists to protect liberty, no attempt is made to 'force' people into being good. All the law does under that system is prevent people from interfering with others; whether they are good or not is not a concern of the law. Nor should it be, since the law is a construct of man and could never really make such a judgment anyway. Such judgments can only be made by God. Under the system where laws are passed to set a standard of behavior, on the other hand, is about control. Under this system, an attempt is made through legislative means to control what people think and do. And while you can control what they do to a large degree, trying to control what they think is not only immoral, it's impossible. Every man will have to choose for himself what kind of person to be. God will reward or punish men for their choices on the day of judgment. Trying to force a man to be a good one will almost surely guarantee that he won't be a good man at all. So yes, put the criminals in jail. Don't do it to make any kind of moral statement, but do it to protect other citizens from infringement of their liberties by criminals. God will make His own moral statement in its own due time.
285 posted on 08/22/2007 6:59:19 AM PDT by JamesP81 (Keep your friends close; keep your enemies at optimal engagement range)
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To: puroresu
Brilliant! how you pretend not to know the different between "libertine", "social liberal", and "libertarian".

social liberalism has been accompanied by the rise of the all-encompassing nanny

As does social conservatism. It's all down to Two Concepts of Liberty

(Iasiah) Berlin distinguished between two forms or concepts of liberty - negative liberty and positive liberty - and argued that the latter concept has often been used to cover up abuse - leading to the curtailment of people's negative liberties "for their own good".

Negative and positive rights
Under the theory of positive and negative rights, a negative right is a right not to be subjected to an action of another human being, or group of people, such as a state, usually in the form of abuse or coercion. A positive right is a right to be provided with something through the action of another person or the state.

To state the difference more formally, if 'A' has a negative right against 'B' then 'B' must refrain from acting in a way that would prevent 'A' from doing 'x'. If 'A' has a positive right against 'B', then 'B' must assist 'A' to do 'x' if 'A' is not able to do 'x' without that assistance. For example, a negative right to life would require others to refrain from killing a person. A positive right to life would require others act to save the life of someone who would otherwise die.

Negative rights may be used to justify political rights such as freedom of speech, property, habeas corpus, freedom from violent crime, freedom of worship, a fair trial, freedom from slavery and the right to bear arms.
Positive rights may be used to justify public education, health care, social security or a minimum standard of living.

Social conservatives, like socal liberals, promote posive rights to help society - they both have good intentions that they know how to run peoples live.
286 posted on 08/22/2007 7:06:38 AM PDT by Oztrich Boy (Misanthropy is a much underrated vitrue)
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To: tacticalogic

Yah, I used the big L there. I suspect that self-identified libertarians are a big chunk of the Republican party. Together with conservatives we might just be a majority of the base. : )

However, we just keep accepting the dunderheads the party feeds us as candidates. Mel Martinez. Ptooooi!


287 posted on 08/22/2007 7:12:03 AM PDT by Greg F (Duncan Hunter is the conservative in the race.)
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To: Greg F

One of the problems with libertarianism is that it can’t be enforced. Marxism can be enforced. It doesn’t work, but it can be enforced. The 20th century was filled with Marxist regimes which were failures internally, but lasted for decades and even succeeded in threatening to annex much of the world by the point of the gun.

The problem with libertarianism is that it creates a void, which is filled by oppressive leftist ideologies. If somehow we wake up tomorrow and find that libertarianism has been magically instituted as our nation’s governing principle, it won’t last very long. It will soon give way to leftism. Human nature will drive it in that direction.

Once people are free to do whatever they damn well please regardless of the common good or traditional morality, or, for that matter, the effects on children who must witness this behavior, they won’t remain responsible citizens for very long. Yes, some will. There are always unique individuals. But what are the odds that a man who contracts AIDS because he got sodomized by three dozen other men at a bathhouse will be such a responsible citizen that he’ll reject the idea of demanding socialized medicine to treat his ailment? Is he the type of man who will say, “I’m responsible for my ailment. My own behavior caused it. Therefore, I’ll take full responsibility for my actions and not demand help from the taxpayers”? Libertarianism expects people to behave and react that way. That’s why it always backfires, and leads to more government, not less.

Take the homosexual agenda as an example. Not all that long ago, homosexuals stayed in the closet. Laws or cultural taboos prohibited them from parading down the street dressed as women, or wearing a g-string or nothing at all. They couldn’t go to the ballpark and grope and kiss in front of baseball capped kids. Bathhouses and homosexual bars were raided and closed down. Libertarians joined liberals in insisting that these legal and societal limits on homosexuals were oppressive.

So the sodomy laws were tossed asunder and homosexuality was freed from the closet. Less government and more freedom all around, right? Well, not exactly.

Those relatively minor restrictions on behavior have been replaced by greater restrictions on behavior. Those taboos against the irresponsible behavior of a few have been replaced by taboos against responsible behavior and honest discussion of the issues. Children, once protected from the destructive effects of homosexual conduct as much as possible, are now indoctrinated in it.

Homosexuals are now free to do as they damn well please. However, the rest of us have to be careful of what we say, lest we run afoul of hate speech laws. We have to be wary, because even a mild homosexual joke can cost us our job. If we run a private business or organization, we can be expected to be hauled into court until we agree to provide homosexuals with everything they want. Even if we win, as the Boy Scouts narrowly did in a 5-4 ruling, we’ll be hit with another lawsuit, and another, and another, until legal bills and ridicule from the leftist media wear us down. Own an apartment? Better be prepared to rent to that nice homosexual couple with the whips & chains. Doesn’t matter if you’re a Christian. The rights of homosexuals are now more important than the 1st Amendment in much of the country.

The dating service e-Harmony is currently bogged down in court amidst a demand that they provide same sex matchmaking. Bed & breakfasts will be sued for not providing homosexual couples with the bridal suite.

Belong to a church that regards homosexuality as a sin? You might want to consider changing religions if you wish to ever be appointed to a government post. Did you refuse to take your small kids to DisneyWorld on “gay day”, or to the Padres game on “gay night”, because you didn’t want them to see such behavior? If so, Senator Feingold has some questions he’d like to interrogate you with. Besides, your feeble attempts to protect your kids are now opposed by the state itself. Check out school curricula in much of the country.

Now, libertarians will insist that they didn’t mean for all this to happen. They just wanted to repeal the sodomy laws and let homos go off in private and do their thing without having to worry about alleged sex police kicking down their door in midnight raids. They just wanted to let consenting adults have sex clubs and meeting places without being judged by “puritanical” society. They never intended for there to be speech codes, attacks on the Boy Scouts, a new plethora of draconian anti-discrimination laws, government crackdowns on “homophobia”, homosexualization of the public schools, and so forth. But that’s what we all got.

Why? Because of human nature. Conservatives do restrict personal behavior on occasion, but we do so because history has taught us that such behavior is destructive and, once unleashed, leads to more government than before. The reasons are simple. Libertarians are a tiny fraction of the population. Leftists are a good sized minority with clout well above their population numbers due to their concentrations in academia, the media, and the legal community. Leftists have enormous clout, while the only clout libertarians have is in providing people like Chuck Schumer with the political cover necessary for enacting socialism while posing as a defender of liberty. Schumer applauded the decimation of state sodomy laws, not because he’s a man who believes in liberty, but because he correctly knew that repeal of those laws would lead to bigger government in the long run. He might have walked over to Hillary with a smirk on his face and said, “Those libertarian shmucks helped us again...now, let’s intruduce that new law to make it a federal crime to refuse to rent an apartment to a man who wears women’s clothes, lipstick, and nail polish.”

When we unleash destructive behavior such as homosexuality, abortion, and the like, we unleash a lot of destructive people and impulses which ultimately boomerang. These are not good citizens who are concerned with the common good or future generations, or for that matter, liberty. They’re concerned with hedonism and self-indulgence, and will immediately demand government benefits, special laws to promote their lifestyle and stifle their ideological enemies, and the hijacking of public institutions for the promotion of their behavior. Leftism and socialism then fills the void. Societies like this also lose the will to fight. People might risk death to protect property, faith, family, or cherished traditions, but who would die to protect a homosexual bathhouse or an abortion mill?

Libertarians fret that the Christian right is like the Taliban. Actually, conservative Christianity may be the only thing with the power to stop the Taliban. Libertine, secularized, socialist Europe surely won’t.


288 posted on 08/22/2007 7:12:54 AM PDT by puroresu
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To: Greg F
Yah, I used the big L there. I suspect that self-identified libertarians are a big chunk of the Republican party. Together with conservatives we might just be a majority of the base. : )

Terms like "conservative" and "liberal" are politically relative. Terms like "libertarian" and "socialist" are absolutes. To the degree that our founding principles are libertarian, libertarianism is conservative.

289 posted on 08/22/2007 7:18:48 AM PDT by tacticalogic ("Oh bother!" said Pooh, as he chambered his last round.)
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To: AndyTheBear
see post 259

Yes and "Libertarian Marxism" gets over 18,000 hits because of the book, "Libertarian Marxism?", by Daniel Guerin which is actually about French libertarians during the revolution.
.
290 posted on 08/22/2007 7:19:34 AM PDT by radioman
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To: sergeantdave
“missionary eating cannibals” slices the pages down to 200.
lol...now we're getting somewhere!
.
291 posted on 08/22/2007 7:21:57 AM PDT by radioman
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To: Hemingway's Ghost

You may indeed see pro-military sentiment in Massachusetts. Do you think it’s coming from the lefties in Cambridge or from the people who engineered same sex “marriage” in your state?

Last time I checked, Massachusetts had two leftist anti-military senators, one of whom has a plaque honoring him in the Communist museum in Ho Chi Minh City for his anti-American conduct and fraudulent testimony. Last time I checked, the entire state House delegation was composed of anti-military leftist, socialist Democrats such as Barney Frank and John Olver.

There are still patriots in Massachusetts and they no doubt honor our troops with banners and support, but they’re sure as hell outvoted.

I expect that all those pro-troops banners were hoisted by the same type of people who tried valiantly to block the homosexual agenda in Massachusetts. Do you think the gay “marriage” and “abortion rights” crowd made those banners?


292 posted on 08/22/2007 7:23:37 AM PDT by puroresu
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To: Oztrich Boy

Give me an example of a libertarian nation.


293 posted on 08/22/2007 7:27:43 AM PDT by puroresu
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To: puroresu
Do you think it’s coming from the lefties in Cambridge or from the people who engineered same sex “marriage” in your state?

You're assuming, as an outsider, that the lefties in Cambridge are representative of our entire state. They're not. As are those who care about same sex marriage, they are a vocal minority that currently has the ear of our political machine here in Massachusetts. Make no mistake: the Democrat party here in Massachusetts is an old-fashioned political machine. I have no doubt that if the people were allowed to vote on homosexual marriage, they would have voted it down---that's why we were prevented from doing so by The Machine. They knew they'd lose, so they used the machinations of politics to block the vote.

294 posted on 08/22/2007 7:42:56 AM PDT by Hemingway's Ghost (Spirit of '75)
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To: puroresu

I agree. The bottom line in our current situation, as always in cultural matters, is cultural marxism. Libertinage rather than liberty, followed by social chaos, and then a crackdown with the totalitarian left in control. Responsible liberty and a careful attention to what rights are fundamental and what rights are not rights at all, but base desires, is the only possible way to protect freedom. Libertarians of a certain stripe fear any ideology that asserts a right to limit action outside of the individual conscience. Libertarian meet anarchist. Anarchist meet Libertarian. That anarchism was and is a variant and tool of the hard left escapes most libertarians.

Where libertarian and conservative can work together is in limiting Federal power and supporting politicians that wish to do so.


295 posted on 08/22/2007 7:43:58 AM PDT by Greg F (Duncan Hunter is the conservative in the race.)
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To: Greg F
You avoid the point that the Libertarian party has not captured the imagination or votes of the people and has no promise of doing so.

And you continue to avoid the point that the Libertarian Party does not represent the majority of libertarians. Most libertarians are registered Republicans. I am a libertarian. I joined the Republican Party in 1960. I stayed with the RP, as did the majority of libertarians, when angry Republicans left the Republican Party and formed the Libertarian Party. I was a campaign worker for both Goldwater and Reagan.

It is a pure idealogy and so rejects all coalitians that could actually help libertarians have influence

No influence?
Good luck in 2008!
.
296 posted on 08/22/2007 7:46:35 AM PDT by radioman
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To: radioman

You don’t think that you are the only Republican voter that wants a Republican party that is committed to limited government. You are bitter that the big government conservatives have taken over again after Goldwater and Reagan. I bet most people on Free Republic are, including me.

And good luck in 2008 to you as well!


297 posted on 08/22/2007 7:53:04 AM PDT by Greg F (Duncan Hunter is the conservative in the race.)
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To: fr_freak
What the "anything goes" libertarian types (as opposed to the limited government, classic liberal type of libertarian) do not realize is that, in a country where there is moral breakdown among individuals and society at large, an increase in government size, power, and oppression is inevitable.

The converse is true as well.

298 posted on 08/22/2007 7:55:12 AM PDT by jmc813
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To: A CA Guy
I sure can’t believe the group that posts here like a pot worshiping drug cult as one-note Johnnys. I have gone to read what stupidity DU folks write for a half hour about twice a year and there is a duplicate pot/drug worshiping one-note Johnny crowd there that repeats verbatim what some of our zealous drug promoting folks do.

Weren't you one of the few freepers who supported this guy's election a few years back?


299 posted on 08/22/2007 7:57:37 AM PDT by jmc813
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To: puroresu
Give me an example of a libertarian nation.

America from 1776 to November 12, 1833...the night science and reason were defeated by ignorance and superstition.
.
300 posted on 08/22/2007 8:01:01 AM PDT by radioman
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