Posted on 07/31/2002 5:20:31 AM PDT by fporretto
Each abridgement of liberty has been used to justify further ones. Scholars of political systems have noted this repeatedly. The lesson is not lost on those whose agenda is total power. They perpetually strain to wedge the camel's nose into the tent, and not for the nose's sake.
Many a fine person will concede to you that "liberty is all very well in theory," follow that up with "but," and go on from there to tabulate aspects of life that, in his opinion, the voluntary actions of responsible persons interacting in freedom could never cope with. Oftentimes, free men and free markets have coped with his objections in the recent past, whether he knows it or not. You could point this out to him, provide references and footnotes, and still not overcome his resistance, for it does not depend on the specifics he cited.
His reluctance to embrace freedom is frequently based on fear, the power-monger's best friend.
Fantasist Robert Anton Wilson has written: "The State is based on threat." And so it is. After all, the State, no matter how structured, is a parasitic creature. It seizes our wealth and constrains our freedom, gives vague promises of performance in return, and then as often as not fails to deliver. No self-respecting people would tolerate such an institution if it did not regard the alternatives as worse.
The alternatives are seldom discussed in objective, unemotional terms. Sometimes they are worse, by my assessment, but why should you accept my word for it?
Let it be. The typical American, when he opts for State action over freedom, isn't acting on reasoned conviction, but on fear of a negative result. Sometimes the fear, which is frequently backed by a visceral revulsion, is so strong that no amount of counterevidence can dissolve it, including the abject failure of State action.
We've had a number of recent examples of this. To name only two prominent ones:
In either of the above cases, could we but take away the fear factor, there would be essentially no argument remaining.
Fear, like pain, can be useful. When it engenders caution, it can prolong life and preserve health. Conservatives in particular appreciate the value of caution. The conservative mindset is innately opposed to radical, destabilizing change, and history has proved such opposition to be wise.
However, a fear that nothing can dispel is a pure detriment to him who suffers it.
Generally, the antidote to fear is knowledge: logically sound arguments grounded in unshakable postulates and well buttressed by practical experience. Once one knows what brings a particular undesirable condition about, one has a chance of changing or averting it. The great challenge is to overcome fears so intense that they preclude a rational examination of the thing feared.
Where mainstream conservatives and libertarians part company is along the disjunction of their fears. The conservative tends to fear that, without State involvement in various social matters, the country and its norms would suffer unacceptably. Areas where such a fear applies include drug use, abortion, international trade, immigration, cultural matters, sexual behavior, and public deportment. The libertarian tends to fear the consequences of State involvement more greatly. He argues to the conservative that non-coercive ways of curbing the things he dislikes, ways that are free of statist hazards, should be investigated first, before turning to the police.
I call myself a libertarian, but I can't discount conservative fears in all cases -- especially where the libertarian approach to some social ill involves a major change to established ways. Radical transformations of society don't have a rosy history.
Yet conservatives, too, could be more realistic, and could show more confidence in the ideals they strive to defend. As Thomas Sowell has written in discussing the War On Drugs, "If at first you don't succeed, try, try again. Then quit. No use being a damned fool about it."
The past two decades, starting roughly with Ronald Reagan's ascent to national prominence, have laid the foundations for an enduring coalition between freedom-oriented libertarian thinkers and virtue-and-stability-oriented conservative thinkers. Each side needs to learn greater confidence in the other, if we are to establish the serious exchange of ideas and reservations, free of invective and dismissive rhetoric, as an ongoing process. Such confidence must include sufficient humility to allow for respect for the other side's fears -- for an unshakable confidence in one's own rightness is nearly always misplaced. There is little to learn from those who agree with you, whereas much may be learned from those who disagree.
Thanks, HV
Let me offer a real-life example: my own mother. She was born in 1931 and raised in North Carolina about the time the Volstead Act (prohibition) was repealed. But in (mostly Southern) states, legal "dryness" lingered for decades (even as every single state and legislative official had access to as much liquor as he could drink, whenever he wanted it.)
My parents' environment was the blue-collar world where, as in the 20's and 30's, the only available alcohol was bootleg. (You probably know that some of those country-boys, in their zeal to outrun the "Rev-e-nooers" back then, eventually turned their hopped-up vehicles into today's billion-dollar NASCAR.)
Back to Mama. In the 30's, with nothing legal (and a serious Baptist stigma attached to consuming any alcohol at all) those who wanted a drink were reduced to buying not only what might be poison (some of it was,) but of drinking as much as possible in a short time. You dasn't get caught.
So in my mother's childhood, all she knew of "imbibers" were people who drank to get drunk. This would bring out latent anger in some of them and they'd beat the hell out of available children. (Sometimes she was one of them.) This was not a crime, then and there.
The drunk driver who killed my mother's mother in 1933 was not even brought up on charges. It was barely a crime, then and there.
Now, as a grown woman, when things had stabilized, she did not turn into Carrie Nation, but had gained a deep suspicion for anyone who drank any amount of alcohol. I don't blame her. Enforcing those feelings was her "stage 2" ability to cope with alcoholic beverages. She can have one glass of wine, but not two. A few people cannot have even one, while still others can drink Herculean amounts. My mother's own body chemistry is her basis for wondering --even at age 71 -- why anybody can have more than a drink or two and continue to enjoy it, because she literally cannot. And the ones who did in her childhood were often quite cruel to her.
But you're right, WyldKard: all the verifiable numbers show that prohibition increased, rather than decreased, alcoholism or just plain drinking to excess. Alcoholics Anonymous was founded in the mid 1930's, of original members who had had no trouble getting all they wanted to drink when it was technically "illegal."
I won't even get into the beginnings of organized crime here; that's a whole 'nother thread. Or 12.
What you can't, or won't, realize is that libertarianism is completly flawed because no one can agree on a uniform standard for "reason". It's that simple. Your version of reason is different than mine and everyone elses. Thus, whatever we decide to be "reasonable" is completely arbitrary. In fact, any big idea such as "justice", or "fairness" or "liberty" suffers the same flaws. There are no ideals. Someone much smarter than either you or I, Plato, tried to solve this with the Doctrine of Forms. He failed.
Plus, most of the time I don't even know what your arguments are about. For instance, you say that you're a libertarian, then you say that liberty is limited. I say, "hey great, looks like your a conservative" because you've admit that society can regulate liberty; what other reason would society have to curtail liberty other than order? So, then you say--no wait, I'm a conservative.
I really don't want to argue who either doesn't know what I'm talking about or whose comeback is, effectively, "I know you are, but what am I".
So, let's put it this way. You win.
HV
I guarantee you won't. I would never accept welfare from the government.
Unless the land when purchased has a stipulation (such as many developments have) that states what is and isn't acceptable to keep property values high as part of the agreement, of course you have no right to sue your neighbor. You are free to ignore, plead, beg and boycott your neighbor but not sue them.
Second, you are taking a 1 in a few million and trying to prove the norm. Most people who could afford to buy a home next to a $750,000 home will not purposely lower the value of their home.
When you use force or fraud (a form of theft) against someone else.
"There is no constitutional right to high property value."
True. No argument there.
"Unless the land when purchased has a stipulation..."
Here's the problem with your response: you're arguing the specific here. In other words, it's not about what's legal right now, but whether or not regulating what can be done on one's property *should* be regulated. I can make a strong case that I'm simply doing what I want to do on my own property. You could make an equally strong case that what I'm doing on my property is hurting your economic well being, which hurts your personal liberty. Who's right? How do you know?
Again, this is the problem with libertarianism. Define "liberty". You say that my right to throw my fist stops at your face. But my fist is always going to be further away from my perspective, and your face always closer from yours. There is no such thing as objective 'reason'. Or objective 'fairness'. Or 'equality'.
And that gets me to the second post, where you say that force is the standard to know if rights are being violated. That tells me you're probably a Rand fan. But, if there's no God, and we need an 'objective' answer to what 'reason' or 'freedom' or 'liberty' means, to whom do we appeal? Rand says that two 'rational' people can't disagree, but we're disagreeing right here. And what Rand doesn't tell you is that this statement--"Two rational people cannot have disagreements"--which she repeats often in her works, is *non-negotiable* to her 'philosophy'. Because if two rational people can honestly disagree, then it's not Objectivism, it's Subjectivism, or better yet Nonsensism.
So, on the issue of force, if we can't agree on which version of 'liberty' or 'truth' or whatever should prevail, eventually someone is going to have to come in and pick between competing visions of what these ideas mean. And once we arrive at what 'liberty' means, and you or I still dissent, how do we enforce the decision? Answer: force. Thus, Rand's entire philosophy relies on arbitrary decisions on what abstract concepts mean, which are then backed up by guns. Because if Objectivism isn't backed up by force, how will it prevail? By appealing to God?
No its not a problem. Economic well being is not necessarily personal liberty.
This is what liberty means.
The condition of being free from restriction or control.
The right and power to act, believe, or express oneself in a manner of one's own choosing
Therefore, if I wanted to move into a development and a stipulation on my contract said I had to keep my property looking groomed to keep property values high and to be considerate of my neighbors, then I have voluntarily entered into an agreement as such. If I purchase property and there is no such stipulation, then it is not violate a contract (fraud), it is not commiting force on someone else, and therefore there is no ground to hold your neighbor accountable.
Again, this is the problem with libertarianism. Define "liberty". You say that my right to throw my fist stops at your face. But my fist is always going to be further away from my perspective, and your face always closer from yours. There is no such thing as objective 'reason'. Or objective 'fairness'. Or 'equality'.
This makes no sense. Either you are forcing me to do something or you are not. There is no 'grey area' as you would like myself to believe. Making physical contact or threating is using force. Asking a neighbor to stop doing something that you do not like is completely another.
And that gets me to the second post, where you say that force is the standard to know if rights are being violated. That tells me you're probably a Rand fan. But, if there's no God, and we need an 'objective' answer to what 'reason' or 'freedom' or 'liberty' means, to whom do we appeal? Rand says that two 'rational' people can't disagree, but we're disagreeing right here. And what Rand doesn't tell you is that this statement--"Two rational people cannot have disagreements"--which she repeats often in her works, is *non-negotiable* to her 'philosophy'. Because if two rational people can honestly disagree, then it's not Objectivism, it's Subjectivism, or better yet Nonsensism.
I haven't read any of Rand's work except Capitalism: The Unknown ideal. Reason is not the discussion at hand, liberty and freedom are, which I've already defined.
So, on the issue of force, if we can't agree on which version of 'liberty' or 'truth' or whatever should prevail, eventually someone is going to have to come in and pick between competing visions of what these ideas mean. And once we arrive at what 'liberty' means, and you or I still dissent, how do we enforce the decision? Answer: force. Thus, Rand's entire philosophy relies on arbitrary decisions on what abstract concepts mean, which are then backed up by guns. Because if Objectivism isn't backed up by force, how will it prevail? By appealing to God?
No, you have it backwards. You have to define force first, before you can define liberty. Liberty could easily be said as free from (initial) force. I should have said initial force, as once you violate the rights of others, you have given up your rights in the process. When you are not (initially) forcing people to do anything, you have liberty.
Where does this type of thinking come from? I'm a Libt. and believe strongly in charity and social responsibility. I don't think thay Libt's are especially anti-charity, except perhaps Randian/Objectivists.
I do have serious issues with govt enforced donations though.
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