October 29, 2008
(Page 2 of 20)
Radley Balko
1. Who are you voting for in November? Bob Barr. He's the first serious candidate the LP has run since I've been eligible to vote.
2. Who did you vote for in 2004 and 2000? Kerry in 2004. Bush in 2000.
3. Is this the most important election in your lifetime? No. There's too little difference between the major party candidates for there to be much riding on this election. It's really only a matter of if you want a huge federal government undertaking grand leftist programs, or if you want a huge federal government undertaking grand rightist programs.
4. What will you miss about the Bush administration? As a libertarian journalist, they've given me plenty to write about.
5. Leaving George W. Bush out of consideration, what former U.S. president would you most like to have waterboarded? Woodrow Wilson. Jailed political dissenters, created the Federal Trade Commission, got us into World War I. He also enacted the first federal income tax, the first modern military draft, and the first federal drug prohibition. Wilson also re-segregated the federal government. When blacks protested, he told them to consider segregation a "benefit," not a debasement. An all-around loathesome human being.
(Correction: Woodrow Wilson signed the first federal income tax law after the passage of the 16th Amendment, but he did not enact the first federal income tax. There were two federal income taxes before that; one during the Civil War, which was later dropped, and one signed by Grover Cleveland in 1894, which was later struck down by the U.S. Supreme Court.)
Radley Balko is a senior editor of reason.
Bruce Bartlett
1. Who are you voting for in November? I plan to vote for Obama mainly because he is not a Republican and not John McCain, who is temperamentally unfit to be president.
2. Who did you vote for in 2004 and 2000? I voted for Bush, but I regret it. I voted for him because I couldn't vote for Kerry, but would not vote at all if I had it to do over.
3. Is this the most important election in your lifetime? I think the election of 1980 was the most important of my lifetime. The importance of this election can only be determined in retrospect.
5. Leaving George W. Bush out of consideration, what former U.S. president would you most like to have waterboarded? Woodrow Wilson was our worst president mainly because we had no business getting involved in WWI and therefore every American who died in that war died for nothing. American intervention also upset the balance of power in Europe, which led to the rise of both Communism and Nazism. Wilson was a rabid racist and did terrible things domestically as well as internationally.
Bruce Bartlett is the author of Impostor: How George W. Bush Bankrupted America and Betrayed the Reagan Legacy.
*Note: Due to an editing error, this entry was omitted from the original version
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Leaving George W. Bush out of consideration, what former
U.S. president would you most like to have waterboarded?
Woodrow fucking Wilson.
Q. Who did you vote for in 2004 and 2000?
A. Libertarians, both times.
He doesn't seem to remember who they are!! :)
I'd never advocate water-boarding or otherwise torturing
anyone, and I think even to joke about it is to diminish the horror
of torture. Torture is like rape-is it okay to joke about which
woman you'd most like to rape?
Hmm. Is it acceptable? No. Can it be funny? Ask George
Carlin.
He doesn't seem to remember who they are!! :)
Would you?
I also thought Andrew Jackson was a good pick for "prick I'd like to waterboard".
Just out of curiosity about the less partisan Reason readers -
Are any of you voting?
I ask because I too have been converted to the "Not voting is
sometimes the only morally acceptable option" school of
thought.
Robert Gates protested the Vietnam War?
Huh. I always thought that guy had a lot on the ball.
Tim Cavanaugh should get some kind of honesty award for admitting that he is voting for Obama because Obama is black. And he also subtly hints that Obama's success is the result of superficial emotional appeal ("Hope! Change!" by saying "my kids like him." Good work, Tim!
Leaving George W. Bush out of consideration, what former
U.S. president would you most like to have waterboarded?
Wahsington. The country went downhill since he struck down the
Whiskey Rebellion.
Did I read the article too fast? The one reasonite, whose
opinion most interests me, isn't queried??!!?
Lisa Snell, how will you vote?
Lots of contributors in the tank for Obama. Interesting.
You'd think the only "reason"able choices would be Bob Barr or stay
home and watch teevee.
Or smoke a cancer stick and fire a rifle while you still have the freedom to do so.
Huh. I always thought that guy had a lot on the
ball.
And he's the inside baseball favorite for SecDef under an Obama
administration.
I ask because I too have been converted to the "Not voting is
sometimes the only morally acceptable option" school of
thought.
Talking to an fifty-plus year old black guy from the South will
cure you of that particular malady right quick.
You'd think the only "reason"able choices would be Bob Barr or stay home and watch teevee.
Because nothing says "free minds" like demanding total party
loyalty and conformity!
"The Libertarians were hijacked in some type of fishy Beer Hall
Putsch."
Stanhope has only himself to blame. If he hadn't wussed out, he'd
have made a hella candidate.
What will you miss about the Bush administration?
The tax cuts. And the comfort in knowing, really knowing,
that we were accelerating our own decline as a nation.
Who did you vote for in 2004 and 2000? Michael Badnarik in 2004. Ralph Nader (IIRC) in 2000. And that should be "whom."
That should be "For whom did you vote..."
(/pedantry)
Funny, Weigel "trusts" Barack Obama not to run the country further into the ground. I think it was pretty fairly assumed that he was going to vote for Obama, but I don't know any libertarian who would ever uset the word "trust" to describe how they feel about any major party politician (let alone Libertarian Party politician)
Hmm...Woodrow Wilson seems to be generally despised by Libertarians. I'm not so much a fan of the Woodrow either, to say the least.
WOODROW FUCKING WILSON.
You know the question.
So glad to see everyone agrees with me there.
Fuck Woodrow Wilson.
LMNOP
I thought Carlin's "Think of Porky Pig raping Elmer Fudd" was the
most unfunny thing he ever said. Not so much offensive, just
unforgivably lame.
For the record:
1980: Ed Clark
1984: David Bergland
1988: Ron Paul
1992: Andre Marrou
1996: Harry Browne
2000: Harry Browne
2004: Michael Badnarik
2008: Bob Barr
I don't know any libertarian who would ever uset the word "trust" to describe how they feel about any major party politician
Yeah, I gotta stick with the old "X-Files" slogan, myself. I still plan to vote for Obama, though.
Is this the most important election in your lifetime? It's way too early to tell, and anyone who says otherwise needs a Valium.
Hmmm. If we say otherwise, will reason give us a Valium?
Because, otherwise.
Gee, Warren. You are as big a loser as I am.
(For bonus points, without looking it up, who was Marrou's running
mate?)
Torture is like rape-is it okay to joke about which woman
you'd most like to rape?
I actually can't think of an answer to that question, since I'd
have to think of a woman who didn't want to have sex with me in the
first place. You can't rape the willing, as my mother used to
say.
Art-P.O.G.: Campagna, but I had to think about it.
I couldn't even vote in 2004, I don't know why I know this.
(For bonus points, without looking it up, who was Marrou's
running mate?)
Nancy Lord, of course. Every time Marrou gave an embarrassing
interview to the media -- i.e., every time someone in the media
decided to talk to him -- I would tell my friends, "But his
running mate is OK..."
A few years later she had an embarrassing appearance on
Politically Incorrect. I was glad those friends weren't
around to taunt me.
I ask because I too have been converted to the "Not voting
is sometimes the only morally acceptable option" school of
thought.
Talking to an fifty-plus year old black guy from the South will
cure you of that particular malady right quick.
Uh, wrong. I get pretty sick and fucking tired of people insisting
that I have to vote. You know what? Fuck you (not you personally,
LMNOP). I don't have to participate in your immoral, bullshit
system.
I too voted for Badnarik, and I can't remember who he ran
with.
A quick look at wiki sez it was Richard Campagna. Whoever that
is.
Kinda wish they were ALL specifically asked 'where' they're
voting.
Some made mention, but with others (unless it's obvious, ie teaches
@ Harvard) such information is important in context.
Epi,
I appreciate your feelings on the matter. However, I think the
perspective of those who did not have the right to vote and fought
pretty hard to get it is an important one.
And since some are still alive to talk to...
I can't even remember who Badnarik's running mate
was.
Three weeks after voting for him, I blanked when a friend asked me
who I voted for.
With a Democrat supermajority in congress coming and a media
that is too enamored with Obama to think straight,
I had to hold my nose and vote McCain/Palin. Hey, at least Palin is
nice to look at.
FDR was the worst president, followed by Wilson. Though some
pretty compelling arguments for Wilson were made here. Maybe a
tie?
No on waterboarding, though. Instead, how about forcing them to
read H&R threads non-stop -- but only the comments by joe, OLS,
and the trolls.
(For bonus points, without looking it up, who was Marrou's
running mate?)
Nancy Lord!
I hear her speak. How I wish she was at the top of the ticket.
Especially in place of one of the Browne campaigns.
I couldn't even vote in 2004, I don't know why I know this.
Impressive memory, but if I'm not prying too much, why couldn't
you vote in '04? Are you that young or are you a felon?
A quick look at wiki sez it was Richard Campagna. Whoever that is.
I know the so-called MSM buried these guys (except for the odd, and I mean odd, Badnarik interview) but I don't recall seeing any definitive proof that this Campagna person actually existed.
Brian Doherty's answer to #2 is making my head spin. He
considers voting irresponsible because it makes you
responsible?
If you have the right to vote and choose not to, you're just as
responsible for the outcome, if not more so, than the person who
votes for the candidate(s) who lose.
Three weeks after voting for him, I blanked when a friend asked me who I voted for.
[chuckles, shakes head]
I too voted for Badnarik, and I can't remember who he ran
with.
A quick look at wiki sez it was Richard Campagna. Whoever that
is.
Yeah I couldn't have come up with Campagna if my life depended on
it, and I drove an hour to here him talk in the basement of the
admin building at Kalamazoo.
I'm personally hoping that Stanhope shows up at the 2012 LP convention so drunk/stoned that he forgets not to run.
I can't in good conscience give my sanction to either of the
two major-party candidates: McCain/Palin represent a GOP in thrall
to troglodytes, while Obama will likely preside over an even bigger
expansion of government than McCain would have.
If you can't, without looking, guess which Reason writer wrote this
sentence, you haven't been around here for long.
Impressive memory, but if I'm not prying too much, why couldn't you vote in '04? Are you that young or are you a felon?
I'm 19.
I'm 19.
I'm impressed. You have that erudition of someone much older. FWIW, I'm 25.
1. Who are you voting for in November?
I always vote Libertarian
2. Who did you vote for in 2004 and 2000?
See above
3. Is this the most important election in your lifetime?
No. Back in 1980 Sue Weise (girl) ran for class president and I
voted for Steve Lang (jock) to keep her from getting in.
Unfortunately Richard Dugan (nerd) gave a great debate performance
just before the election and split the male vote. I wish I had
voted for Richard instead of against Sue. I've never made that
mistake since.
4. What will you miss about the Bush administration?
Uhhh hmmmm ... I uh ... OH, I bet I'll miss the way I was employed
most of his time in office, and the way dollar bills were worth
more than the paper they were printed on.
5. Leaving George W. Bush out of consideration, what former U.S.
president would you most like to have waterboarded and why?
I don't believe in torture. Ever. Under any circumstance.
However, justice demands that anyone who votes for either Obama, or
McCain have their flesh peeled from their body with a pair of vice
grips.
...what they'll miss most about the Bush administration, and
which president they'd most like to have waterboarded.
I read on a liberal friend's blog this morning that the Bush
Administration inserted language into a bill that they are trying
to quickly push through Congress right now that pardons the
Executive staff from any future war crimes convictions. Any truth
to it?
I'm just surprised the obligatory "y'all are Obama supporters?! I'm canceling my subscription!" comments have not yet occurred.
I'm just surprised the obligatory "y'all are Obama supporters?! I'm canceling my subscription!" comments have not yet occurred.
It's 1:15 on Tuesday afternoon. Drinking right now would cause problems.
I drove an hour to here him talk in the basement of the admin building at Kalamazoo.
Was he good?
Wow. I didn't know my father didn't vote the last eight years.
Nor did I know he was going to be polled by Reason.
I wonder if he gets the same moral outrage that talking about not
voting gets in a college?
I haven't been old enough for a presidential election vote yet. I
would have been down with Badnarik, and certainly good old harry
Browne. Barr makes me nervous. I might just go with None of the
Above instead.
Props to all the Wilson hate. And to Brian Doherty's "if you vote,
you have no right to complain about the outcome." I am sick of
being told that not voting means I "have no right to complain."
And that should be "whom."
If we're going to pick nits, it should be 'For whom will you
vote?'
I mean, sure you need to use the objective case with 'whom' but
that's because it's the object of a preposition. Might as well get
that preposition out in the front.
It's 1:15 on Tuesday afternoon. Drinking right now would
cause problems.
It's Wednesday. Have you been drinking?
Reinmoose | October 29, 2008, 1:07pm | #
I also voted for Badnarik in 2004 - I got a lot of slack for it
too
Really, I didn't know you were a follower of Bob Dobbs
"I'm just surprised the obligatory "y'all are Obama supporters?!
I'm canceling my subscription!" comments have not yet
occurred."
lmnop - anybody with a room level IQ who reads this site realized
this long ago :~)
So by my count that's...
Obama: 11 / 35.4%
Barr: 9 / 29.0%
NOTA: 8 / 25.8%
McCain: 3 / 9.6%
I continue to be disheartened by all the NOTA/Stay Home sentiment
here and elsewhere. Oh well, let's just let the statists and
socialists decide everything for the rest of us. Woo hoo.
the Bush Administration inserted language into a bill that
they are trying to quickly push through Congress right now that
pardons the Executive staff from any future war crimes convictions.
Any truth to it?
Presidential pardons don't have to go through congress, so it's not
true as far as that goes.
Also, the president can pardon people for crimes which they haven't
been charged, or even investigated. (Cheney, you're next
rape/murder spree is on the house!) so nothing could stop Bush from
making those pardons now. Traditionally, controversial pardons are
made in the last few days of the outgoing president's term.
I also voted for Badnarik in 2004 - I got a lot of slack for
it too
Was Badnarik Church of the Sub-Genius? I didn't know that.
I'm just surprised the obligatory "y'all are Obama supporters?!
I'm canceling my subscription!" comments have not yet
occurred.
reason sucks!
That should hold you for another half hour or so.
Art-P.O.G.
I was very involved in the LP in those days. There was no question
of not supporting the party.
He was a good speaker. But he was talking to an audience of about
two dozen and half of them were only there for the coffee and
doughnuts. So he was 'phoning it in'. It's got to be hard living
out of a suitcase having to beg spare change for your bed and meals
at every stop hopping you'll scrape by long enough to keep going
till election.
Since it's pretty much assured the US is going to have a bad few decades as our currency collapses and business moves abroad to greener pastures, we may as well embrace change. Let's sing it all together: "God damn America! Go Barack Obama!" :-)
Question 5 should have been framed in a Twilight Zonish
manner.
If you could magically swap a U.S. president for any innocent
victim of water boarding...
I thought Carlin's "Think of Porky Pig raping Elmer Fudd"
was the most unfunny thing he ever said. Not so much offensive,
just unforgivably lame.
For the record:
1980: Ed Clark
1984: David Bergland
1988: Ron Paul
1992: Andre Marrou
1996: Harry Browne
2000: Harry Browne
2004: Michael Badnarik
2008: Bob Barr
I don't understand, Warren. Is this a list of dates and people that
you've raped during them?
1988 - Dukakis (shit!)
1992 - Clinton (fuck!)
1996 - Browne (what?)
2000 - Browne (again?)
2004 - Badnarik (who??)
2008 - Barr (OMFG!?!?)
I read an old article and apparently Badnarik didn't even have a Secret Service detail. I guess if there's a plus side to being fairly anonymous, it's that Mark David Chapman types are unlikely to fixate on you.
It's got to be hard living out of a suitcase having to beg spare change for your bed and meals at every stop hopping you'll scrape by long enough to keep going till election.
Please tell me you're exaggerating.
I am sick of being told that not voting means I "have no
right to complain."
Not voting means you have no right to complain.
Oh, and
2008 - Obama
2004 - Badnarik
2000 - Bush (Dammit, it was a protest vote against Gore, and it
would've worked, too, if those morans in Palm Beach could read a
damn ballot)
Important? Meh - maybe. In hindsight, '00 and '04 may have been
more important. And I certainly could argue that '80 was more
important, although I was years from voting at that point.
Waterboarding? The GOVERNMENT should not waterboard anybody, even
presidents. And I probably wouldn't waterboard anybody. But I'd get
a hell of a lot of schadenfruede out of seeing shadow-president
Cheney tortured, also possibly Nixon and Johnson.
Props also to the Wilson and Jackson hate. Jackson's expansion of
suffrage was as mildly redemptive as Johnson's Civil Rights Act
signature, but both were still abominable presidents.
Who are you voting for in November?
As Jack Benny famously said when confronted by a gun-toting
thief who demanded his money or his life: "I'm thinking; I'm
thinking."
That's, "I'm thinking it over!" Noob.
So the difference between Slate and reason is
the spelling of the title.
BTW, for that who we voted for question in the comments:
1980: John Anderson/Patrick Lucy
1984: Bergland/Lewis (I think, but might have been another "third
party" candidate)
1988: Dukakis/Bentsen
1992: Perot/Stockdale
1996: Dole/Kemp
2000: Bush/Cheney
2004: Bush/Cheney
2008: Barr/Root
I don't understand, Warren. Is this a list of dates and
people that you've raped during them?
"And, Mr. Kelly, in your sworn statement to police, you claim that
the prisoner told you that if you didn't, and I quote, 'jam a bunch
of stuff into your butt,' he was going to 'rape you so hard the
room would stink.' And he was going to, quote, 'eat your butt and
his son's butt in the stink until his stomach was full of ... your
butts.' Is this correct?"
Though I have to admit the Dukakis pull takes me by surprise.
As to the question of the hour:
2000: Nader/LaDuke
2004: Badnarik/Campagna
2008 (unless something changes in six days): Obama/Biden
I read on a liberal friend's blog this morning that the Bush
Administration inserted language into a bill that they are trying
to quickly push through Congress right now that pardons the
Executive staff from any future war crimes convictions. Any truth
to it?
Sounds about as truthful and 'logical' about that Bush draft bill
rumor (only ones have been sponsored by Rep. Rangel (D) NY and
other Dems.) that keep coming up every few months.
As pointed out above, the President does not need any ok from the
Congress for pardons.
I ask because I too have been converted to the "Not voting
is sometimes the only morally acceptable option" school of
thought.
In a country with completely rigged elections, which the U.S.
isn't, not voting is indeed the morally correct decision. I'm not
saying not voting is immoral here, but casting your ballot
certainly is not immoral.
I get to vote for three Libertarians for federal office, not voting
for the state house seat (the Dem is unopposed) and some of the
ballot initiatives matter to me. There are some libertarians
farther down the ballot (University Board of Regents, State Board
of Education) that I'll reflexively vote for as well.
Hopefully I'll get a chance to lie to an exit pollster as well.
Leaving George W. Bush out of consideration, what former
U.S. president would you most like to have waterboarded?
Franklin D. Roosevelt, for putting into place the Bismarckian
welfare state driving us towards inevitable bankruptcy, and for
being the closest thing we've had to a genuine tyrant.
Jacob Sullum said:
1. Who are you voting for in November? Bob Barr. I admired Barr
as one of the most libertarian members of Congress even when he was
a Republican and a gung-ho drug warrior.
What? WHAT?! Wow! I'm sorry but I just can't take Sullum seriously
anymore after that statement.
That said, since I live in Illinois and there is no chance for
McCain to win I will be pulling the lever (well technically
connecting the line on my optical ballot) for Babar -- err Bob
Barr. Not because I like the candidate or believe think his
conversion to libertarianism is genuine, but because a message that
libertarianism is appealing to voters is an important one
Mike M.,
FDR deserves some real torture, not an exercise in discomfort.
Leaving George W. Bush out of consideration, what former
U.S. president would you most like to have waterboarded?
I too would have said Wilson over Nixon. Wilson was a creepy
paranoid dude
Excuse me for geeking out here, but how do Postman and Kiln
People get mentioned under David Brin but no Uplift books do? You'd
think a saga of a lone race with the concept of free will against
hundreds of species who think they are insane and often want them
dead would really appeal to the Hit & Run regulars...
Plus it has Chimps. Who doesn't love chimps?
Plus it has Chimps. Who doesn't love chimps?
Me. I don't even like them. Add to my list of dislike that includes
rainbows, puppies and Socialists.
HA! Beat you to the slack.
Aargh. It was the damn Valium they gave me on the other
thread.
Since we're all confessing:
1988: Dukakis
1992: Didn't vote, or else Marrou, I don't remember.
1996: Browne
2000: Browne
2004: Badnarik
2008: Barr (FL early voting)
When I was in college, Wilson was portrayed by my professors as
God's gift to good government. I have since learned better. And
since I believe he helped lay the foundation for much of what FDR
later perpetrated, I nominate him, not for waterboarding, but for a
good thrashing with a whippy, lightweight, walkingstick.
I will, as usual, be voting in absentia, for "none of the above".
And I propose to caterwaul mightily about the outcome.
1976: Cant't Remember (I was 19, who fucking remembers anything
from that age)
1980: Ed Clark (And so begins the long dark descent into total
cynicism -- and before the age of 25 no less)
1984: David Bergland
1988: Ron Paul
1992: Andre Marrou
1996: Harry Browne
2000: Harry Browne
2004: Michael Badnarik
2008: Bob Barr
2000 - would have gone Nader but was a minor at the time
2004 - Kerry, alas
2008 - McCain, alas
What? No votes for Cthulhu? Or votes for Caligula over at Urkobold? A tyrant is needed you fools!
2000: too young to vote
2004: turned 18 two months before election, voted for Bush; didn't
put too much thought into it.
2008: Barr. Voting for a R or D just feels like a sticky,
disgusting kind of yuck will follow me around for at least four
years.
Not voting isn't really the answer to a
corrupt/nondifferentiated two-party government. Voting third party
is.
We're stuck with craptacular politicians until people wake up and
realize that they've got a better choice than the dumb and dumber
they're offered every four years.
Your failure to vote for a pair of objectionable goobs merely runs
up the percentage numbers for the majority parties. It's imperitive
we don't continue the falacy that we've only got two choices,
especially when it takes a few hours at most to do your part to
dispell it.
Don't vote D or R or Mickey Mouse. Pick a third party.
I like how Cavanaugh seems to have enshrined "when the going gets weird, the weird turn pro" as his new political philosophy. We'd probably be better off if more journalists did. We'd certainly be better-entertained.
Not voting isn't really the answer to a
corrupt/nondifferentiated two-party government. Voting third party
is.
I would, but the Libertarian Party keeps selecting candidates for
whom I don't want to vote, for one reason or another. (Not just
Presidential candidates, but my local and state candidates, too.) A
few years ago, I realized I needed to stop being so loyal to the
Libertarian Party, and do my tiny part to send the message to the
LP leadership that they aren't coming up with good candidates.
White House Press Secretary Dana Perino... way hotter than
Sarah Palin.
Now that's just crazy talk.
A few years ago, I realized I needed to stop being so loyal
to the Libertarian Party, and do my tiny part to send the message
to the LP leadership that they aren't coming up with good
candidates.
How's that working out for ya?
Here's an idea -- why don't you get off your non-voting ass and run
for office as a Libertarian then...?
ChicagoTom wrote:
"Babar"
Nice. ;-)
And for Senator and Rep?
Oh and WhereTF do i find any challangers for state offices. It's
what's going on in Springfield that worries me far more.
1992 - Clinton
1996 - Dole
2000 - Did not vote (if i did it probably would have been
Nader.)
2004 - Badnarik
2008 - Barr
I put this comment in another thread, but it seems more
pertinent here:
I just voted, and, lucky me, I got to vote for Bob Barr AND Ron
Paul.
It's only because I live in Ron Paul's congressional district, and
even though he's running unopposed, I still enjoyed voting for him
again.
And, even though when Barr talks, I can tell he doesn't quite "get"
liberty from the fundamental, philosophical point of view, I still
voted for him because that's the only way I can unambiguously
register my disgust with both major parties, even in an
infinitesimal way.
2000: Gore (because my parents were)
2004: Badnarik (protest vote in TX)
2008: Obama (For great justice)
88 - Paul
92 - Marrou
96 - Didn't vote
00 - I either voted for Browne or didn't vote
04 - badnarik
08 - teh Hope Furher (probably)
I don't like Obama, but the thought of canceling out the vote of
one of my mouth-breathing fellow Virginians is as close to "making
a difference" as I have ever been in an election.
Of course I may get into the voting booth and choke. I'm not very
coordinated.
2008: Obama (For great justice)
I understand that some people really believe that justice means
taking from the rich and giving to the poor. And when Robin Hood
stole from the entrenched aristocracy, there may have been some
actual justice involved.
But I have never understood why taking money from Bill Gates to
give to an unmarried mother in an urban rathole is "justice".
1996 - Clinton
2000 - Browne
2004 - Badnarik
2008 - Obama
3. Is this the most important election in your lifetime? No, 1996
was because it was my first time. It's like driving or drinking,
the first time is exciting and cool. After that, it's just
something to do for shits and giggles.
4. What will you miss about the Bush administration? He did a lot
for sub-Saharan Africa. He got no credit it for it, but he did a
lot of good work there.
5. Leaving George W. Bush out of consideration, what former U.S.
president would you most like to have waterboarded? Jackson. I
propose Cherokee Indians as the waterboarders. Also, if there's a
president that ever decides to ignore the other branches, Jackson
is the one that set the precedent.
1868: Horatio Seymour
1872: Horace Greeley
1876: Charles Darwin (write-in vote)
1880: Darwin
1884: Darwin
1888: Darwin
1892: Darwin
1896: Darwin
1900: Cthulhu
1904: Cthulhu
1908: Cthulhu
1912: Cthulhu
1916: Cthulhu
1920: Cthulhu
1924: Cthulhu
1928: Cthulhu
1932: Cthulhu
1936: Cthulhu
1940: Cthulhu
1944: Cthulhu
1948: Cthulhu
1952: Cthulhu
1956: Cthulhu
1960: Cthulhu
1964: Cthulhu
1968: Cthulhu
1972: Cthulhu
1976: Cthulhu
1980: Cthulhu
1984: Cthulhu
1988: Cthulhu
1992: Cthulhu
1996: Cthulhu
2000: Cthulhu
2004: Cthulhu
2008: undecided
OT, there was a story in the WSJ this morning about the Dutch owner of whatever property Obama lived on in Indonesia as a 10 year old. The only things he could remember about Obama were that he didn't like getting rubbed on his head and one time his pet white poodle ran away and he cried for two days. I'm heartless and I thought that shit was funny.
you guys voting for Obama (OR McCain!) freakin' baffle me. I really don't get it.
2008: Obama (For great justice)
I understand that some people really believe that justice means
taking from the rich and giving to the poor.
Oh for the love of...catch up on your goddamned Net memes.
Especially ones that are a decade old.
Take off every zig, motherfucker.
And Nixon wasn't?
Oh he was. I just feel Wilson layed the ground work for Nixon. He
was sort of a trailblazer.
But Nixon was a close 2nd.
kinnath,
I sort of took that one as the Ron Bailey approach too, after
almost swallowing tobacco juice.
elder troll:
Switch to Hastur so we can get the fucking thing over with,
already.
All I can say is that when even the Reason crowd is all voting
for Obama, we are well and truly fucked.
Oh, well, let me practice: "I for one welcome our new Democratic
overlords."
Naah, that didn't come out right. Let me try again: "I for one
welcome our new Democratic overlords."
Hmm, sounds like I need to go practice some more until I can make
it sound convicing.
While not as lopsided as Slate's slate, I find it appalling that
so many self-professed "libertarians" are voting for Obama. Yeah, I
know that McCain is a fascist, but that doesn't negate Obama being
a socialist. There is an actual bona-fide Libertarian Party
candidate that libertarians can vote for, but he only came in a
distant second to Obama. At least there were several NOTA
votes.
When one of the biggest libertarian think tanks is is ignoring the
libertarian candidate in favor of the unabashed socialist, then the
movement is indeed dead.
picassoIII said:
Oh and WhereTF do i find any challangers for state offices.
It's what's going on in Springfield that worries me far
more.
I dunno man. My state Senator and my state Rep are both running
unopposed.
Now I like my state Sen (Harmon) well enought, but I wish Deborah
Graham would get booted. The only issue she seems to focus on is
gun control.
kinnath,
There's a long philisophical tradition (that starts with the
Catholic church, but is alive and well in many protestant forms) of
defining "social justice" as ensuring that everyone has enough food
to eat and enough free time to worry about their soul. This was
done through a number of mechanisms, all nominally (if not always
actually) voluntary. That same outcome is what a surprising number
of contemporary people (even those without the educational
background of why, exactly) define as "justice." And, since it's
the 21st century and the government can do anything at all if it
has 51% of the vote, why not make justice mandatory?
Not that I agree with making "justice" mandatory, I've just met a large number of people who thought that that was a legitimate line of logic.
When one of the biggest libertarian think tanks is is
ignoring the libertarian candidate in favor of the unabashed
socialist, then the movement is indeed dead.
free minds... well, I guess.
free markets... nope.
It's not that I don't know or understand the arguments against
voting Obama. It's that I don't find them particularly
compelling.
Ask the ghost of Schumpeter, we are already a Socialist country. It
was inevitable.
Meet the new boss
Same as the old boss
I, for one, welcome our new same statist overlords
I must withdraw previous statements and refrain from repeating
what I thought I heard Nick say on the Bill Moyers, PBS
show.
I thought he said that he always votes for the Libertarian
candidate. His response in this article seems to indicate
otherwise.
Weigel voting for Obama? Wins for most obvious.
I am slightly disappointed I guessed wrong that Welch would vote
McCain.I figured the hate mail would sway him.
I don't know how anyone could vote for President in 2004. There
were no acceptable choices on the ballot.
I may be breaking my pledge to vote for Barr this time. The lines
are too long.I am not investing more than one hour for as useless a
ritual as voting.
KM-W is starting to give Sullum a run for the coolest
REASON writer ideologically speaking.Even thugh she wants
to waterboard my favorite President
Meet the new boss
Same as the old boss
Romanian proverb: A change of rulers is the joy of fools.
Elder Troll wins the thread.
Though it would have been even funnier if, in the middle of all
those Cthulhus, he voted for Wendell Wilkie.
How's that working out for ya?
About the same as when I did vote LP. I didn't really expect my
little stand on principle to matter much.
Here's an idea -- why don't you get off your non-voting ass and
run for office as a Libertarian then...?
Been there, done that. I also served on my county and state
executive committees.
And I do vote, by the way. Just haven't voted for a Presidential
candidate in about a decade.
Here's how I've voted for president:
1996: Clinton
2000: Browne
2004: Kerry
2008: Obama
I turned 18 in 1992 less than a month after the election, so I
couldn't vote, although I do remember volunteering at Clinton's
local office for a day.
The 1996 election was boring and not worth discussing.
I voted for Browne over Gore in 2000 because even then I knew
Lieberman was an ass and I couldn't vote for him for any office.
His censor-happy, culuture warrior tendencies pissed me off to no
end, and the fact that Gore's wife (at least) had the same
tendencies (remember, she attempted to ban rap music in the 1980's)
made it a ticket I simply couldn't vote for, although if I lived in
a swing state instead of California I might have stuck a clothespin
on my nose and done so. Also, at the time, I thought Bush would be
fairly benign, like his father was (although, as a rule, I don't
vote for Republicans). Little did I know.
In 2004, I voted for, donated money to, and drove to Nevada to
volunteer for Kerry because Bush was such a disaster. Too bad Kerry
was an idiot and his campaign sucked.
I have already voted for Obama this time, although I haven't
voluteered or given him money (he doesn't need it, frankly).
Though it would have been even funnier if, in the middle of
all those Cthulhus, he voted for Wendell Wilkie.
and/or Pat Paulsen...
"I belong to the Straight Talking American Government Party, or
STAG Party for short."
ah, the good ol' days...
Jacob Sullum said:
1. Who are you voting for in November? Bob Barr. I admired Barr as
one of the most libertarian members of Congress even when he was a
Republican and a gung-ho drug warrior.
ChicagoTom said:
What? WHAT?! Wow! I'm sorry but I just can't take Sullum seriously
anymore after that statement.
You heard that right.
All the way back in 1995 he was pushing for 'sunset clauses' on the
comprehensive anti terrorism act. Ditto with patriot 03. This is
not some overnight transformation.
He's worked with the MJPP and the ACLU, testified in DC calling for
a return to checks and balances and dialing back the power of the
executive.
All of this BEFORE he sought the LP nomination.
I believe this is a real change of viewpoint. I've seem many a
smoker realize that there is a connection between the war on drugs
and the anti tobacco movement in terms of driving forces. They are
feeling what it's like to have your rights of self determination
utterly ignored.
Bob Barr is a smoker.
I highly doubt he's going to take up bisexuality but I think the
big 'ah-ha' switch in his brain has been tripped.
I could be completely wrong, but it doesn't matter. Voting for him
makes little difference to the outcome of the election, it DOES
make a difference for the next cycle in putting the LP on equal
footing.
"you guys voting for Obama (OR McCain!) freakin' baffle me. I
really don't get it."
I dunno, it makes sense to me. If I were a libertarian I might be
suspect of Barr (I'm not a libertarian and I'm not suspect of him,
I think he's truly converted). The guy was a very unlibertarian
fellow at one time. I can see how some folks may be sorry he was
the nominee.
And I can see how a libertarian, especially one in a swing state,
might feel like the GOP has to be punished and the only way that
happens is if Obama wins. And I can see why a libertarian would buy
into the socialist rhetoric and want anyone but Obama and hence, if
they were in a swing state, vote for McCain.
It all seems reasonable to me.
"When one of the biggest libertarian think tanks is is ignoring
the libertarian candidate in favor of the unabashed socialist, then
the movement is indeed dead."
I think it's probably just a matter of wanting to be SERIOUS.
There's a long philisophical tradition (that starts with the
Catholic church, but is alive and well in many protestant forms) of
defining "social justice" as ensuring that everyone has enough food
to eat and enough free time to worry about their soul.
When my priest badgers me into donating 1/10th of my income to
serve the needs of the poor, that is social justice.
When the government takes part of may paycheck, not so much.
SIV
I hope you get that chance. It would be nice to have another
two-term Democratic President...
Who knows, if she keeps working with that voice coach she may have
a British accent by then...
Neither major party candidate appeals to
me. One is an Both are ideologically
confused populist(s) and the other is a pure
demagogue(s).
Fixed.
My '08 ballot:
Most Powerful Man Ever:
Barr (L)- Duh
VA Senate:
Redpath (L)- See above
House (11th dist, replacing Davis):
Fimian (R)- This one required a little thought. As far as I can
tell, all 3 people on the ballot are gigantic douches. I was torn
between voting for the third party douche (Oddo) and the douche
least likely to coronate Obama as Emperor for Life (Fimian.) I
ultimately chose Fimian because I wanted to keep the district
competitive and he's currently down by >30%.
Parks Bond: Hell no.
When the government takes part of may paycheck, not so
much.
Maybe they should call it "Social Justice PLUS".
Leaving George W. Bush out of consideration, what former
U.S. president would you most like to have waterboarded?
Couldn't you have left this question out given how ASININE it is
and HOW MANY OF YOUR CONTRIBUTORS told you how asinine it was?
I'll be wearing black next Tuesday in mourning. 19 months of nonstop campaigning by the two major parties and these two are the best they can come up with. And one of them will win. I already need a drink.
Since this post has a photo from the movie Election,
I'll go ahead and threadjack to explain how terribly overrated that
movie is.
That movie wants me to hate Witherspoon's character and sympathize
with Broderick's. But it doesn't actually show good reasons to feel
that way. On the contrary, it encourages me to root for Tracy Flick
and wish Mr. McAllister would just drop dead. Flick's dishonest
ambition is less objectionable than the script's contempt for her
ambition. Good satire does not come from the cheap envy that
inspires bumper stickers like, "My kid beat up your honor student."
This movie mistakes that attitude for wisdom about American life.
To make an analogy to the far superior One Flew Over the Cuckoo's
Nest, Flick is the McMurphy to McAllister's Nurse Ratched. This
movie's loyalties are all wrong.
I stick by every one of them.
I didn't want more GOP rule post Reagan and I thought the GOP
needed punishing in 04.
The 96 and 00 votes were cast with an eye toward keeping viable a
third party. I hoped the Reform Party would stick.
ChicagoTom,
still curious about your choices for the other Fed offices.
For me Durbin needs to go. If Sauerberg(?) is within striking
distance i may have to hold nose, otherwise i'm free to go
Stafford.
As for Rep, Emmanuel (5th) is a lock so protest it is. I actually
like Hanson the R somewhat, we'll see what he does in the future.
Oh there's a green candidate *rolls eyes*
I'm exited as all get out that the Trib is endorsing Miller over
Davis (7th), and he did this with little support from the state
GOP. Mostly it's been him, local C4L and LP.
So much for these entities being useless.
Speaking of the trib, guess Chapman is a bit more libertarian than
i thought.
The lawn signs go up today, Barr, Stafford and Hanson. If i can
find out who's opposing Silverstein and D'Amico (architects of
SB500 the IL smoking ban *grr*) i may consider putting up their
signs. If they're pro-life, drug warriors, maybe not, but they'll
still get the protest vote.
Maybe they should call it "Social Justice PLUS".
Social Justice Minus maybe.
My wife and I give about $3K a year to a local charity that deals
with young, unwed mothers starting with prenatal education and
continuing into early childhood development. They do great work and
are woefully underfunded.
Sending tax dollars to the feds so that 50% or more of it can be
consumed by administrative costs before it ever reaches the people
on the street is dumb.
Having this opinion some how makes me an uncaring son of a
bitch.
19 months of nonstop campaigning by the two major parties and these two are the best they can come up with. And one of them will win.
But look on the bright side, one of them will lose.
MNG BDB,
Wrapped in the Flag and carrying a cross.
Riding on one of Satan's Lizards.She will win in a 40+ state
landslide if she can get the GOP nomination.
Brian,
The only character in that film that I liked was the lesbian girl
who wanted to get kicked out of school so she could go to the
Catholic all girl's school.
I didn't feel like we were supposed to particularly like any of the
characters. In that way, it really was like an actual election.
1992 - Ross "Charts 'n' Graphs" Perot
1996 - Cthulhu
2000 - Cthulhu
2004 - Michael Badnarik (I mistakenly thought he was Chuck
Bednarik)
2008 - Cthulhu
Having this opinion some how makes me an uncaring son of a
bitch.
Because then you don't HAVE to give. If we make it optional, you
might not participate. And if administrative costs eat up 50%, then
we can just tax you for $6000 and the mothers see the exact same
benefit.
SIV, weren't you the one saying McCain had totally clinched the election through picking Sarah Palin and resorting to psuedo-populism back in August?
Because then you don't HAVE to give. If we make it optional,
you might not participate. And if administrative costs eat up 50%,
then we can just tax you for $6000 and the mothers see the exact
same benefit.
Coercion and waste, it doesn't get any better than that.
Oh, very well:
1984: Reagan
1988: Bush
1992: Clinton
1996: Browne
2000: Browne
2004: Badnarik
2008: Babar
SIV, weren't you the one saying McCain had totally clinched
the election through picking Sarah Palin and resorting to
psuedo-populism back in August?
Give SIV a break. He probably said that before Palin started
speaking in public.
Yeah that might be true.
But thinking she would win in a 40 state landslide after all this?
Yeah. In what paralel universe?
She'd get Utah, Idaho, Wyoming, Alaska, and Oklahoma.
"Wrapped in the Flag and carrying a cross.
Riding on one of Satan's Lizards."
You have to love SIV. That guy not only is for minimal government,
he's for minimal sentences. Subjects AND predicates, what kind of
commie shit is that?
But thinking she would win in a 40 state landslide after all
this? Yeah. In what paralel universe?
never misunderestimate the infinite wisdom of the american
electorate...
... like when we end up electing McCain as our next president next
week, for example.
Warren wrote:
Children's Book?
Yup..
Guess what, it's a FRENCH elephant!!!
doom,
Doom,
DOOOM!
I dunno, it makes sense to me. If I were a libertarian I might be
suspect of Barr
So...Obama is the freakin' more libertarian
candidate or something?
Any libertarian voting one of the two big parties this year should
not be taken seriously.
I hope the polls stay wide enough in VA so I can vote for
Barr.
Augh! Like your one vote for Obamania would matter anyway!
TAO--
I want my vote to be "You done fucked up this year, GOP". I'm not
sure which would best express that yet.
I was going to not vote but then someone reminded me that Sheriff Joe Arpaio is up for re-election. Fuck. Looks like I'm obligated to head to the polls this year.
So...Obama is the freakin' more libertarian candidate or
something?
They're not voting for the more libertarian candidate. They're
voting against the crazy candidate whose political party deserves
to lose big.
BDB - That's an admirable goal. A vote for Obama is not going to
express that, however.
If you want to express that you're a pissed-off conservative,
please vote Barr or Baldwin. Voting Obama makes your vote
indistinguishable from all the yapping idiot undergrads who have
bought into Hopey McChangerson.
They're voting against the crazy candidate whose political
party deserves to lose big.
And how does one vote "against" a political party, Mr. Laursen? I
don't see that option on the ballot.
President I'd most like to see waterboarded?
Martin Sheen.
"Barack Obama, because he most exemplifies Reason and Free Minds
(sorry, the country is in no mood for Freer Markets)."
Surprised no one has commented on this one yet.
Well he has a solid ten point lead in VA at this point so it
will probably be Barr, unless the race miraculously tightens to
>2% McCain lead. That's when I vote for Obama. Thankfully that
doesn't seem to be in the cards.
I really wish I lived in DC or Utah so I could just vote for
whoever.
2004: Bush, to my everlasting shame. I was 19, and stupid.
2008: None of the above. Really wanted to vote Libertarian, but
Barr's an ass.
I sympathize with the effort to nominate a more mainstream,
well-known candidate, but I think the candidate should come from
the left, not the right. As for Barr's purported conversion, his
weaseling on DoMA and the WO(s)D leave much to be desired. I would
be much more convinced if we had a liberal candidate who became
more free market-friendly over time and split with the Democrats.
Not sure if that person exists though.
"I would be much more convinced if we had a liberal candidate
who became more free market-friendly over time and split with the
Democrats. Not sure if that person exists though."
George McGovern. He's too old, though.
A side digretion that has little to do with the main topic
Huh. I always thought that guy [Gates] had a lot on the ball.
And he's the inside baseball favorite for SecDef under an Obama administration.
Gates is the current Secretary of Defense. It seems like he does a
decent job. If things were like they were in '92, it would make
sense to keep him on for a while. But the urge to purge (an
appropriate one, I might add) will leave very few, if any holdovers
from the previous adminstration remaining.
Plus, Democrats need to get out of the habit of hiring republicans
for Secretary of Defense. To be taken seriously on 'national
security' issues, the Democrats need to take these issues seriously
themselves. And this means not always bunting, but occasionally
putting on the hit and run. Plus, from a big picture structural
standpoint, it is worthwile to build up a bullpen with both left
handed and right handed relievers.
If there was an intrade market on such things, if Danzig was less
than 50%, I'd buy. They could potentially bring back Perry, but
he's awfully old, and does not quite fit in with the theme of
change. I doubt they would could with Nunn either, as it would be
too much of a stick in the eye to the base. (would the democrats
filllibuster their own guy? that would be something). But if it's
not Danzig, it's likely to be another AAA guy (or girl) that hasn't
really been in the press all that much.
I am amazed at the constant (and justified)
bitching and moaning and complaining and righteous indignation that
intelligent libertarians hurl at the virtually-the-same two-parties
("Republicrats")...and you know what? A whole mess of you are going
right back to the two-party system, like an abused wife goes back
to her douchebag husband. "He'll be different this time!...I have
good reasons for going back there!"
For shame.
Right, jpok. You wouldn't want to risk that your vote might push Barr over the top.
I can see the merits of a libertarian engaging in "strategic
voting", e.g. Kerry in 2004. Kerry was without merit, but the bar
was set pretty low in 2004, and divided government certainly has
its merits.
I also think there's plenty of evidence of BDS among many of the
above libertarians. I'll miss a few things about the Bush
administration, such as a policy of looking after our own interests
at the UN instead of pretending the UN is benevolent. The same goes
for Kyoto, the ICC, etc. Bush has not attempted to silence his
critics, and those who think the Bush administration is dirty have
very short memories.
Obama has already tried to use the courts to silence his critics.
This impulse does not bode well for civil liberties under an Obama
administration. He favors "redistribution of wealth," by whatever
means necessary, including through SCOTUS. He favors severe
restrictions, or bans, on armed self-defense by law-abiding
citizens. His major goals include raising taxes, raising government
spending, and making health care a Federal program.
For those who believe that Obama is an intellectual, so that makes
him better, consider Wilson. Wilson had a PhD, and he'd be my vote
for waterboarding. An erudite fascist is what? A more effective
fascist? Wilson was quite effective -- in all the worst ways.
McCain's baby, CFR, is an affront to liberty. McCain is a "national
greatness conservative" who worships at the altar of TR. As someone
who grew up with Goldwater conservatism, I don't see McCain as a
conservative at all. I can surely see why a libertarian couldn't
vote for McCain.
Bob Barr offers a viable protest vote, without having to vote for
either Pepsi or Coke. The GOP will still get their needed drubbing,
if one votes for Barr. A vote for Barr (or any 3rd Party candidate,
or a blank ballot) will still be a vote against the GOP.
But how can a libertarian vote FOR Obama? I can find little about
him that's not the polar opposite of what libertarians would want.
We're not talking about a divided government in 2009, either, with
a Democrat in the White House.
Perhaps this article in the Guardian gets it right:
Depending on what Kool-Aid you have been drinking, when it
comes to Obama your glass is either half full, half empty or
overflowing, or you've smashed it lest anybody else imbibes its
poison.
People come to Obama with extraordinary amounts of baggage and dump
it at his door. For the most part their responses to him tell you
far more about them than they do about him.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2008/jul/21/barackobama.uselections2008
(This article is positive about Obama, by the way.)
It's a bit surprising to see the phenomenon manifested in a
magazine called "Reason." Where are rational reasons for a
libertarian Obama vote -- not just a vote against McCain or the
GOP, but a vote FOR a candidate who is a far-left ideologue and a
demagogue, to boot?
Have otherwise smart, mature libertarians fallen under his spell,
in that they, like so many naive liberal college kids, see what
they want to see, in Barack Obama?
CN - seriously...I used to get beat down (deservedly so!)
arguing that libertarians belonged with Republicans. Every time
DONDEROOOO comes around, he's ruthlessly mocked...and yet, we have
a bunch of libertarians who finally have a chance to vote for a
high-profile third-party candidate (or two! Vote Baldwin for all I
care!) and they're too addicted to the Two Big Parties that they
can't walk away.
It's astounding.
The two-party system is flawed of course, but for the love of
god if you can't see a difference between the two parties you just
aren't paying attention.
Third-party supporting idealists who were "voting their conscience"
might have done this country a whole lot of good by holding their
nose in 2000. As I see it, contributing to a lost cause (and
thereby helping the candidate who least represents your values) is
the least conscientious choice there is.
I can see the merits of a libertarian engaging in "strategic
voting",
Tactical voting would be to elect or defeat some particular
candidate.
Strategic voting would be preparing for future elections, primarily
through party building.
There is no fucking reason on earth for a libertarian to vote for
either Obama or McCain in this election. The Democrats are going to
control the House and the Senate. The president will either be
irrelevant (McCain) or destructive to libertarian ideals
(Obama).
Your mileage may vary.
talk about cutting off your nose to spite your face...how many of them said they have or will vote for a particular candidate solely because they didn't like "the other guy"?
Citizen Nothing - you could make that same case no matter who you vote or didn't vote for. And I would not strenuously disagree. But since I am going to vote (at least for all races and measures besides president), and Barr does not meet my standard of a believable libertarian, he does not get my vote. But yes, it certainly doesn't matter either way.
I'm not getting into this "Is Barr believable..." whiny bullshit
again.
It doesn't matter whether Barr is believable. He's not going to
win. However, the whole point of his candidacy was to raise the
profile of the LP.
But it's OK, kids, go back to that abusive husband you call the Two
Parties. And then when you get hit again, you have only yourselves
to blame.
Skipper: McCain. Old navy guy.
Gilligan: Obama. Frequently beaten by The Man.
Mr. Howell: McCain. Several homes. Old.
Mrs. Howell: McCain. Plasters on the makeup like a trollop,
you...
Ginger: Obama. Hollywood.
Mary-Ann: Swing voter. Midwestern, rural, young, low-income.
Professor: Obama. Graduate degree.
Oh yeah...
Obama "will be very good for business," Craig Newmark says? Huh?
Maybe he would be good for Newmark's business (craigslist), but
only because on-line ads for cash-payment services and bartering
will become more popular... Or does Newmark think that the economy
will become so depressed that everyone will be selling off their
old crap on craigslist to pay the bills? I'd be interested in
hearing what Newmark sees in Obama's policies that will be "very
good for business."
Strategic voting would be preparing for future elections,
primarily through party building.
There is no fucking reason on earth for a libertarian to vote for
either Obama or McCain in this election.
There was a reason I used quotations marks, Mr. Potty Mouth.:-)
I suppose I can understand the bitching and complaining about
the sheer number of guys in the article who are voting for Obama.
I'm voting for Barr, and I'd like other libertarians to vote for
Barr.
But I do have to say: if the split among the respondents was
between McCain and Barr instead of between Obama and Barr, would
there be as much bitching? Somehow I don't think so. A libertarian
voting for a Republican is somehow always acceptable, despite the
GOP's atrocious record on libertarian issues. And that's crap. For
all the times that the "choice" was between the Republican and
Libertarian candidate, this time the choice is between the Democrat
and Libertarian candidate. And that's the GOP's fault, and not
libertarians' fault.
And how does one vote "against" a political party, Mr.
Laursen? I don't see that option on the ballot.
I agree with you that voting for the candidate running against the
candidate or party you don't like is not exactly the same thing as
voting "against" them. But, we weren't talking about how I vote.
I've never done the voting "against" thing. I've only voted "for"
or abstained.
Having said that, if I lived in a swing state, I'd be voting for
Obama just to help keep McCain, war-loving, ill-tempered, and
impulsive, from being elected.
BarryD,
One ridiculous aspect of public discourse is that it still hangs
onto the obviously flawed notion that Republicans are good for
business and Democrats are bad for it. Corporations have a
religious-like devotion to the party that is absolutely responsible
for the loss of trillions of dollars in our markets. Cutting taxes
on the rich but nobody else means consumers can't buy the products
of the rich people. Everybody, business included, suffers under
Republicans. Ask any business what their numbers looked like during
Clinton and what they look like now. If business leaders are still
supporting Republicans then they're only doing it out of blind,
religious devotion. Kudos to libertarians who see through the
right-wing BS they've been throwing you for decades. They don't
care about free markets, they care about using the government to
launder money that they funnel to their plutocratic allies. I'm
glad for the rare libertarian who sees through the propaganda.
"When one of the biggest libertarian think tanks is is ignoring the
libertarian candidate in favor of the unabashed socialist, then the
movement is indeed dead."
Citizen Nothing wrote:
I think it's probably just a matter of wanting to be SERIOUS.
Exactly…
There is little difference and from a libertarian point of view on
stated platform. The worst case scenario future with McCain/Palin
is much worse than with Obama/Biden.
Best case probably goes that way too.
"Unfortunately, Governor Bush is a Pat Robertson Republican who
will lose to Al Gore. ... The political tactics of division and
slander are not our values... They are corrupting influences on
religion and politics, and those who practice them in the name of
religion or in the name of the Republican Party or in the name of
America shame our faith, our party and our country. Neither party
should be defined by pandering to the outer reaches of American
politics and the agents of intolerance, whether they be Louis
Farrakhan or Al Sharpton on the left, or Pat Robertson or Jerry
Falwell on the right."
THAT McCain would be worth voting for, not this time.
Not to mention that McCain was far more likely to live 4-8
years.
I can take an unabashed PROGRESSIVE that has yet to advoacte
anything as sweeping as a new 'new deal' or 'great society'. If I
was in battleground, that could be enough to sway me. That would be
a 'tactical' vote i guess, fortunately it's 'strategic' in teh
liberal wasteland that is NE IL.
Ask any business what their numbers looked like during
Clinton and what they look like now.
And then ask them about correlation and causation.
"ChicagoTom wrote:
"Babar"
Nice. ;-)
And for Senator and Rep?
Oh and WhereTF do i find any challangers for state offices. It's
what's going on in Springfield that worries me far more."
The Illinois senatorial candidate Larry Stafford is actually *not a
freak*. I heard him debate the Green and Constitution party
candidates and he was a strong speaker, articulate, and could
convey the libertarian message in a way that was both easy to
understand and appealed to those not familiar with libertarianism.
He stuck to libertarian principles and seemed to take the moderate
position for issues that libertarians internally disagree with
(e.g. abortion).
If you google something like "miller politics third party debate"
you might find it.
Ask any business what their numbers looked like during
Clinton and what they look like now.
Uh, with Clinton and a Democratic Congress, the numbers looked
pretty bad. During the dot-com bubble, they looked pretty good. Of
course, Newt Gingrich invented the Internet, and Bill Clinton made
the economy sing. Or maybe politicians don't do anything
productive, and therefore don't really "help business" except for a
few businesses that donate money to them...
I didn't say that Republicans are "good for business" or that
Democrats are "bad for business." What I asked was what Craig
Newmark sees in Obama's proposed policies that would be
good for business. I'd love to know (and his interview didn't shed
any light on anything, other than that he comes off as a pretty dim
bulb on video).
I'd be glad for the rare poster who doesn't invent a straw man so
he can respond with a predetermined talking point. Again, where's
the "reason" here?
I find principled non-voting to be the ethical choice. But then
I also feel that majoritarian democracy is nothing more than gang
rape by a different name.
OBTW, I'll still reserve the right to complain vociferously no
matter which rapist wins.
"So...Obama is the freakin' more libertarian candidate or
something?"
On many issues he is the more libertarian candidate of the two with
a chance of winning TAO.
And of course a vote for Obama punishes the GOP and sends them a
message. Any way they lose makes them have to re-examine their
message as it was undoubtedly not a winning one.
majoritarian democracy is nothing more than gang rape by a
different name.
Well, in a gang rape, the victim doesn't usually get to feel
involved in the decisionmaking process. Of course, the outcome is
the same...
When the same correlation comes up enough that you can make the phrase "correlation doesn't equal causation" a macro on your Word settings, maybe it's time to step back and think a little bit.
As Jack Benny famously said when confronted by a gun-toting thief who demanded his money or his life: "I'm thinking; I'm thinking."
That's, "I'm thinking it over!" Noob.
Actually, it depends on whether you're talking about the two
different times he did that bit on radio or the time he did it on
TV. It was "I'm thinking; I'm thinking" on television.
On many issues he is the more libertarian candidate of the
two with a chance of winning TAO.
I am GENUINELY CURIOUS.
How is he?
Pre-emptively: I didn't say McCain is. I didn't say anything about
the filthy Democans or Republicrats. I just want to know what
proposed policies of Obama's are libertarian, or "more libertarian"
or whatever. I really want to know.
I's votin for that Obama guy. That's so I don't got to listen to them NEEEEGROOOOES bitch about racism anymores.
TQ:
While the Rs are certainly more 'guilty' of corporate welfare, both
majors have gone to far in that direction.
"...should more appropriately be called Corporatism. It is the
perfect union of the state and the corporation. The individual does
not count."
Ronald Bailey
2. Who did you vote for in 2004 and 2000? George W. Bush and George W. Bush. I am disheartened and ashamed.
David Brin
2. Who did you vote for in 2004 and 2000? I could tell that the neocons were mad in 2000 and that their allies were fanatics or thieves. It was blatant in 2004. Those who act shocked (shocked!) and betrayed today were fools then and are likely fools now. [Emphasis added.]
Um, I think Brin just called Bailey out.
Just when I think this NRO symposium is the most ridiculous thing I have read, now comes this, where self-proclaimed libertarians admit they plan to vote for a liberal Democrat without a single redeeming libetarian quality that every other liberal Democrat in the country doesn't already have.
Too few data points, joe. Two dem presidencies in the last 40 years and I'd say they're batting .500 in the Harvest Good Under Leader from Donkey Clan metric.
While the Rs are certainly more 'guilty' of corporate
welfare, both majors have gone to far in that direction.
This year, the R's in the House tried to fight the "bailout."
McCain rode in to "save the day" for the poor, helpless corporate
welfare recipients.
That's a good reason to vote AGAINST McCain.
But I'm still wondering about why a libertarian would vote FOR
Obama.
"And then ask them about correlation and causation."
Alan Greenspan himself admits that the fault lies with his mistaken
belief that markets regulate themselves. This is a man who calls
himself a libertarian and who pretty much singlehandedly caused the
housing bubble. He admits his worldview--the economic model on
which our economy was based during his and Bush's tenure--is
fundamentally flawed. Our economy prospers under Democrats and
recedes under Republicans. Doesn't mean Democrats are perfect, it
just sheds some light on the difference between pragmatic
governance and ideological governance. "The fault isn't with
libertarianism--it's with the world." Marxists said a similar thing
when communism failed. Maybe you guys are right and we just haven't
been ideologically pure enough. I challenge you to find anyone not
on this web site who wants to give it a shot.
egosumabbas:
Oh, i'm pushing for Stafford. Got signs already. But ... IF
Sauerberg starts getting close it may be worth it to get Dickie
Durban out of the Senate to balance an Obama prez.
My concern with state government is there is borderline media
blackout on these races.
IF the opposition candidates are worth more than a protest vote i
want some of their shwag to distribute.
Alan Greenspan himself admits that the fault lies with his
mistaken belief that markets regulate themselves
I actually listened to what he said. Did you?
That's not what he said. He was talking about the financial
markets, specifically WRT the (IMO fraudulent) use of opaque
derivatives, not the markets for goods in general.
TQ, you may claim pragmatism, but what you just wrote is pure
ideology.
And when Robin Hood stole from the entrenched aristocracy,
there may have been some actual justice involved.
Robin Hood stole from the government and gave it back to the
people.
Obama steals from the people to give to the government.
Obama punishes the GOP and sends them a
message
But what message. I think this goes back kind of to Weigel's
reporting of RP televising immigration commercials. That totally
dilutes the protest angle of voting for him, because there are so
many similarities between him and the other republicans on
immigration. Who knows the message they get might be, "hey we lost
this because we didn't do ENOUGH for the base we will get them next
with Palin. Or we didn't offer the voters enough populism we'll get
them next time with Huckabee" A vote for Barr, for all his faults I
think sends a pretty clear message both to the republicans and more
importantly, the LP.
How about this, Hogan:
A complete and utter absence of correlation, bordering on and
arguable well into the area of negative correlation, is a pretty
damn good argument for the lack of causation.
Oh, and I'm particularly annoyed by the "I'm gonna send a message" voters. Let me explain something to you. When you vote, there's no comment box to provide context. Incredible.
Let me explain something to you. When you vote, there's no
comment box to provide context. Incredible.
Nonetheless, messages are transmitted, admittedly with a lot of
noise, by the vote tallies.
Boston's got it right.
Political parties exist to get votes.
If the GOP loses and sees Obama win with a solid majority, their
response probably won't be "let's get another Goldwater!" If the
GOP loses and sees Obama win narrowly, and the reason for Obama's
win is that 5% of "conservative" voters went for Barr, then maybe
they'll get some sort of message.
A vote for a major candidate is seldom, if ever, recognized as a
"protest vote" by anyone who counts.
I agree joe, there aren't causal relationships between the clan of the Big Chief and the quality of the harvest.
agree with Boston. if you want the Republican Party to be
punished for straying from libertarianism, the only way they'll
know that that's your concern is by voting for Barr.
I would do so, but I have opted to vote for McCain as it
antagonizes my Obama enthusiast social circle.
19 months of nonstop campaigning by the two major parties and these two are the best they can come up with.
Pssh. Pessimist. Don't you remember Huckabee, Giuliani or John Edwards? Trust me, things could've been worse.
But I'm still wondering about why a libertarian would vote FOR Obama.
Maybe there aren't enough Libertarians around to elect Barr...and we know it.
Plus, Democrats need to get out of the habit of hiring republicans
for Secretary of Defense. To be taken seriously on 'national
security' issues, the Democrats need to take these issues seriously
themselves. And this means not always bunting, but occasionally
putting on the hit and run. Plus, from a big picture structural
standpoint, it is worthwhile to build up a bullpen with both left
handed and right handed relievers.
Most baseball analogies (and sports analogies in general) are
mouth-breathing tarded. This one, however, is pretty damn good;
perhaps the best I've seen.
Obama, Paul, Barr, Kucinich, Cox, Brownback and Gravel; YES.
McCain ... NO.
Oh and Art-POG, too true, too true.
Huckleberry and Guili *shudder*
FWIW, I just ran the standard libertarian platform through four
of those "choose your candidate" calculators. Each time it spit out
Barr or Ron Paul (when Paul was available) and each time it rated
McCain above Obama (sometimes by a little, sometimes by a lot), and
both far below Barr and Paul.
Mighty big grain of salt and all, but I'd still like to see a more
rigorous test as to how Obama can be seen as more libertarian than
McCain. It's not that high of a bar to clear, but I don't see him
doing it.
Guys, this is really not complicated. Two voters who agree on
every single issue can logically support different
candidates.
Priorities matter. There are reasonable libertarian justifications
for supporting either Obama or Mccain.
BarryD,
Yes, the conversation was about credit default swaps specifically,
but Greenspan does admit that the flaw in his thinking was in
assuming that the self-interest of firms would protect shareholders
and their equity by itself. He doesn't go so far as to say the idea
is flawed for all or most products, but if it didn't work here, why
should it work elsewhere? The assumption was that officers of the
firms themselves, since they obviously knew more about the risks
than government regulators, would better manage things.
It's a fundamentally flawed idea because it disregards the inherent
conflicts of interest and disregards the entire point of
government, which is to respond to the wishes (i.e. the general
welfare) of the people, and not shareholders.
Entertaining list, except for Pinker who was about as fun as
finding out you have a brain tumor. For the record,
1988 Dukakis, 1992 Bush, 1996 Browne 2000 Bush (high at the time)
2004 n/a 2008 Barr
Jeez, the one time I pick a winner . . .
Most important election: No. Recovery occurs within a year. Pelosi
will be happy to settle for some symbolic shit, and a few gold
plated signing pens, Obama will be the most cautious president in
the nations history. It will be four years of Sunday Afternoons:
The Great Tea Time of The Soul. Unfortunately, by 2012, the
American people will be eager to invade another country again just
to keep them awake.
For that last question: FDR
The only real surprise is Poole. For his pet cause, McCain would
not be a 'privatiser' (neither would Obama, but Barr would be). I'm
a bit perplexed as to why he pays so much attention to 'supreme
court nominations' from what I understand of Poole's background and
policy preferences. I also think while Obama is 'bad' on trade, it
won't make much of differnce due to other priorities and
instituional inertia. (I also believe that those on the left that
believe we are about to enter a new 'golden age' of unionization
are going to find themselves disappointed.)
Plus, if you find yourself on the same side of issue as Grover
Frickin Norquist, you should reassess.
Maybe there aren't enough Libertarians around to elect
Barr...and we know it.
That was not my question. Read anything I've posted. Barr would be
a protest vote, and no more.
Say you're a pragmatist who figures that there's no point in voting
for a 3rd party, that you should pick the R or the D, whichever is
closer to your views.
My question, as clearly as I can state it, is this: why is Obama
the "more libertarian" candidate? What proposals, policies,
beliefs, or anything else, would flag him as the "more libertarian"
major candidate?
Like Voros McCracken, I'm still waiting for any concrete answer to
this question. I am genuinely curious to know what one might
be.
Vote for Democrats because they still believe in civil
liberties. Economic libertarianism is dead anyway as a foundation
for public policy, at least for a long, long time.
This "not a dime's worth of difference" crap is such nonsense. If
we'd elected Al Gore, how many people's torture would have been
sanctioned? How many phony wars would we be engaged in? How much
encroachment upon policy would the theocratic right have had? How
many autocratic signing statements would have been composed? Why is
this a difficult question?
The assumption was that officers of the firms themselves,
since they obviously knew more about the risks than government
regulators, would better manage things.
This was not the assumption.
The assumption was that the officers of the firms would be
motivated by self-interest to limit the risks to their firms, and
more broadly, to the whole industry.
You're right about conflicts of interest, and I do not utterly
oppose regulation, particularly when it comes to transparency.
Requiring a seller to disclose what he's selling does not violate
libertarian principles, IMO. As I said, I believe the CDO and
related derivative markets to have been fraudulent. This is the
most serious threat to our economy and our economic system. On
this, we agree, I think.
However, Greenspan didn't assume that things would go fine because
the CEO's knew more; he assumed that the various self-interested
parties would end up managing their assets in a way that would
manage risk. As it turns out, fraud is more profitable, and more
fun, than just running a boring old stable investment bank.
He underestimated the perversion of self-interest by fraud. That is
not about the government expressing the "general will" over that of
the shareholders. In this case, regulation would have helped the
shareholders most of all, in the long term.
Regulation to prevent fraud is different from regulation based on a
belief that central planning works better than a market kept honest
by a stable, effective legal framework.
BarryD,
You must recognize that the two candidates have different policy
proposals, right?
If you vote based primarily on income taxes, McCain is closer to
the libertarian position.
If you vote primarily based on foreign policy, Obama is.
I recognize that neither one is anywhere near the actual
libertarian position, but clearly one can be closer.
Like Voros McCracken, I'm still waiting for any concrete answer to this question.
I've already seen this question answered repeatedly. Perhaps you missed it or the answers were not to your liking.
If we'd elected Al Gore, how many people's torture would
have been sanctioned? How many phony wars would we be engaged in?
How much encroachment upon policy would the theocratic right have
had? How many autocratic signing statements would have been
composed? Why is this a difficult question?
Some of that depends on whether you believe that Al Gore wouldn't
have continued Clinton's policies. Al Gore was never President, so
it's hard to say what he would have done. It is fair to guess that,
after Clinton's relatively popular administration, he would have
continued similar policies and kept on some of the same
personnel.
Clinton's administration was a gross violator of civil liberties.
Read critiques from that time. Clinton's administration engaged in
phony wars. Again, look back at what people wrote back then. Gore
may not be a right-wing theocrat, but he's an environmental
theocrat. What policies of Bush's "theocratic" leanings caused the
damage that a big carbon tax would?
Blinded by BDS, you probably have already stopped reading. But in
case you still are, that's not a defense of Bush -- it's an
illustration of why this isn't such a simple question, just off the
top of my head.
And here comes TQ to pimp for his "favorite son" half of the
Republicrats.
f we'd elected Al Gore, how many people's torture would have
been sanctioned? How many phony wars would we be engaged in? How
much encroachment upon policy would the theocratic right have had?
How many autocratic signing statements would have been
composed?
1. I don't know. Counterfactuals aren't my game. How many Wacos
have there been under Bush?
2. What do you call the Kosovo War?
3. How much encroachment would the theocratic/environmental left
have on policy?
4. Where did the USA PATRIOT Act originate?
So, when you vote Obama, you send this message to the GOP: "Had
you been more like Obama, you might have garnered my vote"...
Why would any libertarian do that?
Is that a serious question?
Oh god, you're that "Randian" aren't you?
Yes, there is a libertarian foreign policy position. You don't
share it.
Tim Cavanaugh: thank you. It should also be 'whom' instead of
'who' for Q 1. and 'which' instead of 'what' in Q 5.
1. Who are you voting for...
2. Who did you vote for in 2004 and 2000? Michael Badnarik in 2004.
Ralph Nader (IIRC) in 2000. And that should be "whom."
5. Leaving George W. Bush out of consideration, what former U.S.
president would you most like to have waterboarded? Lyndon Johnson.
Because he was mean to dogs.
Drew Carey: thank you. Rights, like the right to free speech, to
religion, to avoid cruel and unusual punishments etc., are only
rights if your worst enemy has them as much as your BFF.
5. Leaving George W. Bush out of consideration, what former U.S.
president would you most like to have waterboarded? None of them.
The sooner we stop coming up with lists of people to waterboard,
the better.
"Priorities matter."
The thing is though that ratcheting up the priorities of one issue
and ratcheting down the priorities of another is a convenient way
to arrive at a predetermined destination. I mean I can get McCain
more libertarian than Ron Paul if I screw with the priorities scale
enough (Immigration is all that matters). Hell I could probably
make a libertarian argument for Pol Pot over Milton Friedman if you
let me tinker with the priorities lever enough.
This "not a dime's worth of difference" crap is such
nonsense. If we'd elected Al Gore, how many people's torture would
have been sanctioned? How many phony wars would we be engaged in?
How much encroachment upon policy would the theocratic right have
had? How many autocratic signing statements would have been
composed? Why is this a difficult question?
911
Why would any libertarian do that?
I do whatever I can live with myself after doing. If you really believe the GOP's that retarded...
"The thing is though that ratcheting up the priorities of one
issue and ratcheting down the priorities of another is a convenient
way to arrive at a predetermined destination. I mean I can get
McCain more libertarian than Ron Paul if I screw with the
priorities scale enough (Immigration is all that matters). Hell I
could probably make a libertarian argument for Pol Pot over Milton
Friedman if you let me tinker with the priorities lever
enough."
Yeah, you could. Priorities still matter, but obviously you have to
have perspective.
What's the alternative? Weight every issue equally? That seems like
a pretty silly way to decide your vote, but to each his own.
Art, if Obama wins in a landslide, you know which Republican
looks good for 2012?
Hint: He comes from Arkansas. (shudder)
Mike, for your edification, most "Randians" share the
libertarian foreign policy perspective, at least as it was
elucidated by Ayn Rand.
Some Objectivists, unfortunately, have gone off the reservation
with this war stuff.
Voros,
Also, my remark was directed at the sentiment that "No True
Libertarian would ever vote for Candidate X!" Obviously
libertarians (like every political ideology) make philosophical
sacrifices when they vote. I may fundamentally disagree with the
sacrifices they make, but I wouldn't call into question their
ideology. Their perspective, maybe.
The Angry Optimist | October 29, 2008, 5:21pm | #
And here comes TQ to pimp for his "favorite son" half of the
Republicrats.
f we'd elected Al Gore, how many people's torture would have been
sanctioned? How many phony wars would we be engaged in? How much
encroachment upon policy would the theocratic right have had? How
many autocratic signing statements would have been composed?
1. I don't know. Counterfactuals aren't my game. How many Wacos
have there been under Bush?
2. What do you call the Kosovo War?
3. How much encroachment would the theocratic/environmental left
have on policy?
4. Where did the USA PATRIOT Act originate?
Well covered, I will only add that the Clinton Administration with
much show of support from Gore also had signed into law a
declaration of intent to overthrow Saddam Hussein. The Washington
establishment left and right wanted that war in Iraq, and it is
highly unlikely a Gore administration would have rejected a call to
feed those animal spirits.
"Mike, for your edification, most "Randians" share the
libertarian foreign policy perspective, at least as it was
elucidated by Ayn Rand."
Wasn't Rand a cold warrior? I might be wrong. In any case,
retracted.
Hint: He comes from Arkansas. (shudder)
Wow. Two days from Halloween and that's the scariest thought I've had in some time.
Ehn...I don't know if she had a position WRT defense spending (other than to spend what you need to spend), but she was opposed to U.S. involvement in WWI, WWII (pre-Pearl Harbor), Korea, Viet Nam etc. etc.
Wow. Two days from Halloween and that's the scariest thought
I've had in some time.
It certainly gave me the creeps. I remember watching a documentary
in school on William Jennings Bryan, and thinking something along
the lines of, 'thank God, I didn't have to listen to his horse shit
in real time.' Well, if you live long enough your curses get
answered.
Obama is the most "libertarian" of candidates.
Obama will:
Legalize gay marriage
End federal War on Marijuana
End corporate welfare
Stop the Republican secret draft plan
Restore our civil liberties
End student loan debt slavery
Whoa!!!
Stop the Republican secret draft plan
Since when is Charles Rangel a Republican?
Art-P.O.G.,
I'm definitely not arguing for McCain but my question is:
Given that none of us know the future and any number of unforeseen
events could occur in the next four years, isn't a more broad
outlook on potential policies more wise? I'm not arguing that such
an outlook favors McCain (although the vote calculators did), but
I've yet to see a broad based argument for Obama. All I've seen are
minimalist ones where everything is off the table except Iraq and
the Patriot Act.
My personal view is that I'll vote for a Chicago Democrat for
president as soon as never (at least not personally, they might
still be voting in Chicago for me), but that's not really the
point. I'll probably pull the lever for Barr (an LP vote is
something of merit I guess). I just want to know why an Obama vote
by a libertarian is anything more than a figurative obscene gesture
directed at Republicans. That's fine I guess (though literal
obscene gestures would be more fun), but do like Cavanaugh and
don't make it out to be more than it is.
Freedom - that is a pile of lies.
And know your audience: I don't believe in "student debt slavery";
I see adults having to pay back what they've obligated themselves
to pay.
Legalize gay marriage No. He takes a pass there.
End federal War on Marijuana With Biden as Obama's running
mate? Who are you kidding?
End corporate welfare You are doing this on purpose with a
wink and a nod, right?
Stop the Republican secret draft plan He has got a few
ideas about 'volunteerism' of his own. Though I doubt he is serious
on that score.
Restore our civil liberties Might be something there, but
the Biden pick makes me wonder if he is serious on this
score.
End student loan debt slavery
Pay your damn bills, and stop making it more expensive for the rest
of us.
I'm under no illusion about the excesses of Democrats, but I'm a
realist. We have two options. Either a Democrat or a Republican
will get elected. I'm no shill for Democrats but I do believe in
evidence. Which party has been better for civil liberties?
And no, it wasn't the entire establishment that was gunning for war
in Iraq. It was the cadre of middle east hawks led by our current
vice president. The two parties are not in bed with each other;
they hate each other. Equating the two is ignoring history and
reason in favor of a simplistic throw-your-hands-up cynicism. We
won't get to anyone's ideal world in four years, libertarian or
otherwise. What we can get is a government that believes in
evidence and pragmatic policymaking, which is what Obama offers.
It's the best you're gonna get.
TQ - you ARE a shill. The only reason that "one of the two
parties" will win is because people like you, every four years,
come around like clockwork and talk about how we've just "GOTTA
vote for the better party this year, man! You can vote on
principles next election!"
The two parties are not in bed with each other
McCain-Feingold.
No Child Left Behind.
AUMF in Iraq.
Medicare Part D
The Bailout.
1. I'm writing in Ron Paul. He's a qualified write-in in
California, and he's looking even better now that we are in the
midst of the financial collapse he tried to warn us about. The fact
that he doesn't want to be president clinches the deal.
2. I proudly voted for Harry Browne in 2000, and Michael Badnarik
in 2004 -- and I have the autographed copy of "Good to be King" to
prove it. I wish more people had the guts to tell state governments
what they can do with their driver's licenses.
3. The most important election of my lifetime was 1992, because it
was the only realistic chance to show the two "major" parties what
we really think of them. If only Perot hadn't dropped out
temporarily, or if only people knew then that talking about
Republican dirty tricks didn't mean you were paranoid, it meant you
were perceptive.
4. I will miss Condoleeza Rice reminding me continually that some
of the smartest people in the world can be the most clueless.
5. I wouldn't wish waterboarding on anyone, but I would rank Abe
Lincoln as the worst president, for launching the deadliest war in
our history after seven states peacefully seceded, then convincing
people that crushing dissent with military power was somehow
protecting government "by the people".
Oh god, you're that "Randian" aren't you?
Yes, there is a libertarian foreign policy position. You don't
share it.
Huh?
No, I'm not that "Randian" nor any other randian. And how would you
know what I share?
However, there are several schools of thought, ranging from
Heinlein to Chomsky, that have been labeled libertarian foreign
policy.
So there may be a Mike foreign policy, but I'm not sure there IS a
common libertarian foreign policy.
I'm a pragmatist. Jefferson found out how well a trade-only,
military-isolation policy worked in the early years of the
Republic. So I figure that I don't want to get into a war except
that which is necessary to protect national interests (trade,
territory, etc.). That's not uniquely libertarian, by any stretch
of the imagination!
What's your foreign policy?
If you are arguing simply that Obama is the lesser of two evils
of the two parties than yes, I've conceded that along time
ago.
However, my pragmatic reason for voting a Libertarian ticket is to
keep that party alive for a hoped for time when it will make a
difference, as it needs a certain percentage of support to be able
to stay on the ballot for the next election in my state.
How does everyone feel of Europe's influence on the next president? Is Obama going to try to please them too much, and overextend ourselves(financially)?
BTW I understand that there is a lot of room for debate on what
a "national interest" is. And I hate the term.
However, when Jefferson had to confront the Barbary Pirates, he
wasn't defending our country's soil. I don't object to what he did.
So one has to use some term to describe what he was defending.
"What's the alternative? Weight every issue equally? That seems
like a pretty silly way to decide your vote, but to each his
own."
There's no reason it has to be equal and on a few issues on the
calculators I wasn't. But my argument is that given that so much of
what is going to happen is unknown, unusually narrow focuses can be
a little presumptuous. The key issue could be economics, it could
be military adventurism (national greatness or humanitarian
flavored). It could even be trade if things swing unusually
protectionist. It could be something really off the wall like
cloning (say they find a cure for cancer, but have to clone you to
do it). I mean what _could_ happen is a pretty large scope. Why
shouldn't a look at the candidate's positions be similarly large?
I'm not saying such an outlook benefits McCain, but I don't agree
with narrow scope outlooks regardless of who it favors.
Call the grammar police! Posting while working never ends
well.
How does everyone feel about Europe's influence on
the next president? Is Obama going to try to please them too much,
and overextend ourselves(financially)?
Obama is the most "libertarian" of candidates.
Obama will:
Legalize gay marriage
End federal War on Marijuana
End corporate welfare
Stop the Republican secret draft plan
Restore our civil liberties
End student loan debt slavery
You slay me.
How does everyone feel of Europe's influence on the next
president?
As the son of people who emigrated from Europe, I feel like the
entire left side of the political spectrum got its rose-colored
ideas about Europe when they went there and had a good time on
Spring Break.
Is Obama going to try to please them too much, and overextend
ourselves(financially)?
If the renowned fiscal restraint of the Pelosi/Reid Congress don't
keep him from doing it.
Voros, I understand that and respect it.
The only reason that "one of the two parties" will win is because people like you, every four years, come around like clockwork and talk about how
Eh, too many other people to blame. Non-voters, the MSM, people already "in the tank" for one of the majors, etc.
Hey, where the fuck is Kerry Howley?
I think she's off studying at some college in Iowa or something
like that.
Art - fair enough. But the only reason "one of the two parties
will win" is because enough people support "one of the two
parties". It does not have to be that way.
And what gets my goat is that we have libertarians going
through mental and linguistic gymnastics to justify voting for the
Republicrats.
my pragmatic reason for voting a Libertarian ticket is to
keep that party alive for a hoped for time when it will make a
difference
Makes good sense to me.
If you've got no reason to vote FOR either major candidate, why not
vote AGAINST both, while using your vote FOR something you believe
in?
THAT'S why I don't understand the above enthusiasm for Obama. He'll
win or lose with or without one vote. If one is a libertarian and
wants to cast a vote against the GOP and McCain, why would one vote
for a Democrat who's a left-wing demagogue when there's a
Libertarian on the ticket?
Oh, one more time.
Transparency.
Oh as for my record...
Libertarian (if available) every time since 1988.
Otherwise anti-incumbent.
And what gets my goat is that we have libertarians going
through mental and linguistic gymnastics to justify voting for the
Republicrats.
LOL
Feminists sold out in the mid '90s, when many blindly supported
Clinton and lashed out at women whom he had sexually harrassed and
dared say so.
Conservatives sold out in 2004, when they felt they had to talk up
George Bush because they wanted him to beat Kerry. Liberals sold
out at the same time, for the same reason but the opposite
candidate. I remember seeing REM perform at some Democrat
rally/concert, with a Michael Stipe in a Kerry t-shirt; he was a
Deaniac at heart and you could see it in his grimace.
Lately, it's been disgusting to listen to people like Hugh Hewitt,
once a Reaganite for better or worse, shill for the GOP over and
over.
Fortunately, many other commentators still write or say what they
really think, even if it's critical of their preferred lesser evil.
One would hope that, if conservatives and liberals can do it, that
libertarians could, though.
Last time aroung, Bush and Kerry both sucked.
Newsflash: so did Bush and Gore, and so do McCain and Obama.
Clinton won because, of three candidates, he was the one who seemed
to suck least, so he got a plurality of votes.
As many have said, 300 million people and this is the best we can
do?
Geoff | October 29, 2008, 5:46pm | #
Whoa!!!
Stop the Republican secret draft plan
Since when is Charles Rangel a Republican?
Right after he was proven to be more corrupt then Stevens.
Apparently only republicans are capable of kicking their own out of
congress so the dems moved him to the other party.
I don't know if it's been mentioned, but the Goldwater 'family'
has endorsed Obama.
May explain why McCain might not carry his home state.
Oh, one more time.
Transparency.
Uh, given Obama's attempts to hide a lot of his past (and
Michelle's), and his not-at-all transparent campaign contribution
system, among other things, why in the world would one
believe this pledge?!?
For all his many faults, McCain actually has a record of
opposing earmarks, as well as transparency. I'm not campaigning for
him here; I'm just wondering why someone would cite transparency as
a reason to vote FOR Obama?
Pardon the excessive posts, but the Goldwater family does not
support Obama. One of his granddaughters does. His son, for one,
clearly does not.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/barry-m-goldwater-jr/why-barry-goldwater-could_b_137389.html
I remember seeing REM perform at some Democrat
rally/concert, with a Michael Stipe in a Kerry t-shirt; he was a
Deaniac at heart and you could see it in his grimace.
I remember passing by Stipe on a street in Athens Ga around 1990
and being overcome with what smelled like raw sewage.
""What proposals, policies, beliefs, or anything else, would
flag him as the "more libertarian" major candidate?""
Easy. Independent assessments of Obama's tax cut plan shows that
under it more people would get more tax relief than under McCain's.
Pretty much everyone on this thread would have to pay less tax
under Obama's plan than under McCain's.
"I'm just wondering why someone would cite transparency as a reason
to vote FOR Obama?"
The bill he co-sposnored with Coburn might be a place to start.
"How much encroachment would the theocratic/environmental left
have on policy?"
I can tell TAO is on his period today, but I can't let this goofy
shit pass.
Yeah, all those thousands of theocratic scientists from around the
world and from varying organizations. You know, 95% of the experts
in the relevant fields. WOuldn't want them to have any influence on
our environmental policy. That would be "theocratic."
MNG - most of that isn't tax "relief"; it's welfare.
And frankly speaking, a simultaneous increase in deficit spending
AND raising the United States' already ridiculous corporate tax
rates is not appealing to this libertarian, anyway.
"MNG - most of that isn't tax "relief"; it's welfare."
That's bullshit TAO.
"raising the United States' already ridiculous corporate tax rates
is not appealing to this libertarian"
Oh Noes, the poor corporations!
1. Libertarians generally oppose progressive taxation schemes,
and massive spending plans.
2. Who sponsored that bill, again, Mr. Nice Guy? Coburn, Carper,
Obama and McCain.
Since Obama and McCain are running against each other, and both
were cosponsors of the bill, why is this a reason to vote for Obama
instead of McCain (or vice versa)?
The answer to that question might be a place to start. Maybe then
I'll "get it."
Really TAO. You would have to pay less money under Obama's plan
but you would be upset because you'd have the knowledge that
corporation taxes went up?
I don't know whether to say "congratulations on being so
principled" or "man, you are f*cking nuts."
MNG - no, it is NOT bullshit. Part of the Obama plan includes an
expansion of the EITC. Welfare, dude.
And you might not have a lot of sympathy for the big "nameless,
faceless corporations", but I do...those corporations are composed
of hard-working people who provide a valuable service and are
employed. Raising taxes on corporations is reverse trickle-down:
the detriments trickle-down to the consumer and the employee.
And I'm not talking about scientists when I talk about the
"environmental theocrats"; I'm talking about the ridiculous
individuals who think that humans and their artifacts are some kind
of strange, unnatural aberration that are distorting the Earth's
"natural" climate.
Oh Noes, the poor corporations!
That's a silly response.
Uh, most libertarians who can read are aware of the effect of the
corporate income tax: companies incorporating outside the US.
It's not about the "poor" anyone, other than the poor US
economy.
BarryD wrote:
Pardon the excessive posts, but the Goldwater family does not
support Obama. One of his granddaughters does. His son, for one,
clearly does not.
Ah, good find Barry. I didn't catch the follow-up.
Still, notice the fact that Jr did NOT endorse McCain (at least in
that article).
Now CC was speaking for herself and others.
"Myself, along with my siblings and a few cousins, will not be
supporting the Republican presidential candidates this year."
"Nothing about the Republican ticket offers the hope America needs
to regain it's standing in the world, that's why we're going to
support Barack Obama. I think that Obama has shown his ability and
integrity."
Link
"most of that isn't tax "relief"; it's welfare"
It's the "most" part that's bullshit and you know it. The EITC is
involved but it in no way accounts for "most" of the money
involved.
You would have to pay less money under Obama's plan but you
would be upset because you'd have the knowledge that corporation
taxes went up?
For one, I'm a deficit hawk, and I doubt that Obama's plan is going
to work without an increase in deficit spending.
Two, yes, I care that corporate taxes go up. Most of my friends and
family work for the "big bad corporations" and I care if their
place of employment is taxed to the point that the corporation has
to downsize.
Some nuts believe that global warming is a threat that must be addressed and have some related nutty ideas. Gore seems influenced though by the 95% of the scientists who believe the same, sans the nutty ideas...
picassoIII, why should i care what Goldwater's granddaughter thinks about anything? I dont believe in reinarnation.
MNG - you're probably right, "most" was a poor choice of words. However, a not-unsubstantial portion of Obama's so-called tax "cut" is not a "cut" at all...it's a transfer payment.
"For one, I'm a deficit hawk"
Good, party of the President who last balanced the budget
anyone?
"Most of my friends and family work for the "big bad corporations"
and I care if their place of employment is taxed to the point that
the corporation has to downsize."
Somehow I think most companies will make it...Besides, look how
well they did under the tax raising Clinton and how poorly under
the tax cutting Bush
TAO
I will say I've thought about and I think you are right when you
say that a vote for Barr would in many contexts send more of a
libertarian message to the GOP than a vote for Obama would.
The EITC is involved but it in no way accounts for "most" of
the money involved.
It accounts for most of the promised 95% of Americans who get "tax
relief." Given the number of Americans who pay no income tax, and
the number who pay very little, and the fact that we already have
tax cuts in place (due to sunset), it couldn't work any other
way.
Still, notice the fact that Jr did NOT endorse McCain (at
least in that article).
Neither did I.
I'm still asking why Obama, not why not McCain.
And CC can write whatever she wants, but she can't "speak for
others" any more than Barry Jr. can.
Good, party of the President who last balanced the budget
anyone?
No clue. And if you're talking Clinton, that was
projected. Although kudos to him for that anyway.
And balancing the budget is like balancing your checkbook: it's a
basic life skill. It's not something that we (should) get erections
about.
BarryD
1. Libertarians generally oppose progressive taxation schemes, and
massive spending plans.
2. Who sponsored that bill, again, Mr. Nice Guy? Coburn, Carper,
Obama and McCain.
Since Obama and McCain are running against each other, and both
were cosponsors of the bill, why is this a reason to vote for Obama
instead of McCain (or vice versa)?
The answer to that question might be a place to start. Maybe then
I'll "get it."
1. McCain voted for the bailout. So there IS little difference
there. While it's clear Obama is not a fiscal conservative i don't
see McCain ACTING much more like one either.
Now libertarians are also socially liberal, who fits that?
McCain/Palin is far more of an issue than Obama/Biden too. Oh and
of course the supporting casts that are then given power and/or
favors post election.
2. McCain DIDN'T sign the oath.
Why?
Don't forget, i'm voting and campaigning Barr, BUT i can completely
understand almost any libertarian making this Obominable
choice.
Mr Nice guy, are you advocating voting for the fellow that will reduce your income tax burden? IF so, why dont you want to pay your "fair share"?
Clarification...
BUT i can completely understand almost any libertarian making the
Obominable choice in a battleground state.
This whole list of people's answers for the most part left me
numb with disdain. The number of your respondents who don't vote
because of (fill in your ever-educated snarky reason here) was
amazing.
Intelligence most be tempered with simple action, making choices,
participating next to your fellow man.
This whole list (with obvious exceptions) seemed like
self-congratulatory drivel from people not human enough to put a
quarter-million bucks of Ivy education to good use.
-Karl
Karl Gajdusek,
You need to get that sound out of your vagina. It's making you
cranky.
I enjoyed the comment about waterboarding Lyndon Johnson while his children watch.
For one, I'm a deficit hawk, and I doubt that Obama's plan
is going to work without an increase in deficit
spending.
What does it matter if McCain's campaign statements about how he
would manage the budget sound better than Obama's, when we know
that McCain is a war-loving neo-con who is more likely to get us
all involved in a war with Iraq that will completely blow the lid
off spending?
TAO wrote:
...balancing the budget is like balancing your checkbook: it's a
basic life skill. It's not something that we (should) get erections
about.
Should we castrate DC or give em Viagra.
I'm so confused.
"Mr Nice guy, are you advocating voting for the fellow that will
reduce your income tax burden? IF so, why dont you want to pay your
"fair share"?"
Yes I am. And under Obama's plan people like me and you will pay
less money to the government than we would under McCain.
I think that is a "fairer share" btw.
"It accounts for most of the promised 95% of Americans who get "tax
relief." Given the number of Americans who pay no income tax"
People pay taxes other than income taxes. Those people deserve to
get back some too if we want less "government theft"
Mike Laursen - I'm not talking about McCain. In the context of the discussion, MNG asked me if it was possible that I would care that corporations are getting a tax hike if it benefits me in the short term. I said yes for two reasons: 1. increased deficit spending and 2. decreased jobs and depressed economy.
Mike Laursen - I'm not talking about McCain.
My apologies. It's hard to keep up with some of these enormous
comment sections.
Obama has come out against the wiretapping stuff Bush
does.
He's also offered a much better position on medical marijuana than
McCain.
He wants to end a war which involves government force to kill
people and occupy a nation at great financial cost to our
nation.
Obama has stood up for people who are the in the most danger of
imminent harm at the hands of the government: the accused. And he
has done so in ways unthinkable for McCain to have done
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/01/03/AR2008010303303.html
I mean, there's a good deal of reasons why a libertarian might like
him better than McCain...
Mr Nice Guy, I would wholeheartedly agree if the government reduced its spending to the point that all tax payers were taxed at a lower rate. What I dont understand is how asking someone else to shoulder your share of the burden is fair. How do you arrive at that assesment?
MNG - for one, I could rattle off a list of things McCain is
better about than Obama. Free trade, for one.
But that's not the point.
Obama has come out against the wiretapping stuff Bush
does.
Uh, FISA Bill.
He's also offered a much better position on medical marijuana
than McCain.
Even if true temporarily, he's backpedaled on this. And I'm not
even convinced he'll do anything better when in office.
He wants to end a war which involves government force to kill
people and occupy a nation at great financial cost to our
nation.
And likely expand another one (Afghanistan) and maybe dink around
in the Sudan for a while.
Balancing the budget should be easy enough for our pols, but the
reality is that it is not in our recent history. Therefore I think
it is quite important that the last time it was done it was done
under a Democratic Presidency.
If one values balancing the budget at all then one would be nuts to
vote for the GOP presidential candidate, because their party's
Presidents have not done that in a long, long time.
TAO-I'm responding to the folks upthread who said "give me one
area in which Obama is more libertarian than McCain"
But as for your specifics:
He voted for the whole package of the re-done FISA bill. He worked
to limit the wiretapping, some of what he wanted made it into the
bill, some did not. The bill was certainly better than what came
before it.
"Even if true temporarily, he's backpedaled on this. And I'm not
even convinced he'll do anything better when in office. "
He eventually settled on a position much better than McCain's, as
Sullum noted here on Reason. And of course if we go on "well I
really think he will do X in the future" then of course we can get
nowhere in this discussion. For that matter I could say "well I
really think McCain when he gets in will be worse on free trade no
matter what he states as his position now.."
"And likely expand another one (Afghanistan) and maybe dink around
in the Sudan for a while."
An expansion in Afghanistan that would be much less overall
committment than what McCain wants (Iraq and Afghanistan). Nothing
I've heard from Obama makes me think he has committed anymore to
military involvement in Sudan than McCain.
TAO
I'm not getting the connection between the tax hike on corporations
and the budgeet deficet. As deficets are created by spending more
than revenue brings in a tax increase which increases revenue will
be on the good side of that equation. Unless you are arguing that
the net effect of such a raise will be less corporations left to
pay the tax because of the negative effects of the raise?
"What I dont understand is how asking someone else to shoulder
your share of the burden is fair."
Well, I do believe in progressive taxation. As Jesus recognized the
widow's penny is worth more her than the millionaire's hundred
dollar bill is to the millionaire. So I consider fairness in that
light.
But I think corporations especially can shoulder more while
individuals shoulder less. The government does a lot more for these
legal entities than it does for real ones.
"The only reason that 'one of the two parties' will win is
because people like you, every four years, come around like
clockwork and talk about how"
No one person can change the behavior of the aggregate. To end
two-party rule you have to fundamentally change our laws and our
system. Even though two-party rule has been warned against since
before the country existed by its own founding fathers, our system
unfortunately promotes it, and has since just after the
founding.
Since bloody revolution is not an option (I hope), you have to get
there incrementally. I don't think unfortunately that the
unfettering of us from the two parties is going to happen anytime
soon, but can't we at least vote for the one party that isn't
trying to turn the country into a banana republic?
TQ - the problem is, I don't know which party that is.
You say there are obvious differences, and I'm just not seeing
them.
But as for your specifics:
He voted for the whole package of the re-done FISA bill. He worked
to limit the wiretapping, some of what he wanted made it into the
bill, some did not. The bill was certainly better than what came
before it.
No, he didn't.
http://www.salon.com/opinion/greenwald/2008/06/21/obama/
In the past 24 hours, specifically beginning with the moment
Barack Obama announced that he now supports the
Cheney/Rockefeller/Hoyer House bill, there have magically arisen --
in places where one would never have expected to find them -- all
sorts of claims about why this FISA "compromise" isn't really so
bad after all. People who spent the week railing against Steny
Hoyer as an evil, craven enabler of the Bush administration -- or
who spent the last several months identically railing against Jay
Rockefeller -- suddenly changed their minds completely when Barack
Obama announced that he would do the same thing as they did. What
had been a vicious assault on our Constitution, and corrupt
complicity to conceal Bush lawbreaking, magically and
instantaneously transformed into a perfectly understandable
position, even a shrewd and commendable decision, that we should
not only accept, but be grateful for as undertaken by Obama for our
Own Good.
Accompanying those claims are a whole array of factually false
statements about the bill, deployed in service of defending Obama's
indefensible -- and deeply unprincipled -- support for this
"compromise." Numerous individuals stepped forward to assure us
that there was only one small bad part of this bill -- the part
which immunizes lawbreaking telecoms -- and since Obama says that
he opposes that part, there is no basis for criticizing him for
what he did. Besides, even if Obama decided to support an imperfect
bill, it's our duty to refrain from voicing any criticism of him,
because the Only Thing That Matters is that Barack Obama be put in
the Oval Office, and we must do anything and everything --
including remain silent when he embraces a full-scale assault on
the Fourth Amendment and the rule of law -- because every goal is
now subordinate to electing Barack Obama our new Leader.
Unless you are arguing that the net effect of such a raise
will be less corporations left to pay the tax because of the
negative effects of the raise?
Well, not necessarily less corporations, but less revenues. Obama's
plan is "roll back the Bush tax cuts and give that exact amount
back out", either to people who pay taxes in lower brackets or
people who do not pay income taxes at all.
My point is that said raise in taxes is not going to facilitate a
commensurate rise in revenues, requiring deficit spending,
especially since I've seen no indication Obama's going to cut
spending.
Mr Nice Guy, I can't follow you on the Jesus thing, sorry. Deities dont figure in my worldview. If that is the foundation of your fainess assesment, I dont think we will find common ground there. However, I am curious about your concept theologial progressivity. Dopes it apply only to taxation or would it apply to all aspects of ife? Should food be proegressivly priced? What about Labor? How far does this biblical fairness go, and are you suggesting a government based on the gospel? How do I as an "unbeliever " fit in your Biblical version of government?
Hey, at least Palin is nice to look at.
Is that exactly Tim Cavanaugh's rationale?
I find it kind of alarming that so many respondents abstain from
voting as a habit. I understand the protest concept - that no
matter who you vote for you're getting screwed, I think most people
feel that way these days - but one's vote has a symbolic as well as
practical purpose. When you vote for someone, if nothing else,
you're saying "this candidate is the one least unlike my ideal
candidate".
Knowing that any given one of them are going to suck, what you're
going to do here is tell the powers that be that you want a little
more of some of what this guy has going on. Through a long
selective process you can contribute to giving us less and less
sucky candidates over time. If you abstain, on the other hand, you
are telling the powers that be that you don't give a rat's
ass.
"Screw me however you like, it all hurts and I can't be bothered to
care anymore" translates to "I like getting screwed, more please
sir" in the minds of the twisted bastards that apathy has put in
office these past decades.
I might vote next week (hell, it might even be Barr) but I'm more looking forward to voting against Bloomberg next year for that stunt he's pulled. That, and voting for whichever non-Democrat runs in my city council district. These posts have far more effect on me that the -- pfft -- president.
I'm undecided. Vote Libertarian or write in Ron Paul? Better choices than the last election, when I wrote in my own name.
I had a lot of fun reading this, but what's with all the
humorless or downright indignant responses to the (obvious joke)
waterboarding question? As if getting uptight about ironic
hypothetical questions makes you a more conscientious and caring
human being...
Rob Kampia's response was particularly obnoxious. It made me want
to give him a wedgie. Or better yet, answer his question. Yes Rob,
I think it's ok to JOKE about just about anything, so long as you
don't actually hurt anybody. And If you're wondering who I would
choose to molest: Well, You, of course.
Just kidding Rob. And so was the questionaire. Lighten up, man. I
don't think anyone here actually supports rape or torture, or
thinks it's anything less than god-awful. I just think a warped
sense of humor is a better way of dealing with an f'd up world than
straight-laced self-righteousness.
We're spoiled in Louisiana as well as in Montana. The only reliable constitutionalist in the world managed to be on the ballot.
I'm struck by how many staffers at Reason Magazine manifest no
reasoning ability.
Reading the whole rundown -- from people who I would guess have
expensive educations and fancy themselves to be intellectuals --
makes me leery of democracy.
Leaving George W. Bush out of consideration, what former U.S.
president would you most like to have waterboarded and why?
FDR, because handicapped people are so much more fun to watch
suffer.
I find it incredibly annoying when someone says that
corporations should pay more because they get help from the
government. Some corporations do. Others don't, and are simply
getting screwed over. In any case, the best way to deal with that
is to get rid of whatever special privileges (subsidies, land
grants, eminent domain) that the government gives them, not to use
to justify more socialism.
And, MNG, Biblical references don't get so much attention here.
Just sayin'.
I'm not paying attention to Obama's 95% claim, because it's
bullshit. At some point, he will either a. go back on it by raising
taxes on lower tax brackets when revenues inevitably stagnate, and
possibly fall, after a few years b. He will engage in more deficit
spending, which will continue the federal government's slide into
fiscal insolvency.
I base this on the fact that his promises don't add up. He is
promising to balance the budget, introduce a wide array of new
programs and domestic spending, is unclear on how much will go to
foreign interventions, claims he will give a significant tax break
to 95% of the population, and will somehow finance all this by
taxing the rich more. Doubtless this might work for a year or two,
until the well-known effects of such a steep income tax set in.
Then something will have to give.
It was no surprise to learn that Obama was the overwhelming choice of journalists writing for Slate. But for Obama to also come in first place for the writers at a LIBERTARIAN magazine? Huh. I was not expecting that.
Well let me see here;
(1) I think I voted for George Bush senior in a mock school
election way back in 1992. A ballot without only two choices.
Clinton as the lessor of the two viable evils in 1996.
I supported Dr. John Hagelin 2000 attempt to be the sane (more or
less) Reform Party nominee and create an independent/third party
coalition by working on electoral reform issues.
Have voted for some Libertarians and Greens in local or legislative
races, but tend to be frustrated with their inability to work
together on electoral reform issues via an interest group.
Voted for Kerry in 2004, because Bush & Co were doing serious
damage to our Constitution and running an totally inept foreign
policy, and the bigoted attacks on gay marriage but thought Kerry
ran an incredibly inept campaign and his campaign manager should
probably be banished.
Will be voting for Obama and Al Fraken with sincere support. Have
little respect for Barr or Nader (but they do sometimes say some
good things).
Still trying to drum up support for electoral reform...
Americans need a good 20 years with a dictator - a real good
one- at the helm.
Too spoilt for choice - that is the All American problem.
Each of you thinking ( and really believing) that YOUR opinion
counts.
Get out and vote for McCain or Obama and stop believing your own
PR.
To begin with, NONE of you, and that includes BOB BARR ( THE
ALTERNATIVE OF CHOICE) can do diddly squat about running a complex
country like America .
Uou have 2 choices, none of them perfect ( and what HAVE YOU DONE
to deserve perfection either in a mate or a leader, may I ask?) but
both of them BETTER than anyone on this blog!
TO TWISTED NERVE WHO ASKED:
How do I as an "unbeliever " fit in your Biblical version of
government?
Well the Lord says he makes the rain to fall on the just AND on the
unjust - so according to GOD, you will make out just fine- It is
not God's will "that ANY man should die" and that is the purpose of
the Parable of the LOST SHEEP>
The shepherd looked as conscientiously for that lost ONE sheep as
he looked after the 99 that were safely in "the shelter of the
fold"
SO DON"T WORRY _ YOU TOO WILL BE PROTECTED< FLOURISH and
GROW!
5. Leaving George W. Bush out of consideration, what former U.S.
president would you most like to have waterboarded?
Calvin Coolidge, for refusing to talk.
I just happened upon this survey via a link on another site. Very interesting results. Good clear thinking in evidence, I am an independent voter who has some Libertarian leanings, certainly on the social side. On balance, I tended to vote Republican a bit more but Bush has alienated me so much I voted against him in 2004 and will vote for Obama. I respect Libertarians as, for the most part, having an intellectual construct that seems absent in the Republicans of today.
I'm surprised at the number of non-voters... I can certainly understand the logic of not wanting to vote for president but there's way too many local races where my vote actually matters.
I wrote in John Hospers in 1972, and every few years he does
something to make me regret it.
I voted for MacBride 76, Ronald Reagan in 80, NOTA in 1984, and for
the Libertarian candidate in every election since.
I backed Ron Paul this year, and will vote for Bob Barr in order to
pump up the Libertarian vote total.
I find a lot of hilariously contradictory, half-baked concepts
here, like "The Bush Admin. has been disastrous" and "elections
don't matter" in the same sentence. Am I the only one who sees the
glaring, monumental incoherence in that statement?
I am a liberal and a progressive and I think Libertarians represent
some of the better elements of conservatism. But so many here seem
very cynical and self-righteous, as if they were part of a small
minority that knows better than anyone else. Please vote this year
and grow up.
Once again proves that socialists control the media including
Reason. How can the so-called libertarians vote for the 0? I just
don't get it.
I am voting Palin because she is nice to look at on TV and she
seems to be the most libertarian of them all. Also I hope Palin
wins, I want to see some media people drop dead on TV on election
night. The MSM coverage has been the worst as far as I can
tell.
My prediction:
Palin - 49%
0 - 48%
Gee, is libertarianism supposed to cause so much ennui? Such
lassitude leading to a vote for Obama certainly isn't a strong
advertisement for LP membership. The contributors have spent too
much time in Foggy Bottom.
This year, a vote for Obama is a vote for Pelosi and Reid to run
roughshod over America, as well as saying hello to the Second Bill
of Rights. Sometimes you have to vote against the bad
candidate.
I have always been intrigued with a libertarian approach. As soon
as libertarians figure out how to accommodate children and a real
foreign policy, I would support their take-over of the Republican
Party in a heartbeat. Until then, irrelevance will continue to lead
to more ennui.
Wow! I've been thinking that old style liberals were splitting
into Libertarians and Leftists but I hadn't realized how far the
split had gone.
Of course, with so many of you disdaining to vote at all, I don't
see much of a future for y'all.
You sound more like a bunch of liberals who have realized the
contradictions in your old ideology and decided to embrace "A
plague on both your houses!"
Here's a clue. If a society is only successful if it perpetuates
itself, how does your libertarian ideology contribute to a
successful society? Or are you all resigned to following Britain,
Rome and Greece into the past?
KMW is my new favorite reasonoid. Voting is for suckers.
And ditto all who wished Wilson waterboarded.
Why does that fat fucktard Penn Jillette think it's okay to joke about murder (as he does numerous times in his act) but not rape or waterboarding????????????????
The continued comments about Reason supposedly being in the tank
for Obama are pretty funny considering the magazine's staff
combined who support Barr, NOTA and McCain outnumber the Obama
supporters.
And here's my voting record:
2000: David McReynolds
2004: David Cobb
2008: Bob Barr
Once again proves that socialists control the media
including Reason. How can the so-called libertarians vote for the
0? I just don't get it.
I am voting Palin because she is nice to look at on TV and she
seems to be the most libertarian of them all. Also I hope Palin
wins, I want to see some media people drop dead on TV on election
night. The MSM coverage has been the worst as far as I can
tell.
My prediction:
Palin - 49%
0 - 48%
It's no more moronic than so-called libertarians like you voting
for Palin because you think she's attractive.
Reading these answers I now know why the LP never will succeed and why there is little movement on embracing freedom. To make the GOP pay you all are going to ensure a socialist take over of government by all three branches. You will burn the village to save it???? AS a libertarian conservative you make me sick. Obama is the most openly Marxist candidate in five generations and you "small government" freedom lovers are there to vote him in? Have you heard spread the wealth around? Civilian National Force? Redistributive change? Wake up and get over yourselves. Thank you for your article, it did clarify just why you are on the fringe - intellectually bankrupt people that will sacrifice ideals to punish the better of the two parties?
I am sickened that so many libertarians are thinking of voting
for Obama. He is by far the most socialist candidate who has run
for president in this country in recent decades. He is the most
dangerous to our economy since FDR, even counting Carter and
Nixon!
I am no big McCain fan, but it disgusts me that any libertarian,
despite wanting to punish the Republican party, would cast a ballot
for Obama.
Consider just a few of Obama's domestic policy proposals, things he
favors and will push through:
1. The Employee Free Choice Act (government mediated wage setting,
and no private ballot -- allow union intimidation).
2. The Fairness Doctrine (the end of free speech in media).
3. Public Works / Employment programs including "Transition Jobs"
and his National Infrastructure Reinvestment Bank.
4. Windfall Profits tax
5. "Fair trade" programs that are just blatant protectionism and
will hurt the workers who can no longer sell to us.
Actually, why bother listing all these - just check out his
website. I defy you to find one libertarian policy on his
"economics" page or his "poverty" page. Even his "tax cuts" are
mostly welfare credits for non-payers, and come directly from
raising taxes on "the rich", most of whom are actually small
business.
Start here:
http://www.barackobama.com/issues/economy/
"The darkest moments in world history have occurred during the
confluence of a bad economy and a charismatic leader. Those videos
of children singing and marching for Obama are really
disconcerting."
One of the best, most succinct explanations of why I will NEVER
vote for an anti-Right- of-Self-Defense candidate like Obama... (Or
McCain for that matter).
There is only one non-negotiable Issue in politics - and that is
your Right to Keep and Bear Arms... because without that, NOTHING
is negotiable. After that it doesn't matter who is in charge.
Communist or Facist, Left or Right, history doesn't lie. With no
RKBA they are in charge and you kowtow or die.
Wait a minute, where's Kerry Howley? And Katie Hooks?
Bravo to 'liberty', one of the very few who apparently
understands the issues and is actually connected to the real
world.
If the list of 'big names' on the main article is any indication,
the Libertarians are far worse than I remember, when I paid
attention to them in the 1980s and 1990s. Clearly, while they may
in theory adhere to libertarian principles, their beliefs in action
have zero connection to the real world if they could give Barack
Obama any assistance, direct or indirect, in gaining the White
House.
And, yes, there is no question this is the most important
Presidential contest in the past ~80 years (post the first FDR
campaign). When major media outlets are gleefully declaiming, with
Obama, the 'end of a failed ideology', to help support him to
actually achieve that tips those listed in the article past the
point of reasonable difference of opinion.
McCain is confused, pragmatic, and commits a great many sins. But
his errors and actual evils pale in comparison to what Obama stands
for, is, and will be if elected.
Are you guys brain death? You are voting for Obama because you think McCain isn't libetarian enough! Obama is a guy whos ideas are straight from Nazi-Germany or Soviet Union.
@svf: "I continue to be disheartened by all the NOTA/Stay Home
sentiment here and elsewhere. Oh well, let's just let the statists
and socialists decide everything for the rest of us. Woo
hoo."
Look, here's the thing. Obama wins. McCain wins. Here are the
things that will not change:
1) We'll still be at war
2) We'll still have hundreds of expensive
military bases in foreign countries
3) Our liberties will continue to erode
4) The drug war will continue
5) The war on sexuality will continue
6) The government will continue to grow
7) Taxes will continue to increase
8) Economy will continue to be manipulated for the rich
9) constitution will become even less(!) relevant
10) biz in washington will be trading earmarks
11) religion will continue to infect 85% of the population
12) education will continue to be a low priority
13) medical care will continue to be a low priority
14) oil will continue to be the fuel of choice
15) states will continue their slide into federal vassalhood
16) "save the children" will continue to enable the most corrosive
and coercive legislation, followed closely by "terrists!" and
"global warming!"
17) Our financial system will continue to fly, peter-pan style, by
force of imagination, misplaced trust, and out of control printing
presses
...you understand? If the dems get in (congress AND executive),
some left wingery will get funded. If the reps get in, some right
wingery will get funded. None of which we can actually afford.
Nothing else will change.
This game is RIGGED, and it is a depressing measure of your
susceptibility to propaganda that you don't even know it.
You wanna vote for Obama to punish the republicans? Go ahead. I
bloody well guarantee that you'll be voting for republicans to
punish the dems next time around. The humor here is that all
electable candidates are selected by the same machine. That's why
the results are always the same.
BAD news for PA and WV from Associated Press: Obama Tells SF Chronicle He Will Bankrupt Coal Industry By P.J. Gladnick November 2, 2008 - 07:26 ET Barack Obama actually flat out told the San Francisco Chronicle (SF Gate) that he was willing to see the coal industry go bankrupt in a January 17, 2008 interview. The result? Nothing. This audio interview vanished. Here is the transcript of Obama's statement about bankrupting the coal industry: "Let me sort of describe my overall policy. What I've said is that we would put a cap and trade system in place that is as aggressive, if not more aggressive, than anybody else's out there. I was the first to call for a 100% auction on the cap and trade system, which means that every unit of carbon or greenhouse gases emitted would be charged to the polluter. That will create a market in which whatever technologies are out there that are being presented, whatever power plants that are being built, that they would have to meet the rigors of that market and the ratcheted down caps that are being placed, imposed every year. So if somebody wants to build a coal-powered plant, they can; it's just that it will bankrupt them because they're going to be charged a huge sum for all that greenhouse gas that's being emitted. Story Continues Below Ad ↓ That will also generate billions of dollars that we can invest in solar, wind, biodiesel and other alternative energy approaches. The only thing I've said with respect to coal, I haven't been some coal booster. What I have said is that for us to take coal off the table as a (sic) ideological matter as opposed to saying if technology allows us to use coal in a clean way, we should pursue it. So if somebody wants to build a coal-powered plant, they can. It's just that it will bankrupt them."
Yeah, it's pretty disheartening that so many self-proclaimed libertarians could actually consider voting for Obama. Bush and McCain at least mouthed the words of freedom; Obama is telling us outright that our liberties will be taken away. And you idiots are taken in by the fact that he is black. Deny it if you will, but white guilt is going to win this election for a socialist. Maybe it's time for some thoughts about moving to Australia.
Not voting is voting for the status quo. The big government
allies don't construe a non-vote as anything but a thank you for
business as usual.
Voting your conscious, voting for the candidate who best represents
your views helps those views gain traction. It also rewards that
candidate for his hard work and sacrifice. It also rewards those
who helped the campaign with their time and money.
There is no bigger slap in the face for candidates, their
supporters and contributors who promote free minds and free markets
than to have editors for the premier magazine which shares those
views encouraging their readers to NOT vote.
In sum, libertarians will never vote Republican again and would love to water board Woodrow Wilson. I see this as a new future demographic!
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