David Weigel | October 2, 2006
Over at Cato Unboard, Markos "Daily Kos" Moulitsas publishes his longest essay yet on the idea of "Libertarian Democrats." The innovation I see in this version of Moulitsas' thesis is the idea that Silicon Valley/the Bay Area is a libertarian utopia.
My libertarian tendencies have always found a welcome home in the Silicon Valley culture (and in all of the nation's great technology centers). It is a place where hard work and good ideas trump pedigree, money, the color of one's skin, nationality, sex, or any of the artificial barriers to entry in most of the rest of the world. It is a techno-utopia that, while oft-criticized for a streak of self-important narcissism, still today produces the greatest innovations in technology in the world. Where else could such a motley collection of school dropouts, nerds, brown people (mostly Indian), and non-Native English speakers (mostly Chinese), not just rise to the top of their game, but dominate it? This is free market activity seemingly at its best, and it works precisely because these individuals are able to take risks and be judged by the results of their work, rather than be judged by who they are, where they've been, or who they know.
But there are other reasons why this outpost of libertarianism works. The government has put in an infrastructure to support the region including, among many other things, roads, the Internet, government research grants, and the most important ingredient of all: education, from the lowliest kindergarten to the highest post-doc program. Such spending, while requiring a government bureaucracy that makes a traditional libertarian shudder, actually provides the tools that individuals need to succeed in today's world. If our goal is to promote and champion individual liberty and the free market, we need government to help provide those tools to all Americans, not just a privileged few. This isn't a question of equality, it's one of opportunity. Some people will take advantage of those opportunities, and others will not. That will be up to each individual. But without opportunity, there is no freedom.
Jesse Walker's original counterblaste to Kos is here. Anyone want to tackle the new material?
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the schools suck, the roads and bridges are crumbling, broadband
still isn't available in quite a few communities, traffic is
horrible, and public transportation is next to useless.
as a bay area resident who deeply loves the place, i have no idea
what kos is on about.
the questions you'll want to ask are:
1. what net gains/losses did libertarians really get out of their
coalition with republicans?
2. what possible gains could realistically be accomplished in a
libertarians coalition with democrats?
3. what future losses of liberty could be avoided by simply
discontinuing the the coalition with republicans?
though i'm sure the discussion will be more akin to "what? that's
not libertarian". which entirely misses the point. tuning out, or
voting 3rd party is a valid option, but politics is about what is
possible. so at this point, which coalition presents greater
opportunities?
I was thinking:
a)Roads - one of the very few areas the government actually should
be in charge of;
b)Internet - the government made the internet?!?
c)Research Grants - I doubt these have much to do with the success
of Silicon Valley. I have no numbers to back this up, but it is
probably a small fraction of what companies spend on
themselves;
d)Education - I bet the schools are not as good there (or anywhere)
as Kos seems to think. Most of the successful people went to
private school or were self-motivated enough to teach themselves
what they needed to know with minimal assistance from college profs
or high school union thugs.
What "coalition with republicans"?
Did you guys form a coalition without me?
That hurts.
As a silicon valley resident all I have to say is 'meh'. The job
market is great, I'll give him that.
It's also an elitists wet dream. Overregulation and rampant
NIMBYism has led to a housing market that forbids entry. A 600
square foot apartment will run you 400K (if you're lucky). Food
service workers often have to live 3 or 4 families to a house. In
short, the economy is great, for those at the top.
libertarian democrat:
1) Certainly no net gains.
2) "Realistically"? No gains. I try not to be that realistic and
plan to work with democrats in the future in some way towards some
very narrow gains, but that's just my being hopeful.
3) No real losses could be avoided. Outside of the handful of
democrats obsessed about libertarians (whether they think of them
as a threat or opportunity), Democrats with a clue realize they can
better spend their effort worrying about voting blocks that will
actually matter in an election, like "left-handed Klingon-speaking
supermarket workers of Irish descent".
I wouldn't think that most of the Indians and the Chinese (especially the non-native speakers) received their education (the most important ingredient, don't you know) from the American government. Sure, there's the odd graduate degree from Stanford or Cal, but you only get that after you have proven your worth at IIT or Tsinghua.
First, no, I didn't RTFA, I only read the excerpt in the H&R
blog post. I don't have much trouble with what Kos says-- yes, I
cringe at the turn towards the needs of government beyond that of
real basic infrastructure, but any reasonable libertarian would
only quibble with details.
What I have a problem with is not what Kos said (in the excerpt)
but what he didn't say. And when you're talking about
California, that's like ignoring the elephant in the living room.
California has become a complete pitri dish of top-down
governmental social experimentation and bad economic 'planning'
that not only meets, but surpasses the kind of crap that one only
used to see in the northeast. They have a crapped up power and
utility infrastructure which, after putting in Stalinesque
controls, they actually told the press it was 'deregulation' and no
one in California, nor the press even blinked, let alone questioned
it.
It's the home of Hollywood, where the monied elite have never met a
social program or government regulation they didn't like. San
Francisco is a city of fantastically arcane 'progressive'
legislation.
I guess I'm not reallly sure I buy Silicone Valley as a libertarian
utopia, other than the fact that it built itself initially on
libertarian ideals. California is about as libertarian 1980's
Romania.
Kos is so stupid and suffers from such a complete lack of self-awareness that he doesn't even realize, as Bret points out, that he is lauding as some idealized community, a place that is so elitist that the average American would no hope of ever living there. That is pretty much the face of the nutroots campaign; it is about re-making the world so that benefits rich, educated white people and their fellow minority travelers more so than it already does.
Reading that essay, it just strikes me that Kos wants to
claim the word "libertarianism", divested of the ideas and
people currently associated with them.
I guess "liberal" and "progressive" both lost their luster.
Is he really sympathetic to libertarianism, or is he just trying to get back at us for using the term 'classical liberal'?
But there are other reasons why this outpost of
libertarianism works. The government has put in an infrastructure
to support the region including, among many other things, roads,
the Internet, government research grants, and the most important
ingredient of all: education, from the lowliest kindergarten to the
highest post-doc program.
Might not "the Internet" have done just as well without government
"infrastructure"?
I have almost nothing to thank the government for in this
department. ...and I suspect there are others like me, especially
in Silicon Valley. ...If he looked hard enough, he might find some
examples among "school dropouts, nerds, brown people (mostly
Indian), and non-Native English speakers (mostly Chinese)".
Such spending, while requiring a government bureaucracy that
makes a traditional libertarian shudder, actually provides the
tools that individuals need to succeed in today's world.
I know a lot of people who have managed to overcome all
the stupid things they learned in college and become successful in
an entrepreneurial environment anyway. ...but I suspect they would
have done just as well or even better without the government's
involvement in their education.
I worked my way through a prep school by taking odd jobs on farms,
working in a saw mill, working in the summers, etc, and at my
school, I was by no means unusual for that. I understand those
opportunities are still available to most anyone who wants them.
(If you smoke or drink, etc., they'll probably kick you out, so,
no, it's not available to everyone.)
By the way, of all the factors that make higher education
unaffordable for some, is there anything anyone's done to make that
situation worse then what the government's done purportedly to make
higher education affordable?
a lib dem,
The alliance that lead to fusionism has more or less already
collapsed - even those who identify themselves as small government
conservatives are starting to jump ship on the Repubs - so points 1
and 3 are pretty much moot at this point. So the question that
remains is #2, what can Dems do for libertarians?
The most common arugment in libertarian circles is that Dems can
provide gridlock and prevent some bad policy simply by making it
more difficult for either party to enact its agenda. This approach
rejects forming a coalition with either party and is where I stand
right now.
The Democratic party has consistently fallen short of even its own
principles on the issues where libertarians agree with liberals.
For all the preening about how curbing corporate power is just as
important as limiting the state, the Democrats can't even conjure
the courage to fillibuster a bill essentially permitting torture.
How tyranical does the government have to get before Dems get their
priorities straight?
Time and time again, Democrats have rolled over on civil liberties
issues, substituted identity politics for principled defenses of
civil rights, and advocated paternalism over personal choice on
just about everything but abortion. And don't even get me started
on Democrats' enthusiastic embrace of the war on drugs.
Republicans used to talk a lot about small government until they
got the levers of power - why should we expect more of the Dems
with civil liberties with their current record?
This is just wearying. Every government failure is a
justification for more government, because the problem
"must" be solved. And now, every private success is now a
justification for more government too, because hey, you have to
give government must be partially responsible: they built the
roads.
It's the same thought-pattern as "Intelligent Design" and elicits
from me the same question: what facts could possibly disprove your
position? A hypothesis that isn't falsifiable is just a
superstition.
His whole schtick is mostly rhetorical.
Kos wants to claim the word "libertarianism", divested of the
ideas and people currently associated with them.
As far as I read it, that's exactly what he's saying.
It's about "liberty" & "libertarianism" being useful buzzwords
for Kosocrats to appropriate for their own "we're more *moral*
ones" campaign.
...notwithstanding what the words mean in actual practice.
He refers to this quote below as razor sharp insight that shows why
'anti-government' libertarianism is somehow mistaken =
"A cabal of major corporate industry is, in fact, more powerful
than the government of the most powerful nation on earth�and
government is the only thing that can stop them from recklessly
exploiting the people and destroying their freedom"
This is where I respectfully tell him to please eat deez
nuts.
Whatever awful influence 'corporations' have on individuals, it's
only THROUGH government collusion. Handing out taxbreaks,
protecting them from competition, granting exemptions from
liability, bailing them out from bankruptsy, etc. He's got the
whole thing backward. It's the combination of the corrupting
influence of government power and corporate anti-competitiveness
that creates whatever problems he percieves, not predations of free
market capitalists run amok. I really dont understand what it is
that these "progressives" really think 'teh corporshuns' do that
makes their lives miserable. What did Time Warner ever do to you?
Procter& Gamble? Cisco? They're a bigger problem than the
tireless Children Protecting-Earmark Machine in congress? Give me a
break.
What he means is that "people shouldnt have the freedom to choose
things bad for them, like McDonalds, or uncool, like Starbucks, or
be allowed to listen to fascistic tripe like Rush Limbaugh, etc.";
No, we need government to PROTECT us from them.
To protect us from our choices.
Rather than have to read another boring screed like this, I'd be
interested in his response to a series of check-boxes on specific
issues, or scenarios.
Like,
to what degree should states be free to make policy for themselves
(e.g. abortion? medical dope? drinking age? ban public
smoking?)
where do you draw the limits of gun control?
What forms of privatization of education do you endorse?
How would you inject competition into healthcare industry? How will
you reform medicare?
What is your position on US agricultural subsidies?
etc.
I think if he had to give brief, clear answers on actual issues,
his Libertarian pose would fall apart immediately.
Maybe he should test himself. Ever seen the "Political Compass"?
Its actually pretty handy. It does measure whether your opinions
fall authoritarian/statist-Left/Right.
http://www.politicalcompass.org/
Evan,
You just don't get it. People are never responsible for themselves
in KOS world. In the same way that someone who steals only does so
because the system made them do it, someone who is successful is
only successful because the benevolent government allowed them to
be so. The whole line of reasoning is pretty frightening when you
think about it.
Most importantly education? I don't know the exact makeup of the silicon valley workforce but I have to imagine that it is much like that for engineering and science, that is, half foreign and mostly Chinese and Indian. Kos himself points out all the brown, i.e., Indian and non-native speakers, i.e. Chinese. I'm willing to bet that the locally educated folks aren't doing much more than manning the Walmart.
I would like to hear the ruminations of Kos once George W. Bush leaves office, because without him he's nothing.
I would like to hear the ruminations of Kos once George W.
Bush leaves office, because without him he's nothing.
I dunno, a Republican might well win the election in 2008. If not,
he'll certainly stop calling himself "libertarian" after the real
ones start laying into the Democratic president for not actually
doing anything to stop torture.
I think it's OK to say that libertarians tend to side with Democrats on social issues and Republicans on fiscal issues. There's no need to be married to the Republican Party, especially since the GOP has disregarded the one plank, i.e., fiscal responsibility, that used to draw in the libertarians. We are left with a fiscally irresponsible party that also wants to shove God down our throats. The Democrats haven't disregarded the plank they have in common with libertarians, i.e., social tolerance, and it even seems that they grasp the importance of fiscal responsibility. We all have to ask ourselves, do we have a better chance of finding a fiscally prudent Democrat or a secular Republican? I believe that the Democratic party has much more room for reform in this area than the moralizers in the GOP.
"I would like to hear the ruminations of Kos once George W. Bush
leaves office, because without him he's nothing."
I thought that about Limbaugh after Clinton left office, but he is
still around. KOS and Limbaugh are very similar in that they both
have a shtick that appeals to a certain demographic by confirming
all of their worst suspicions. A change in the Whitehouse won't
change that appeal. Kos isn't funny like Limbaugh but insufferable
earnestness and smugness sells well with his audience. I am sure
KOS will be bojangling his way to much undeserved attention for a
long time in the future.
The Democrats haven't disregarded the plank they have in
common with libertarians, i.e., social tolerance
erm, not to speak for all, but I'd characterize 'social tolerance'
slightly differently from a libertarian point of view.
Libertarian "tolerance" is a byproduct of people having rights;
i.e. you can do what you want on your property, do what you want
with your body, say what you think no matter how vile or unpopular
= go ahead, it's your perogative.
I think the "social tolerance" Democrats have in mind is much more
"politically correct, mandated uprightness". Hate Crime! Hate
Crime!
If you look at the bill of rights, I dont think they've
demonstrated any more fealty to the principles in there than the
GOP.
I dont think Democrats are less likely to pursue ridiculous,
privacy violating legislation if they think voters will believe it
makes "children safe"
I think Dems are less likely to ever reform Medicare or Social
Security.
In short, I dont see what they have to offer at all. Show me a
democrat that believes in FEWER laws, and you might start to
convince me.
Gilmore,
I'm interested in practical soluations. The question of whether
Democrats believe the same thing I do for the same exact reason is
a giant waste of time. Am I going to vote for the guy who believes
in intolerance because the Democrat isn't enough like me? I also
think you're wrong about the philosophy, but that's a separate
issue.
I love so many people start posts with "I didn't read the
article but" and then proceed to talk about how Kos is full of
it.
"b)Internet - the government made the internet?!?
c)Research Grants - I doubt these have much to do with the success
of Silicon Valley. I have no numbers to back this up, but it is
probably a small fraction of what companies spend on
themselves;"
Yes the government made the Internet. The fact that you are don't
know this means you are probably pretty young. The Internet
originally started as ARPAnet - Advanced Research Project
Network.
Pure research is always a net gain on society. For example the
initial code used by Google got it's start as a National Science
Foundation grant. The fact that you don't know how science works
shows means perhaps you should spend more time understanding such
things.
The Internet originally started as ARPAnet - Advanced
Research Project Network.
...and it didn't amount to shit until private industry got
involved. Seriously, how many people had internet access prior to
say, 1994?
Let's review some proposed policies by various Democrats since
they've been out of power. Campaign finance, Kelo, compulsory
public service for young adults, the "fairness doctrine",
legislation against video games, smoking and food bans, etc.
That's the major problem, as someone here or elsewhere (I forget)
once aptly put it: tyranny from the pulpit of God, or tyranny from
the pulpit of "four out of five experts agree."
Both parties seem to agree that we simply can't be trusted with the
amount of freedom we currently have (much less the amount of
freedom many of us would like), so why exactly should I have any
reason to even think about throwing my lot in with the Democratic
power structure just because the Republican power structure has
gone so badly off the rails?
I think the best solutions to the problem are apathy and ignorance.
If you don't know and don't care, there's a decent chance that,
whatever is taken from you, you won't feel or recognize the effects
of it for quite a long time.
"I love so many people start posts with "I didn't read the
article but" and then proceed to talk about how Kos is full of
it."
Ann Coulter has a great new article about a re-alliance between
Republicans and libertarians. What do you think of it?
The government did start the Internet. Much the same way that the Spanish monarchy started the United States of America.
In close elections, I simply vote against whichever major party
candidate that will likely restrict more of my freedoms.
Most of the time, I vote Republican. Because they are in principle
better? Not really. Rather, I just find it far more likely that a
Democrat will find a way to control what I eat/smoke/drink than a
Republican will find a way to control who I screw.
Expanding on that, Democrats refuse to let me plan my own
retirement, education, or health care (well, unless I am willing
and able to pay double). This is almost unpardonable.
Gilmore,
I'm interested in practical soluations. The question of whether
Democrats believe the same thing I do for the same exact reason is
a giant waste of time. Am I going to vote for the guy who believes
in intolerance because the Democrat isn't enough like me? I also
think you're wrong about the philosophy, but that's a separate
issue.
Hey, I'm interested in practical solutions too mon frere. Which is
partly why i'd vote GOP faster than for people who dont have the
balls to reform the teacher's unions, which "harms more children"
than all the threats of porno and predators and religious
proselytizing combined.
"Believes in intolerance"? aren't you generalizing a bit? If you
mean, 'against affirmative action' or something... i dont know what
you mean.
i dont care about playing lessers of ideological evils, i'm more
interested in policy makers who will shrink government enough to
where we we will need fewer of these buffons, and buffons with
fewer powers.
JG
ARPANET was one of several components that merged to form the
internet and was mainly significant for using packet switching. The
first international packet switched network, IPSS, was actually a
collaboration between Western Union, Tymnet, and the British post
office. IPSS was actually much closer to the TCP/IP-based internet
of today, in that it was available to the public via dial-up
through commercial services while ARPANET access was restricted to
non-commercial use. The "internet" was created by the connection of
various networks using TCP/IP, which included ARPANET, NSFNet,
IPSS.
What made the internet become so powerful was not any specific
technology or program, but the broad adoption of TCP/IP that
allowed communication among previously unjoined networks. This
combined with the rise of the PC allowed it to achieve its current
cultural and commercial significance.
The internet is actually a great example of spontanteous order
where infrastructure, technologies, organizations, and standards
from all kinds of sources were combined over the course of years
without an grand guiding authority to form something immensely
useful.
The Internet originally started as ARPAnet - Advanced
Research Project Network.
...and it didn't amount to shit until private industry got
involved. Seriously, how many people had internet access prior to
say, 1994?
That's like saying goverment built roads didn't amount to shit
until people started driving on roads. The government (including
universities) still built the damn thing. I'm no fan of big
government spending and boondoggles, but let's face it, the
government made something useful with the internet.
Even a blind squirrel finds a nut...
"I wouldn't think that most of the Indians and the Chinese
(especially the non-native speakers) received their education (the
most important ingredient, don't you know) from the American
government."
No, I think they received their education from the Indian or
Chinese government.
Re: the internet. Vint Cerf on Al Gore: "I'd like to clear up one
little item - about the Vice President ... He really does deserve
some credit for his early recognition of the importance of the
Internet and the technology that makes it work. He was certainly
among the first if not the first in Congress to realize how
powerful the information revolution would be and both as Senator
and Vice President he has been enormously helpful in supporting
legislation and programs to help further develop the Internet - for
example the Next Generation Internet program. I get to see a lot of
this stuff because I am a member of the President's Information
Technology Advisory Committee and we regularly review the R&D
programs of the US Government and many have relevance to the
evolving Internet."
http://www.firstmonday.dk/issues/issue5_10/wiggins/#w5
Also, wasn't Tim Berners-Lee at the CERN Institute in Switzerland
when he came up with the web? Isn't that a government-funded
entity?
"The internet is actually a great example of spontanteous order
where infrastructure, technologies, organizations, and standards
from all kinds of sources were combined over the course of years
without an grand guiding authority to form something immensely
useful."
You are correct here, but have missed an important part of Brian
D's point.
Many of the technological advances underpinning the development of
the internet were funded directly by government. Some of that
funding went to private businesses, as is wise government policy,
but the basic science was mostly done by the government or its
proxies (as in the government sanctioned monopoly that was
AT&T, or government grants to Universities).
The combination of public and private innovation is always the most
successful. Private industry likes to take credit for much of the
innovation, but having grown up with a father who worked for a
government research lab, I can tell you that it is easy to
underestimate the amount of technology transfer that moves from the
government to private industry. And it is important to note that
this is part of policy. If research is government funded, it has to
move out into the world of private industry, and it is available to
anyone who wants to use it. Private innovations have a tendency to
remain propietary, stifling innovation (see Autocad, for a good
example). Private industry has an interest in monopoly control of
technological innovations. Government has an interest in wide
distribution of technological innovations. Which one do you think
is the most effective at engendering "spontanteous order?"
My take on the Kos/Cato article is on my website,
http://www.wirkman.net/ . . . and perhaps I target, too much, his
obsession with corporations.
I'm one of those libertarians who hates the GOP, and has many
Democratic friends, and yet does not belong to the hopeless
Libertarian Party. You might think, then, that the idea of voting
Democratic would sound good to me.
It does . . . until the proponents start listing the reasons. Then
I balk.
I remain independent at heart, and cannot convince myself that the
party that gave us Woodrow Wilson, FDR, Social Security, the
VietNam War, and cooked up the 1974 Budget Act will somehow bring
us more freedom. When Democrats repudiate Wilsonianism and
imperialism in general; when they talk about unbuilding the
disgrace of Social Security; oppose the War on Drugs; and when they
repeal the Congressional Budget and Impoundment Control Act of 1974
. . . THEN I'll reconsider.
But there are other reasons why this outpost of
libertarianism works. The government has put in an infrastructure
to support the region including, among many other things, roads,
the Internet, government research grants, and the most important
ingredient of all: education, from the lowliest kindergarten to the
highest post-doc program.
Uh, the government "provides" those same things in most of the
country, yet Silicon Valley it ain't.
Nue: R&D in the US is about 40/60 public-private, roughly in
line with their overall fractions of the GDP. However, any major
technological advance requires elements from so many fields that it
is all but impossible that ALL of those advances would come from
either the 40 or the forty. In the case of the internet, it is
probably closer to 20-80, but of course some level of
government-funded research has had an impact. For the billions we
send to NSF DOE, DOD et al, it darned well better.
That being said, the government funding is not necessary. We'd
still have a modified internet and something approximating Tang
without Uncle Sam. If it wasn't Arapnet, it would have been
something similar somewhere else just a few months later.
"Government has an interest in wide distribution of
technological innovations."
sometimes.
unless that innovation runs counter to their interests.
much like companies.
but the government has guns. lots of them, in fact. it's a problem
i'm told they're working on, but progress is slow.
My old saw is that you can't go left by turning right. In the
same vein, you'll never reach a libertarian society by voting D or
R. You can temporarily move people in that direction. In GA several
years ago, a US Senate election was forced into a runoff because
enough people voted Libertarian that no one received 50% of the
vote. The R (Paul Coverdell) won the runoff and he was mildly
receptive to libertarians. However, he died in office and his
replacement showed no similar interest. By voting D, you may get a
bone thrown your way, but it will eventually be overwhelmed by all
the sh!t that follows.
Besides that, don't forget that D's have their god too. While the
R's worship a wierd vaguely Christian god, the D's worship
government. They have a blind faith in government that might just
as well be a religion.
We are often told about the great stuff government does without
really thinking about what would happen without it. If government
did no R&D, do we really believe that private industry would
simply fail to pick up the slack. We'll never really know, but I'd
suspect that someone would do it regardless. As it stands now, it
just gives private corporations a good reason not to invest in
R&D.
Finally, my take on Kos is no different than my take on Limbaugh
(or Carville or O'Reilly or any number of celebrity pundits). For
the most part they are clever without really being smart. They are
brilliant tacticians who can win an argument. But if you look at
how their individual arguments add up, it's pretty much incoherent.
Bush is pretty much the perfect President for our age. His whole
strategy can be boiled down into two words - trust me. It takes
more than 30 seconds to convince people why that's a bad idea and
by that time their attention has drifted to something else.
Yes the government made the Internet. The fact that you are
don't know this means you are probably pretty young. The Internet
originally started as ARPAnet - Advanced Research Project
Network.
So once again, it all comes down to the 'but for' argument. Oh,
Brian D., please, tell us something that even a lightweight
techhead doesn't know.
Using the idea of technological manifest destiny to expand the
information superhighway doesn't prove that it wouldn't have
happened without the governmental nudges for expansion.
They way I see it, the fact that government controls the 'seed'
money just gives them inroads for later regulation.
I love so many people start posts with "I didn't read the
article but" and then proceed to talk about how Kos is full of
it.
Who cares? The excerpt stands on its own. And speaking for myself,
I only commented on the excerpt. He attempts to co-opt
libertarianism and use Silicone Valley, California(!) as his
theme.
Do you really think that if I read the whole Kos essay that I'm
going to come out of it, staggering, realizing that Kos is really
correct about libertarianism?
A liberal Democrat could never convince me to vote Democrat, but
a socially conservative Republican could. I voted for Obama to send
a message to the Illinois Republican party: keep religious nutbag
carpetbaggers like Alan Keyes out of my state.
The converse applies as well. I am considering helping campaign for
Judy Baar Topinka to rid our great state of Gov. Blagojevich.
...and it didn't amount to shit until private industry got
involved. Seriously, how many people had internet access prior to
say, 1994?
i remember compuserve and AOL dial-up in the 80's...perhaps that is
the government sponsored internet he is talking about? :)
If it wasn't Arapnet, it would have been something similar
somewhere else just a few months later.
If it wern't for government protected Ma Bell we would have had it
20 years earlier, not a few months later.
A cabal of major corporate industry is, in fact, more
powerful than the government of the most powerful nation on
earth?and government is the only thing that can stop them
from recklessly exploiting the people and destroying their
freedom.
Right. Because it's corporations that are passing laws restricting
freedom. Campaign Finance Reform, Patriot Act, War on Drugs, gun
control, smoking bans, eminent domain, online gambling, immigration
reform, and on and on and on.
And government is going to "stop" corporations? With tax
abatements? With contracts?
How do you start a corporation? By incorporating under government
regulations. Corporations are government's creations. Government's
natural instinct is to favor them, not rein them in.
Libertarians could be one of the interest groups controlling a
defined sphere of issues within the Democratic party.
Not exactly a Freidmanite revolution, but it's better than being
the "where else are you going to go" butt boys of the
Republicans.
The question is, are you willing to settle for nothing short of
a completely libertarian society, or are you willing to be
politically mature and recognize that it is necessary to compromise
with people with different ideologies? If the latter, would you
rather compromise with Democrats, with Republicans, or opt for
neither and remain on the sidelines?
On the internet being funded by private means; I always thought
there was a chicken-and-egg problem with that. Without end-users
the internet can't be very profitable, and without an
infrastructure there can't be any end-users. I could be wrong about
that, though. AOL was doing okay before the web came along.
The problem with libertarians turning to the Democrats is that
the Democrats don't pay even lip service to limited government. Of
course, they do act all huffy and surprised when the GOP uses all
that ever-expanding power towards its own ends.
The civil liberties issue doesn't play in practice much
better over in Democrat land either. Once in power, Democrats can
be worse than Republicans, because they want to show that they are
tough on crime, foreign policy, etc. I'd say that the Clinton
administration arguably has a worse civil liberties record than Old
Man Bush's administration, for instance. Not all Clinton's fault,
of course, but my point is that things definitely didn't get
better.
I've said this before, but it's worth repeating. If the Democrats
want to grab the displaced small-government Republicans, then they
are going to have to change their tune on limited government. And
continue to do so while in power. Otherwise, the best you can hope
for is apathy, not a mass move from one useless party to the
other.
Libertarians could be one of the interest groups controlling
a defined sphere of issues within the Democratic party.
Sure. The Democrats are tired of not having a defined constituency
for ferret-owners.
Seriously, as patronizing as that remark is, on what insignificant
"defined sphere of issues" would the Democrats be willing to listen
to a tiny group of people who utterly disagree with the rest of the
party on many issues and are (in Democratic eyes) off-putttingly
hard-line on all the others?
I don't think libertarians could change the Democratic party as a
captive voting bloc any more than they can the Republican party as
the same. They'd just end up getting more worked up over Democratic
failings due to the illusion of input into the process.
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