Nick Gillespie | February 9, 2007
Reason Senior Editor Brian Doherty will be talking about his great new book, Radicals for Capitalism: A Freewheeling History of the Modern American Libertarian Movement (Public Affairs) today on C-SPAN's BookTV. He'll be on at 6pm and 9pm (both ET) today.
For more info, go here.
For details on and an excerpt from the book, go here.
A retroactive reason to subscribe to Reason: If you had already bought a year's worth of the magazine of "Free Minds and Free Markets" for less than $20, you'd be able to check out a wonderful excerpt from RFC about Milton Friedman, "the 20th century's most influential libertarian."
Update: Watch Doherty on the Web here.
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I caught the Doherty interview.
I thought it interesting, the observations about utilitarian
libertarians and natural rights libertarians essentially being of
one spirit. I suppose I've long suspected, perhaps subconsciously,
that utility libertarians tend to come from the left and that
natural rights libertarians tend to come from the right--I wonder
is that true outside of libertarianism? I think of conservatives as
being more about costs and benefits and leftists as thinking that
people have a natural right to things.
Speaking as a libertarian who tends to emphasize the natural rights
side, I suppose I've always been a little suspicious of utilitarian
libertarians. To me, they often seem to be offering libertarianism
up as some superior form of planning that the government will
hopefully adopt someday. That misses the point entirely from where
I'm standing. ...not that I don't see the usefulness of libertarian
policies.
But maybe that's why we're so often (mis)identified as
conservatives in the media--maybe people tend to associate utility
arguments as an exclusively conservative domain. I don't think
natural rights are necessarily thought of as an exclusively liberal
kind of thing.
Mr. Doherty didn't require much prompting from the interviewer,
did he?
Now I want to read _It Usually Begins with Ayn Rand_.
Video of the interview here:
http://disinter.wordpress.com/2007/02/11/brain-dohertys-c-span-interview/
I thought it was an excellent interview and it looks like an
intriguing book. I just ordered my copy.
I doubt he saw this, but I can just see Jonah Goldberg turning red
when Mr. Doherty said, "Without the libertarian parts of
conservativism, conservatives don't really bring much to the
table."
Brian Doherty made an excellent showing on Booknotes
this weekend. Try to catch it on a rerun if you missed it (or at
the Wordpress URL someone else posted above) and before the
Randoids attack him and all records of the show for calling Ayn
Rand a Libertarian.
This was one of my favorite interviews on that show ever. Almost as
good as the final Brian Lamb hosted episode when he interviewed Tom
Wolfe.
Only advice to Mr. Doherty: Visit a barber a few days before going
on TV and find a new shirt tailor. All of your words were great and
you tell great stories too!
I'm going to listen to the interview later. For future
reference, you might want to point out that C-SPAN makes their
channels available as both video and audio streams on the
intertubes, so even if you are uncabled and have dial-up you can
listen to @ ~20 kbps, or even timeshift the feed with something as
lowtech as a casette recorder that takes a patch cord from your
audio output jack. (TotalRecorder or JetAudio or the like makes
life easier.)
Kevin
Interview? His studio mate barely got in 10 sentences. Nice job, however, and he did give Rand more credit than I thought he would, and in a less snarky way than one might expect, given Reason's ambivalence toward its birthmother.
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