Damon W. Root | May 16, 2008
From the chair of California's Libertarian Party:
People who truly cherish freedom see today's Supreme Court decision as a victory for liberty and common sense. There's no reason why consenting adults should not be allowed to marry so long as their arrangement doesn't interfere with any other individual's ability to live their life in any way they want to.
Many supporters see the decision as a repudiation of bigotry and narrow-mindedness. But Libertarians also see it as a step towards a revision of the larger public policy issue surrounding marriage. Californians should start asking their elected officials why government is involved in granting marriage licenses at all.
And here's Libertarian presidential hopeful Bob Barr (via
Marc Ambinder):
Regardless of whether one supports or opposes same sex marriage, the decision to recognize such unions or not ought to be a power each state exercises on its own, rather than imposition of a one-size-fits-all mandate by the federal government (as would be required by a Federal Marriage Amendment which has been previously proposed and considered by the Congress). The decision today by the Supreme Court of California properly reflects this fundamental principle of federalism on which our nation was founded.
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Takenaga got it exactly right. Bob is close enough. Barr is really stating to talk the talk. I'm warming up to him even though I still don't trust him.
Someone really ought to ask Barr why this is a decision that
each state exercises, rather than each individual.
If it is an abuse of liberty for the Federal Government to impose
marriage standards, how is it any less an imposition for a State to
do so?
If you don't support gay marriage, don't marry someone of the same
sex.
If you believe in freedom, don't tell 2 other people what they can
or cannot do if it does not affect you.
hugs,
Shirley Knott
Damn it, Shirley was in before me. The only thing I'd add to her post is that marriage (between consenting adults) shouldn't be limited to two people.
Nevertheless, this is an improvement for Barr. If he can stop backsliding on certain issues, I won't have a problem voting for him in November (assuming nomination, etc.)
Ahh the Ron Paul route. "My position on Gay Marriage is irrelevent because I'm running for Federal office and not state office." Certainly an acceptable position for my libertarian candidate to hold.
"You don't wanna beat me or screw me? What kind of marriage is this? Bring a book."
It's always pleasing to see other people aksing the right
question: why are there marriage licenses at all?
"Marriage" and all its variants are in the domain of corporate law-
or at least, so it should be. "Household Corporations" should
replace marriage.
I'm warming up to him even though I still don't trust
him.
He's a politician running for office, so by definition there's no
reason to trust him.
However, I think this was my one remaining gripe with his opinions,
and he finally cleared it up.
It's official, I am now a shill for Bob Barr.
(I kinda starting liking him when he was throwing back scotch in
between takes on Penn and Teller: Bullshit!, episode on the Patriot
Act, IIRC)
I'm in agreement with Shirley. This is going to be my first
voting election, and while I intend to register as a Libertarian,
I'm very skeptical of Barr. I went to his website, read his
platform, and specifically looked for where he stands on gay
marriage - that is a voting issue to me (if one's going to
support civil liberties, one should, you know, support civil
liberties).
He mentions it infrequently, but this
just bugs me a little. It's okay to use gays as fodder but they
can't get married? What the hell, man?
He's better than McCain or Obama, I'll give him that, but my God...
I think this weird skating act he's doing in relation to the
repealing of the anti-gay marriage stuff in California is pretty
politically motivated and not very genuine. Not cool, but still
better than the other two. I was just hoping that, in my first
election, there'd be someone who I was actually interested in
voting for. Now I just feel like a cog in the machine, a tool of
The Man. :p
(I kinda starting liking him when he was throwing back
scotch in between takes on Penn and Teller: Bullshit!, episode on
the Patriot Act, IIRC)
That wasn't Christopher Hitchens? lawl
I keep telling my children to go for a three-year contract with an option to renew.
Someone really ought to ask Barr why this is a decision that
each state exercises, rather than each individual.
If it is an abuse of liberty for the Federal Government to impose
marriage standards, how is it any less an imposition for a State to
do so?
The Constitution says that an issue like gay marriage is to be left
up to the states, at the most.
BakedPenguin,
The only thing I'd add to her post is that marriage (between
consenting adults) shouldn't be limited to two people.
I was about to call you on this, but I cant read. I missed the
"n't".
If we arent going to have a strict definition on the word marriage,
I agree with you. I prefer a stricter definition of what the word
means. I also prefer the state not license at all, which allows
each individual to define the word as they mean it.
Some people don't like equating Marriage with Homosexuality. I don't really care. I think they're entitled to that opinion. The issue is not the word Marriage. The issue is state sanctioned contracts that are available only to a male/female pair. I haven't had time to review the court opinion to see if they recognized that it is on the issue of contracts where the problem exists.
"Our towns and our cities, then our counties, then our
states, then our regional contacts - and only then, the national
government. That, let me remind you, is the ladder of liberty,
built by decentralized power."
Shirley (and others) are of course correct that individual
sovereignty ought to be the guiding principle here, but better we
climb (or is it descend?) the ladder of liberty one rung at a time
than not at all...
How is it that any "Libertarian" is for this State sanctioned
fiction called marriage at all?
It is nothing mor than layer upon layer of arbitrary law deciding
who gets your stuff after you die, combined with being a
who-you-can-do list, that ties right back into who gets your stuff
while you are alive or dead.
Bah! Marriage, the greatest scam on man ever!
@ Guy:
In a perfect world, marriage is an idiotic social pipe dream. But
working within the realm of obtainable items at the time, gay
marriage is better than no gay marriage. I'd much rather see
marriage as a state institution abolished than I'd rather see
ANYONE married, but you'd have to be tripping to think that the
government-sanctioned marriage is going to end any time soon. As
in, like, within my lifetime. Gay marriage will become the norm in
my lifetime. The end of state sanctioned marriage will not.
Best quote on gay marriage:
"I support gay marriage. I believe they have a right to be as
miserable as the rest of us"
- Kinky Friedman
Bob Barr is a weasel. This is really an equal protection issue
under the US constitution, as indicated by SCOTUS in Lawrence v.
Texas.
If marriage is truly, and only a state matter then why did the
Federal Defense of
Marriage Act (DoMA) (authored by Barr, signed by Clinton)
contain the following:
The Federal Government may not treat same-sex relationships as
marriages for any purpose, even if concluded or recognized by one
of the states.
The above paragraph in Barr's DoMA precludes the federal government
from offering spousal benefits to same-sex couples. This clause
affects survivor benefits for social security, military pensions
and insurance, etc.
"I support gay marriage. I believe they have a right to be
as miserable as the rest of us"
- Kinky Friedman
Quite similar to the Howard Stern Doctrine.
The Constitution says that an issue like gay marriage is to
be left up to the states, at the most.
Well, kind of. One of the issues here is whether states have to
recognize gay marriages performed in other states under the Full
Faith and Credit Clause. If so, then one state gets to decide for
everybody, not each state for itself.
I've always wondered why states are free to refuse to honor my
Texas concealed carry license, but apparently have to honor my
Wisconsin marriage license.
I agree that the state shouldn't be able to tell people they can't enter into a contractual agreement just as the federal government shouldn't be able to, but isn't an issue like this where we would alleviate some injustice better than not alleviating any in the name of not being perfect? Can the slippery slope ever work to our advantage?
Maybe I'm missing something - I'm very tired - but I am not getting the Chapman reference.
There's no reason why consenting adults should not be
allowed to marry so long as their arrangement doesn't interfere
with any other individual's ability to live their life in any way
they want to.
Aye, there's the rub. Given the invasive nature of the state into
all areas of life letting people make their own mistakes is not
allowed.
We can see this in the history of the sexual revolution. We were
sold the idea that people had the right to make their own decisions
about sexuality free from involuntary restraints of law and
culture. Yet, at the same time, it quickly become standard to
regard dealing with the negative consequences of those choices as
the responsibility of the rest of society.
People are free to do as they wish but if they catch an STD, the
state is expected to pay for their healthcare. If they get
pregnant, the state is expected to pay for abortions of pre-natal
care. If people choose not to form and maintain a traditional
family, the state is responsible for picking up any economic short
fall and so on.
Liberty without responsibility is not freedom. It merely enslaves
the responsible to the irresponsible. Creating a legal standard
that people get to chose whatever marriage arrangements they wish
will be a disaster unless we simultaneously create a legal standard
of personal responsibility.
I personally support gay marriage but it is easy to see how Bar's
legal thinking would support people choosing polygamy or polyamory.
Not a problem in theory but with our present real world
institutions, they could be disastrous.
The problem is not gay marriage, but that it was decided by
judges.
Fortunately, the people of California may very well have the right
to vote on it this November.
Or the Kinnison rule "Any man who's been married is qualified to be a tour guide in hell."
Guy,
I hate to gripe again, but Friedman is at least ten times funnier
than the King of All Mongos. It's a damn shame that the great Texan
does not have his own talk show.
robc - if people want to define marriage as between one man and
one woman, that's fine with me. What they shouldn't be able to do
is to force the government to discriminate against people who
disagree.
Of course, as several people have pointed out, the government
should have no business in marriage whatsoever.
Who here is going to turn queer, abandon their family and dash
off to California so they can get hitched to theur butt
buddy?
IOW, only an idiot would see gay marriage as a threat to
traditional unions.
Another great Kinky Friedman line:
"Poly, more than one, tics, blood sucking parasites. That's what
politics is."
Man, how can you not love this guy?
JohnD:
it takes one to know one, not that there's anything wrong with
that
Colin:
what's your suggestion for how unconstitutional laws ought to be
overturned, if you don't want judges doing it? It can't be by
legislation, since legislatures passes unconstitutional laws all
the time.
btw, the CA legislature has already passed bills legalizing gay
marriage. the governator vetoed them, stating that the issue was
for the courts to decide. try to find out some facts before you
spout off.
an issue like gay marriage is to be left up to the states,
at the most
What about certain *federal* benefits granted by marriage? I could
marry my non-American partner in California, but that isn't going
to stop the feds from kicking him out anyway. These "state"
marriages aren't "real" until the federal government recognizes
them as such.
The proper place of government in regard to marriage is the enforcement of voluntary marriage contracts. That's it. Nothing more.
NP,
I was not commenting on their funnieness, just on the idea. Not
sure when you ever had to tell me that Friedman was funnier than
Stern, because that is the position that I have had ever since
knowing of them both.
Marshall | May 16, 2008, 10:25am | #
Maybe I'm missing something - I'm very tired - but I am not
getting the Chapman reference.
He was advocating higher capital gains taxes yesterday, something
to do with it being a viable position, vs. some wacky principled
position.
The problem is not gay marriage, but that it was decided by
judges.
So, if it was something you support, like (presumably) gun rights,
it would be OK for judges to decide?
Your framing of this issue makes it sound like the California
Supreme Court just arbitrarily decided to grant gay marriage. The
court interpreted the California constitution and they found an
equal protection issue. That's the job of the courts in our system
of checks and balances.
And, FWIW, the California legislature has passed gay marriage
TWICE. The executive branch, in the person of Gov. Schwarzenegger,
failed to sign the legislation.
Fortunately, the people of California may very well have the
right to vote on it this November.
Yes, and they may choose to not amend their constitution. Polling
now indicates an essentially even split on this issue.
...only an idiot would see gay marriage as a threat to traditional unions.
I find it amusing that Conservative Christians often talk about how
homosexuality is a choice. The implication to their argument that
they're missing is that their God made us all bisexual.
Can the slippery slope ever work to our
advantage?
Sure. Some people are just too bullheaded to figure out that half a
loaf is better than none. Get the camel's nose in the tent
first.
Full faith and
credit question from another thread
If I purchase and register a vehicle without fenders or
bumpers, in a State where it is legal to do so, and then drive it
to a State where it is not legal to operate a vehicle without
fenders or bumpers, how am I exempt from being ticketed? To avoid
confusion, let's say the offended State is one that has "junker"
laws where it is illegal to have that vehicle on that state on
private property either.
To head off one side argument at-the-pass, I am aware that the
offended State can not suspend or revoke the operator's license of
the offender, but his licnsing State can if they recognize the
infraction from the other State.
The point of this is that there are all sorts of things one can do
in one State that are not recognized in other States and tossing
about "full faith and credit" seems to cloud things to the point
that, if it were valid as frequently used, there would be no need
for Uniform Commercial Code and similar.
I could marry my non-American partner in California, but
that isn't going to stop the feds from kicking him out anyway.
These "state" marriages aren't "real" until the federal government
recognizes them as such.
Good point. Taxes too. But having more and more states recognize
gay marriage will clear the way to the feds recognizing it too. If
all 50 states do it, the feds will follow suit.
Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness as a matter of
"originalism", as a matter of controlling philosophy and original
intent, should be every ones concern.
And we should always ask why so many, like Herr Scalia, should so
object to it, as he did in Lawrence v. Texas.
Perhaps it is as he argued in the case about the "10 commandments"
that he disagrees with the founders as a matter of principle, for
in those arguments he stated that the commandments indicate that
government originates in his fav sky fairie and not in the people,
and not in the rights of individuals and their consent, as the
founders believed.
Some day someone will have to ask why the republican party, and
religious fundamentalists as well, hate the Founders so very, very
much.
I find it amusing that Conservative Christians often talk
about how homosexuality is a choice. The implication to their
argument that they're missing is that their God made us all
bisexual.
Ever see that famous Colbert interview where he's talking to a gay
rights supporter and he insists that he "chose" to be straight.
:)
It's a classic.
E,
I believe that this applies to other multiple-spouse situations
too, like from countries where multiple wives are accepted, but I
don't think that they are here.
I heard someone else mention Barr today at work, so i decided to
check out his wiki page. What a phoney! He's done a complete 180 on
so many issues how can you trust him? And a lot of his positions
are so un-libertarian i can't believe anyone's taking his bid
seriously.
examples:
War on Drugs: "Barr advocated complete federal
prohibition of medical marijuana. In 1998, He successfully blocked
implementation of Initiative 59 -- the "Legalization of Marijuana
for Medical Treatment Initiative of 1998" -- which would have
legalized medical marijuana in the District of Columbia. The "Barr
Amendment" to the 1999 Omnibus spending bill not only blocked
implementation of Initiative 59 but prohibited the vote tally from
even being released. Nearly a year passed before a lawsuit filed by
the ACLU eventually revealed the initiative had received 69% of the
vote. In response to the judge's ruling, Barr simply attached an
amendment to the 2000 Omnibus spending bill that overturned
Intiative 59 outright. Since leaving Congress, Barr's position on
medical marijuana has changed dramatically and he now lobbies for
state choice on the issue."
Same Sex Marriage- "He authored and sponsored the
Defense of Marriage Act, a law enacted in 1996 which states that
only marriages that are between a man and a woman can be federally
recognized, and individual states may choose not to recognize a
same-sex marriage performed in another state. However, he opposes
the Federal Marriage Amendment, contending it is a violation of
states' rights."
Terrorism- "He voted for the Patriot Act, but only
after his amendments adding "sunset clauses" were added to the
final bill. Barr played a similar role during the debate over Bill
Clinton's Comprehensive Anti-terrorism Act of 1995, crafting
pro-civil liberties amendments to the original text. He now
publicly regrets his Patriot Act vote."
Religious Freedom- "In Congress, he also
controversially proposed that the Pentagon ban the practice of
Wicca in the military."
it can be found here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bob_Barr
And he used to be a spook too?
give me a break...
Is this the same court that ruled that parents can't teach their
kids geometry without being certified by the state first?
lose an inch, gain an inch is suppose...
Is this the same court that ruled that parents can't teach
their kids geometry without being certified by the state
first?
Assaults on hotrodding never cease. Those judges just want to get
their fingers into everything!
If all 50 states do it, the feds will follow
suit.
Stranger things have happened, I guess. Still not breaking my vow
to never again consort with a foreigner...
As long as governments, both federal and state, pass laws that give preferential treatment to married people and also pass laws that restrict who gets to marry, the courts will need to step in. If a state wanted to pass a law that says that only catholics can marry and that everyone else can't, do you think that the states rights crowd would oppose federal intervention? I don't think so.
(I kinda starting liking him when he was throwing back
scotch in between takes on Penn and Teller: Bullshit!, episode on
the Patriot Act, IIRC)
YouTube?? Pleeeease...?
Still not breaking my vow to never again consort with a
foreigner...
Yeah, good luck with that.
At least I have the option of marrying mine to keep her here if
necessary. Man, do I hate the government.
Still not breaking my vow to never again consort with a foreigner...
And the gay mail order husband business is right out, too.
I heard someone else mention Barr today at work, so i
decided to check out his wiki page. What a phoney!
He has 0% chance of becoming president. He's the most visible
possible candidate for the LP, so as long as he talks the talk, who
cares if he's sincere?
And of course, there's the uncomfortable fact that if he actually
was being a phony, he would most likely have stayed in Team R to
pander his way back to power.
YouTube?? Pleeeease...?
in the spirit of libertarian self-reliance...
Scotch swilling (out of the bottle, no less) here, at about the
14:00 mark...
that seals the deal: BARR 2008
lose an inch, gain an inch is suppose...
or given the topic at hand, maybe it's lose an inch, gain seven
inches?
hey-oooo...
He has 0% chance of becoming president. He's the most
visible possible candidate for the LP, so as long as he talks the
talk, who cares if he's sincere?
Are you being serious? Maybe because as the most visble possible
candidate for the LP, it hurts the LP to have their front-runner be
a an easily proved phoney? I don't care that he "talks the talk",
GWB says all kinds of things about liberty and freddom as well, i
care about his record and consistency on positions i care
about.
And of course, there's the uncomfortable fact that if he
actually was being a phony, he would most likely have stayed in
Team R to pander his way back to power.
Not always true. There is a long line of 3rd party candidates and
3rd party nominees who have chosen to both Buck their own party
when it was not politically viable to do so, and pretend to share
values with demographics when their record showed the opposite.
Just shows he's got too big of an ego to care about either parties
platform or history. The "If he was that bad he's be a republicrat"
has been proven false many times.
Steve - none of that makes any sense, man. Seriously.
you're being deliberately obtuse and reflexively contrarian (which
part of the charm of libertarians, I guess).
Makes me almost certain he's doing a Nader, turning a 3rd party into his own vanity candidacy vehicle without actually promoting or even accepting the views and platform of the party, all because he's a name (somewhat) on the national level.
Steve - none of that makes any sense, man. Seriously.
you're being deliberately obtuse and reflexively contrarian (which
part of the charm of libertarians, I guess).
sorry, which part doesn't make sense?
"Sure. Some people are just too bullheaded to figure out that
half a loaf is better than none. Get the camel's nose in the tent
first."
J sub D, can we start with the camel toe, instead of the nose?
Put it this way, i'd rather have the most likely nominee for the LP have a proven track record of libertarian ideals, not just someone who is federalist enough (sometimes) that he's "passable". Big name plus so-so record does not excite me.
Can you imagine how insane the refrain of "Bob Barr is no
Libertarian! Look at his record!" would be if it were applied to
say, my conversion from Christian to atheist?
ring ring
THE CHURCH: Hey there Mr. AR! We would like to have you be a pastor
at our church!
AR: Well, I am not a Christian anymore.
TC: But look at your record in 2000 - 2002…you were a very strong
advocate for Jesus and the Church.
AR: Um, yeah, I know that, but as I said, I am not a believer
anymore, so I am not sure how I can help
TC: Ahh, people say that all the time! You are just doing it for
the attention.
AR: Look man, how much more can I do to convince you? Here are all
of the atheistic things I have said and done. Writings, quotes,
secular activism…
TC: you are just doing that to stroke your ego.
click.
sorry, which part doesn't make sense?
well, all it is, is your Libertarian Spidey-Sense is a-tingling,
and I don't play along with people's emotions. Barr does work with
MMJ activists, was an LP delegate and has been on this pony for a
while. And you think it's all some big ploy for attention? Through
the L-freakin'-P? THAT doesn't make any sense any way you slice
it.
"I keep telling my children to go for a three-year contract with
an option to renew."
That made me LOL, but you know that makes alot of sense the more
you think about it.
I don't know how that makes me contrarian, but just because he's
a nominee for a 3rd party with little chance of winning the
general, doesn't make it okay with me that he doesn't represent (at
least in my view) the core values of the party. And no, he's not
"talking the talk" any more than he's walking the walk. His
"federalism" might maybe possibly attract some right-winger unhappy
with McCain, but why should i care about attracting them if it
means my party's positions are distorted or misrepresented in the
process? Is it going to equal party growth? no, because it's
probably going to attract about as many right-wingers as
libertarians it alienates. Is it going to help promote libertarian
ideas in the political marketplae? not if the ideas being pushed
around are conservative and not libertarian, if anything it's just
going to give a GOPer who thinks McCain is too liberal an outlet
for 1 election and do nothing for the party.
my opinion at least.
Barr does work with MMJ activists, was an LP delegate and
has been on this pony for a while.
yeah, now that he's out of office and has no chance of effecting
change. Did more damage than he has made up for...
Long before Barr announced any attention to run for President. I happened to see a video on you tube of Barr being interviewed by someone from Integrity in Service which is a organization that works for gays to be able to openly serve in the military. Knowing what a piece of shit Barr was when he was in congress. I was expecting him to be against gays serving in the military, but to my suprise he was saying gays should be able to openly serve in the military. That changed my opinion of the man.
He can't unvote for the Patriot Act, DOMA, or undo the damage to Initiative 59. but hey, he's working with "activists" now. great.
would be if it were applied to say, my conversion from
Christian to atheist?
Big difference.
It's more like a christian who stoned gays and persecuted jews now
trying to be taken seriously by both and trying to be their
spokesman. And even then still not accepting of gays or jews, just
not trying to hurt them anymore. Barr wants to be taken seriously
as a libertarian convert, then maybe he should ditch the federalist
stances and actually, i dunno, talk and walk as a libertarian?
Bob Barr threads are my new favorite thing because they show that the libertarian movement has just as many idiots as the other political parties. Heaven forbid someone analyze a situation critically and change their viewpoint!
whatever, Steve. I thought I was cynical, but you're entirely
too ridiculous to carry on this conversation.
you're one of those libertarians who revels in being completely
irrelevant. if the LP (and its platform) became a major party
tomorrow, you'd be down in An-Cap party, sniping at the
"Republitarians".
It's more like a christian who stoned gays and persecuted
jews now trying to be taken seriously by both and trying to be
their spokesman.
Yeah, what did Saul of Tarsus do for Christians, anyway?
Steve Torquemada wants to have the Libertarian Inquisition. Put 'im
on the rack, Steve...then you'll uncover his nefarious plot to
propel himself to power by latching on to the oh-so-popular label
of "libertarian".
then maybe he should ditch the federalist stances and actually,
i dunno, talk and walk as a libertarian?
you know, I could give you a whole spiel on how I think that
federalism and libertarianism can mesh, but it'd be lost on you. go
read a book.
Guy,
I know. Never been a huge Stern fan, so I just wanted to "gripe" a
little, that's all.
Reinmoose - Who are you talking about?
How is it ever going to become a major party by mimicing the other parties? I don't want GOP lite or a little-less-interfering-Democrat party. A party named the Libertarian Party, should be nominating a libertarian with a libertarian record and appealing to libertarians! Barr is not a libertarian he is a conservative, he has no libertarian track record he has a conservative one, he is not appealing to libertarians or libertarian ideals, but to conservatives who feel the GOP is too liberal. We already have several conservative parties in this country, i want a libertarian one...
Ayn_Randian you don't have to be a jerk. I don't know who Saul of Tarsus is, i never bothered reading the christian's manual, but if he went from persecutor to spokesman, i'm guessing it didn't go very smoothly.
you know, I could give you a whole spiel on how I think that
federalism and libertarianism can mesh, but it'd be lost on you. go
read a book.
It have to be a history book, cause that's where it shows where
federalism FAILS. States rights rhetoric works for 1 demographic,
and they are not people i feel kinship with...
Wow, way to go Steve! You're the one that made an analogy to Christianity. Don't get all butthurt when A_R calls you on your argument which you apparently don't know anything about.
Steve - ok, sorry for being mean. I think you mean well
here.
Here's the thing, Steve: a party that mandates we have Pure
Libertarians and Pure Libertarians Only is going to end up like the
"Eighth Baptist Reformed Church (Reformed)". It will devolve into
never-ending purges and litmus-tests.
Politics is zero-sum: there are a set number of people, and those
people will be split up by libertarian, conservative, liberal, etc.
Right now, we can't affect change because the ascribed
"libertarians" are too small of a number.
Appealing to libertarians is like preaching to the choir...what
converts do you win like that?
I don't know who Saul of Tarsus is, i never bothered reading
the christian's manual, but if he went from persecutor to
spokesman, i'm guessing it didn't go very smoothly.
Ouch. that one hurts.
Saul of Tarsus = The Apostle Paul. It went about as well as a
conversion of that nature could go.
Appealing to libertarians is like preaching to the
choir...what converts do you win like that?
But can go too far the other way as well, to the point where
"libertarianism" means nothing more than, not a liberal, but not
from the south.
Funny how the liberals don't compromise their core values (the
ideas that make a liberal a liberal) in order to attract others,
and i don't Rush limbaugh compromising his views in order to
attract others. You can't spread an idea or belief system if it
isn't consistent, i have no problem with Barr's conversion on it's
own, or his semi-maybe-possibly-under-a-certain-light current
libertarianism. but both together doesn't sound like someone i want
as our NOMINEE. From the party leadership? yes purity is important.
the priest is always held to a higher standard than the layman, he
bears a heavier burden, and his reach and voice carry further.
Politics is zero-sum: there are a set number of people, and
those people will be split up by libertarian, conservative,
liberal, etc. Right now, we can't affect change because the
ascribed "libertarians" are too small of a number.
Which leaves the LP with two options (if they want to be a real
force in American politics):
Wait(as in, try to indoctrinate enough people over several
generations that their ideas start to become mainstream) until the
people living in the United States are more Libertarian.
or
Do what the two major parties do and move towards the center then
hope that they have enough of an impact to destabilize the party
system so they can move in.
Wow, way to go Steve! You're the one that made an analogy to
Christianity.
actually Ayn_randian made an analogy to christianity to which i
responded to. I didnt know the christians went that far with their
forgiveness thing, it's bit extreme if Saul of Tarsus went from
tormentor to leader...
Steve - we're having two different arguments now. One (that the
LP needs to ensure it does stray to far) we shouldn't be having,
because I generally agree with you.
The other (that Barr isn't sincere) is just silliness because
neither one of us has any way of knowing, but common-sense tells me
Barr's legit with this.
the decision to recognize such unions or not ought to be a
power each state exercises on its own
That worked particularly well when the other 47 states refused to
recognize a Nevada divorce and occasionally charged people with
bigamy for remarrying after getting legally divorced in
Nevada.
While all the conservative pundits are having puppies over what the
Ca ruling means, I can assure you that it will have little effect
in the real world. California still sucks and will continue
tottering around the drain, leaking tax money profusely, regardless
of how many of our friends in West Hollywood and the Castro
District tie the knot.
And [nods to Shirley] WTF business is it of government in the first
place to determine what constitutes marriage and why aren't we
working harder to get government out of the marriage business?
NP -
I'm talking about Steven Colbert, of the Colbert Report. The
question from the gay rights supporter was "did you choose to be
straight" and Colbert, who always plays the stereotypical fox news
conservative, replied that "yes" he did make that choice.
The other (that Barr isn't sincere) is just silliness
because neither one of us has any way of knowing, but common-sense
tells me Barr's legit with this.
Then why is it for example in regards to the California decision he
brings up states rights rather than the individual's rights? Seems
to me that if California went the opposite direction it would be
fine with Barr as long the Feds didn't interfere with the way
California was imposing it's mandate on individuals marital
relations. Seems to me that he isn't interested in presenting the
libertarian (pure or unpure) position that the government (any
government) as no business in marriage, but rather the federalist
arguement that the California Government has a say in the matter
thought the feds do not. makes me question his sincerity, is he
running for the libertarian ticket because he shares those values,
or because the GOP is to left of right for him?
Reinmoose,
Gotcha. I thought there was another "he" that you were referring
to.
And so it seems natural to me to question the sincerity of the LP nominee hopeful, when he says something that contradicts the platform of the LP. Remember also that Barr isn't yet the LP nominee, if he isn't interested in promoting libertarianism during the primary/caucus process, what makes you syre he'll do anything during the general other than try to win those who are to conservative to be happy with McCain. Isn't there whole point of the nominating process to choose who does best represent your parties platform? Especially a party that has no chance of winning at all, might all grow your base instead of switching it for a new one built out of the remains of the GOP. That didn't work for the CP it isnt going to work for the LP.
Yeah Steve, good point. It sure would be awful if someone with federalist views got elected! What a huge blow to the libertarian movement. We need someone that will expand the power and role of the executive branch and federal government in order to give us freedom.
Some people don't like equating Marriage with Homosexuality. I
don't really care. I think they're entitled to that opinion. The
issue is not the word Marriage. The issue is state sanctioned
contracts that are available only to a male/female pair. I haven't
had time to review the court opinion to see if they recognized that
it is on the issue of contracts where the problem exists.
MP-
IIRC, the opinion allows for the state to refuse to call a gay
marriage "marriage", but only if they do the same for straight
couples.
Which would be cute, I think, in that the fact that California
would not be entering people into a marriage, the questions of
taxes and especially benefits would run into a political morass the
likes of which we've never seen.
Bingo, no one with federalist views is going to get elected.
this is post-civil war, post-civil rights era.
If you remember it wasn't Paul's libertarianism that turned off
voters, it was his ties to the old right. those are not people i
want to be associated with, they have no chance of helping our
parties growth.
Reason is no one gives a crap about State's rights anymore (except the dying old right), but people still care about individual civil liberties. that's what we can use to our advantage because that's what we're about. instead we hitch ourselves to obsolete leaders of the dying old right who have nowhere else to go, so they can in turn appeal to voters of the dying old right who have no one else to vote for because McCain is too liberal and the LP has a bigger base than the CP and nominal agreement on tax cuts.
From the chair of California's Libertarian Party:
People who truly cherish freedom see today's Supreme Court decision
as a victory for liberty and common sense ... Californians should
start asking their elected officials why government is involved in
granting marriage licenses at all.
Wow, this is just blatant pandering by the chair of California's
Libertarian Party. These two statements directly contradict each
other. This would be clearer with this rephrasing:
"People who truly cherish freedom see today's Supreme Court
decision increasing governmental involvement in granting marriage
licenses as a victory for liberty. We call on elected officials to
give us a further victory for liberty by ending all governmental
involvement in granting marriage licenses."
Heaven forbid someone analyze a situation critically and
change their viewpoint!
When I can no longer do that, put me out of my misery. Please.
These two statements directly contradict each
other.
You omitted the bit about how the former is just one step leading
toward the latter. And considering that the latter is not ever
going to happen in this universe, I'll gladly settle for the
former.
If you remember it wasn't Paul's libertarianism that turned
off voters, it was his ties to the old right. those are not people
i want to be associated with, they have no chance of helping our
parties growth.
That's right. All those young folks working on Rep. Paul's
campaigns were really *secret John Birch Society operatives*.
Sneaky bastards.
Gays need their own community where they can engage in all the sodomy they want to. The rest of us stay away :)
"[f]rom the beginning of California statehood, the legal
institution of marriage has been understood to refer to a
relationship between a man and a woman." - Majority opinion.
So what justifies the majority's ruling? What has changed in the
law that mandates the majority's logic? Beyond that four of the
seven justices have come to believe that same-sex couples are the
social functional equivalent of a male-female pair? Which by the
facts of biology simply is not true.
"Nothing in our Constitution, express or implicit, compels the
majority's startling conclusion that the age-old understanding of
marriage - an understanding recently confirmed by an initiative law
- is no longer valid. California statutes already recognize
same-sex unions and grant them all the substantive legal rights
this state can bestow. If there is to be a further sea change in
the social and legal understanding of marriage itself, that
evolution should occur by similar democratic means."- CA Associate
Justice Marvin R. Baxter (writing in dissent).
@ Ayn_Randian
you know, I could give you a whole spiel on how I think that federalism and libertarianism can mesh, but it'd be lost on you. go read a book.
I'd like to hear your speil. I've read books, and I don't see
anything particularly "libertarian" about federalism.
Federalism could very well describe an arrangement of lots of
little tyrannical states, each cooperating with one another. That
doesn't sound like libertarianism to me.
sh(A)ne
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