Speaking of political distancing from the fringe, the gun-packing, Ron Paul-supporting, Hit&Run-commenting town hall attendee William Kostric gets a two-handed rhetorical shove away from libertarianism by Justin Raimondo, over at Chronicles Magazine. Excerpt:
So as to make his intent unmistakable, he carried a sign that day which proclaimed it to all and sundry: "IT IS TIME TO WATER THE TREE OF LIBERTY!"
This was widely interpreted as a not-so-subtle threat to the President, personally. And I fail to see how it could be understood in any other way. To carry that sign in one hand, and a gun in the other, is a declaration of war. A war, I hasten to add, that Kostric and his fellow revolutionaries cannot possibly hope to win. […]
Typically, some in the libertarian movement hailed Kostric as a hero. While we've had more than our our share of crackpots and scamsters in the libertarian movement, never have we had a significant organized grouping that openly advocated violence, or even flirted with it—at least, not until now. […]
With [Ron] Paul appearing to endorse this sort of behavior—or, at least, not oppose it—he is encouraging more of the same. And the dangers of that are many, and ominous:
1) It sets up the libertarian movement for government surveillance and infiltration. Under the PATRIOT Act, the government has the "right" to spy on anyone suspected of planning illegal acts, and any act of civil disobedience can be construed as "terrorism."
2) It marginalizes the libertarian movement, and gives the professional "extremist"-hunters as well as the Obama-ite left a reason to tie a seemingly violent "fringe" with individuals and groups working to preserve what remains of our economic and civil liberties.
3) It is bound to end in a violent incident: Indeed, there have already been confrontations between the "tea-baggers" and union thugs at those town-hall meetings. It is only a matter of time before a gun goes off, either by accident or by intention.
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It is bound to end in a violent incident: Indeed, there have already been confrontations between the "tea-baggers" and union thugs at those town-hall meetings. It is only a matter of time before a gun goes off, either by accident or by intention.
Due to the confrontations between tax protesters and British soldiers - this is bound to end in a violent incident. It is only a matter of time before a gun goes off, either by accident or by intention, and five Bostonians will die. -- Justin Raimondo, Feb 1770
From wikipedia, for anyone who doesnt get my post:
The Boston Massacre was an incident that led to the deaths of five civilians at the hands of British troops on March 5, 1770, the legal aftermath of which helped spark the rebellion in some of the British colonies in America, which culminated in the American Revolution. A tense situation because of a heavy British military presence in Boston boiled over to incite brawls between soldiers and civilians and eventually led to troops discharging their muskets after being attacked by a rioting crowd. Three civilians were killed at the scene of the shooting, and two died after the incident.
It marginalizes the libertarian movement, and gives the professional "extremist"-hunters as well as the Obama-ite left a reason to tie a seemingly violent "fringe" with individuals and groups working to preserve what remains of our economic and civil liberties.
Liberals "marginalize" everyone who ever so slightly deviates from their opinions
as "extremists." Did Kostric do anything illegal? No, so STFU.
That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security.
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. - That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, - That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness.
Some people in the Civil Rights movement advocated violence to achieve its ends, some people practiced it. Its rank-and-file were subject to surveillance, harassment, and arrest. It didn't stop them, it won't stop us.
There are fruit loops at the fringes of any movement. That doesn't invalidate the core goals of the movement either conceptually or perceptually.
You know, it's kind of fun to rant about revolution. But the fact of the matter is, when it comes, it won't be one that anyone here likes.
Except for maybe Tony.
Fortunately, I don't think I'll see one in my lifetime.
But the fact of the matter is, when it comes, it won't be one that anyone here likes.
Historically, the odds are that your are correct. And that is why we are generally "disposed to suffer". But there comes a breaking point and as long as you have a chance....
Because, let me guess, no no I got this... torture, denial of due process, extraordinary rendition, wiretapping, a phony war--not quite enough abuse to warrant overthrow of the government. But a public healthcare option? TYRANNY!!!
Rights not used are rights lost. The problem is that few exercise their right to open possession of personal arms so Kostric is odd man out.
Raimondo is wetting his bed for nothing; as for damaging the libertarian brand; doubtful since after all these years libertarians haven't broken through to even 'permanent gadfly' status in legislative bodies.
With [Ron] Paul appearing to endorse this sort of behavior-or, at least, not oppose it-he is encouraging more of the same.
If I've learned anything from being a Paul supporter and just what I've read, it's that he really operates on a different mindset than most when it comes to these "in his name" issues. He doesn't see the need to comment on everything he can, he doesn't see a purpose voicing his support or opposition to things that aren't laws on his desk (Some exceptions apply). I think it's unfair to run to him and demand a statement every time someone who supported him does something. The guy just doesn't have the ego for that.
Because, let me guess, no no I got this... torture, denial of due process, extraordinary rendition, wiretapping, a phony war--not quite enough abuse to warrant overthrow of the government. But a public healthcare option? TYRANNY!!!
Because, let me guess, no no I got this... torture, denial of due process, extraordinary rendition, wiretapping, a phony war--not quite enough abuse to warrant overthrow of the government. But a public healthcare option?
A couple of years ago, I told my extremely conservative parents that George Bush should be impeached for warrantless wiretapping.
It is bound to end in a violent incident: Indeed, there have already been confrontations between the "tea-baggers" and union thugs at those town-hall meetings.
Slow down, there, buddy. Before you get your lace panties all in a bunch, you might want to stop and think about three things:
(1) There already has been violence at these meetings, none of it initiated by the protestors, armed or not.
(2) The presence of armed citizens at protests might actually keep the union thugs in line, thus reducing violence.
(2) Self-defense is a virtue; the use of violence to end violent aggression is a good thing.
BTW, by characterizing the protestors as teabaggers, you let us all know that you are not to be taken seriously.
The British House of Commons was created to serve as the political power base and voice for the free subjects of the realm, originally selected from the business and merchant classes of each local area to represent all the Sovereign's subjects who were not Lords Temporal or Spiritual...
The name of the House does not originate from the fact that it represented the 'common' people, but rather from the fact that the constituencies represented were based on the commons (land areas) of England. The House of Commons was thus elected ...
Throughout their histories, the British and Canadian Houses of Commons have become increasingly representative, as suffrage has been extended. Both bodies are now elected via universal adult suffrage.
So, some sort of democractic form from the beginning.
I got this... torture, denial of due process, extraordinary rendition, wiretapping, a phony war--not quite enough abuse to warrant overthrow of the government.
Listen dumbass, were your reading this site a few years ago? Nothing has changed around here.
yo, fuck Justin Raimondo. This is the guy who posted screeds on his blog about how Reason sabotaged the Ron Paul campaign.
Speaking of which, he doesn't think that Ron Paul's name being plastered all over a newsletter which called MLK a "gay pedophile" and complained about "fleet footed niggers" in Washington should put a black mark on Paul's record; but he thinks him showing up at the same event as a guy with a gun and a sign with a Jefferson quote on it puts a black mark on libertarianism in general? Does. Not. Compute.
Gee, there's a shock. Raimondo spends a majority of his time whining about what the other libertarians are doing wrong. If it weren't for various flavors of "No True Scotsman" his website would be about 5 lines long.
This is more of the same. I heard this exact same argument from the RKBA crowd, too. We shouldn't exercise our rights because it makes the pinks and the normals nervous and it isn't doing us any good. Bullshit. Every time somebody like Kostric shows up and nothing happens, it helps us. The more times it happens, sooner or later it ceases to be news. It makes us look like harmless eccentrics.
Then, when the secret instructions for revolution come, we'll take them all by surprise.
Tony, you might try pulling your head out of your ass long enough to note that the abuses of the Obama administration are ADDITIONAL TO the abuses of the Bush administration and all previous administrations. It's called the breaking point, you airheaded shitcock, and people are getting a lot closer to it.
robc,
I must admit that my "breaking point" is nowhere on the horizon. Again, from a historical standpoint, this has all happened before, and will all happen again -- assuming the fucking Cylons don't kill us all, or that the LP doesn't take control, which is less likely than the thing with the Cylons.
Listen dumbass, were your reading this site a few years ago? Nothing has changed around here.
So the only reason you didn't get your tea party started then was because you're impotent? Good, I was getting worried. I guess I don't remember seeing morons with guns at Bush events because he had you carted off for so much as wearing the wrong lapel pin.
Ok so Raimondo thinks the libertarian "movement" is ill served by a guy who uses his right to carry while protesting on private property near an area where the President will eventually be speaking...later on in the day, but condemning and wanting to know the source of article upon article of racist and jewish conspiracy content that bears the name of the biggest libertarian figure in recent memory, during the zenith of his popularity, is somehow pedantic.
I guess if William Kostric was sent there by Lew Rockwell Raimondo would be cool with it, even if he shot the whole place up.
Damnit Kostric, if you could just give Raimondo a few extra site hits you would be a fearless fighter for first and second amendment rights.
So the only reason you didn't get your tea party started then was because you're impotent? Good, I was getting worried. I guess I don't remember seeing morons with guns at Bush events because he had you carted off for so much as wearing the wrong lapel pin.
Tony,
1) Shut the fuck up.
2) The groundswell we are seeing now is the result of a policy change that will affect the people who are protesting personally. When the government engages in nefarious foreign adventurism or denies the rights of an unpopular minority, people of good conscience denounce it, but Joe Six Pack could care less. When you come after J6Ps wallet, you'll see the shit hit the fan. What do you think the last revolution this country had was about?
Dunno,
Gotta agree with Justin on this ... mostly.
Very correct on this being an 'out of context' combo. Enforces Ron Paul/libertarians = gun nuts/militia to the unwashed masses.
He did put the tea-baggers comment in quotations aping the liberal MSM.
A little off base that Rep Paul needs to 'counter' this strongly though.
It's sort of like Michael Medved telling the 'birthers' they need to STFU because it makes some conservatives look like 'cranks'.
Gotta tell ya, i roll my eyes whenever some pundit includes, and emphasizes Obama's middle name. That's pretty cranky too.
As long as we still have the ballot box, we don't need to resort to the cartridge box. Bostonians, circa 1770, had no such option.
Raimondo has a long long tenure in the libertarian movement. Can anyone cite quotes from his past that are surprisingly belligerent towards the government? Seems to me he was a black flag anarchist at one time, no? Maybe he's just mellowed out.
Tony doesn't deserve an answer, but I'll give it to him anyway.
Libertarianism is about maintaining personal autonomy. Progressivism is all about giving up personal autonomy "for the good of everyone".
The evils of the Bush administration hacked away at personal autonomy mostly by whacking off big chunks of protection from unwarranted search, The average guy or gal on the street was unlikely to see a direct impact on his or her life unless he or she got caught up in the drag net.
The evil of health care reform is intended to impact each and every one of us a soon as the government can crank up the machinery. This results in a direct impact to the autonomy of everyone right now.
Hence, people carrying signs and in some cases carrying guns.
I wear my t-shirt w the Mencken quote ("Every normal man must be tempted at times to spit on his hands, hoist the black flag, and begin to slit throats.") Does that make me dangerous?
I carry a gun 24/7, ever since my neighbors and their two beautiful daughters were brutally murdered in their own home by criminal animals.
I will not disarm unless required to by statute (court buildings, schools during school hours or functions, etc).
Don't see any reason to disarm at a public meeting; in fact, based on the behaviour of many of the union idiots, I have more reason to be armed.
If I am ever attacked by a group of people that put me "in fear for my life" I am justified in using deadly force to stop the threat.
And I will.
Raimondo's website consistently published propaganda generated by Randall (Ismail) Royer, a former CAIR employee now doing a 20-year federal sentence for terrorist activities. Recently, one of Royer's associates, Ahmad Omar Abu Ali, was charged with plotting to assassinate President Bush in collaboration with al-Qaida.
So, he's fine with publishing Randall Royer and his merry band of Bush-assassins, but a guy with a sign at a rally alluding to a 1700s statement from Thomas Jefferson about resisting dictatorship is dangerous?
Oh, by the way.
I have spoken many times in front of my city council while openly carrying firearms. Usually, I am disagreeing with the latest proposed tax increase. Never been arrested, never even been questioned.
So, he's fine with publishing Randall Royer and his merry band of Bush-assassins, but a guy with a sign at a rally alluding to a 1700s statement from Thomas Jefferson about resisting dictatorship is dangerous?
Well, yes, because Raimondo disagrees with Kostric. The benchmark for libertarianism in Raimondo's head is how much you agree with Raimondo.
I don't think it's worth the effort to discuss Raimondo (or Tony, for that matter) but I do think there's a legitimate discussion to be had about the image that a guy like Kostric portrays and how it impacts the libertarian movement. I get where he's coming from, and I'm sure many others here do as well, but certainly it has at the very least the potential to drive away more moderate supporters of liberty, disaffected by the two major parties, who may otherwise be interested in supporting libertarian causes.
There is a lot of really fuzzy logic and misrepresentation for the sake of the story in his article.
The man was there not to debate. He stated he didn't want the policy implemented. He was never a part of the debate he was a part of the protest to oppose the legislation. Two distinctly different things.
The paragraph or two attacking associations should be familiar to anyone who has ever uttered the "l" word in public or unfamiliar social settings. Kind of funny such a superficial tirade would come from a self described libertarian that left the LP for oddly similar reasons to start his own political group. Pot, this is Kettle. Kettle, this is Pot.
I do like the carrying a gun endangers the 2nd argument. You know who generally makes comments like that? The same people that say things like, "I think the second amendment grants the right to own a gun, but..." Oddly, or not, comments like this are common among LEO.
For the record, if I ever get 15 minutes of fame, I think it's okay to protect your property with force. Even if that property is a silly plant. The whole drug dealer firing on cops hyperbole is a joke. I guess he supports the drug war and taking of property based in the drug war.
Not exactly a shining article. The cognitive dissonance, contradiction, MSM style based hyperbole, poor comparisons, underlying fear of repercussions of opposing government and willingness to apparently remain afraid.
The last two paragraphs of advice are, well pathetic. There really isn't a lot to say about them. The fear or denouncing civil disobedience is a nice little cherry on this turd of an article.
In 1295, burgesses were allowed to sit in Parliament. Sometime during the reign of Edward III, Parliament was split into two houses.
The deposition of James II in 1688 was the turning point. It's an interesting speculation what would have happened had parliament allowed colonial representatives to be seated.
Oh, while were at it.
William ... please, tuck in the shirt, get a shave and dump the frat boy hat.
Seriously, you're embarassing us.
KTHXBye
After further pondering, yup, dumb.
I even have a Gadsden on order myself, but Kostric totally ends up checking off all the boxes on someone's (negative) stereotype list.
There's a difference between asking someone to be PC vs not unnecessarily provocative.
You may disagree with me on this, but in my mind, anyone who freaks out because a guy has a holstered pistol is an extremist. Moderates dont think a second think about it.
Because having the right to do something doesn't necessarily make it wise. To me the guy comes across as a paranoid coward. Surely we can have political debate without the implicit threat of violence.
The difference between the movement and the mainstream duopoly is the substance:style ratio. Libertarianism has enough good ideas presented compellingly by intellectual heavyweights that most pretentious hacks can be strung up by their own poor arguments.
The Democrats and Republicans, on the other hand, are intellectually bankrupt and run by the empty suits most capable of appealing to the lowest common denominator.
To sum up: The D/R have no substance, but are heavy on style (such as it is), while the libertarians have plenty of meat, but no personalities. You can claim to be libertarian by having no personality, but once people discover you have no substance either, you lose your power faster than Bob Dole an hour after popping his pill.
2) The groundswell we are seeing now is the result of a policy change that will affect the people who are protesting personally. When the government engages in nefarious foreign adventurism or denies the rights of an unpopular minority, people of good conscience denounce it, but Joe Six Pack could care less. When you come after J6Ps wallet, you'll see the shit hit the fan. What do you think the last revolution this country had was about?
I'll post Tony's response to save him the effort. He'll inject race into this by making a distinction between Joe Six Pack (WASP) and unpopular minority (everybody else, but occasionally he refers to them as brown people or those people). Then he will go further and say we only defend the rights of WASPs here on this site, and subsequently accuse us of being racist.
I'm not freaking out, I'm saying he comes across as paranoid, cowardly, and ignorant. And when one of his paranoid, cowardly, ignorant friends decides to actually engage in violence, just see how much good it will have done for your movement.
"To carry that sign in one hand, and a gun in the other, is a declaration of war...."
Except that he had his sign in BOTH hands and his gun strapped to his leg in a state where open carry doesn't even require a permit. While I respect Justin Raimondo greatly on his antiwar stance, I have a sneaking suspicion he doesn't really like open carry without a permit as a standard of law, at all. I saw the guy in question in interviews and clips of him almost disinterestedly, but politely responding to franetic alarm of those who agreed with Raimondo, and I think he was a very peacable guy who was expressing himself on an issue he considers important. If an incident with a gun had occured, I suspect he'd have been the one using his to defend people, not attack them.
I don't know him, but from all facts I have, I'm on his side. I think his sign was a figurative, not literal, call to 'taking back the country', and I think those who have their panties in a twist about this should remember why the first and second amendments exist and lighten up.
It isn't as if he bit off someone's finger, or something.
Clearly being Ayn Rand novel carrying weenies has gotten Libertarianism so far. maybe it is time for a different approach.
Both of Rand's major works endorse acts of property destruction under certain circumstances.
A character in Atlas commits open acts of violence against the state, with the obvious full approval of the author and the narrative mouthpiece of her philosophy.
Is there any violence in Anthem? I can't remember.
There's less distance between Rand and these guys then it might immediately appear.
Raimondo's only really good point is his observation that a revolution in America could not possibly succeed. That being the case, revolutionary rhetoric becomes a sort of pose, and makes the speaker something of a joke. I talk smack all the time, but mainly just for a basic verbal catharsis - it never escapes me for even a moment that the American state could not be defeated unless it was severely weakened by some random external event, on the scale of a small asteroid strike. Without some one in a billion event like that, our state is more eternal than Orwell's ever dreamed of being. So we may as well not talk about watering the tree of liberty or any other adolescent fantasies like that.
He only comes across as paranoid, cowardly and ignorant because fearful, paranoid, hoplophobes believe that gun=badguy until that person is wearing a superhero costume police uniform. And estimated 2.5 million people each year successfully defend themselves with a firearm, and yet he's paranoid simply because he has a gun and a quote from a founding father?
Actually, Tony's behavior in this thread is the best argument in favor of Kostric's action that I can think of.
Since his area has open carry, the only reason people would be afraid or concerned is because Kostric's action is unusual. If you saw hundreds of people open carrying every day, eventually from sheer ennui you would stop being so afraid of it.
Therefore, the best thing people who support open carry can do to support it is to open carry. If they can make the activity ubiquitous, maybe people like Tony will stop wetting their pants about it.
Once upon a time people shat their pants with fear if they saw an automobile. That doesn't happen so much any more. Hmmmmmm now why could that be?
One of the reasons I prefer it to concealed carry is the fact that it functions on two levels. It provides you with your weapon, but also sends a message. That message is always at least "I will use violence to protect myself." But it can be a more explicit and more active message when paired with other forms of communication (like a sign saying it is time to start using violence). Those that are denying that the gun+sign message would not be reasonably read as a threat are, well, in denial. If Kostric was all about non-violence, he should have chosen a different quote, or reworded the quote he used ("Is it time to start watering the tree of liberty?" - my suggestion).
RC Dean,
I believe the man who had his finger bitten off the other day was a "protester" who was punching a "supporter" in the face. His finger got bitten off on his second punch. Not all of the protesters are peaceful victims. Thugs are showing up on both sides.
PR wrote:
truthers agreeing with each other? no fucking way!
Straw man much?
As much as i would love to pin 9/11 on W and Dick ... puhleaze.
No false flag either, while i allow some possibility that an ally (supposed) of ours MAY have had a hint that something was up and didn't tell us, that's as cranky as i get.
I find Raimondo a curiousity more than anything else; a gadfly on the gadflies.
Like others there is respect for his primary 'work'; Antiwar. Non aggression being a CORE libertarian value.
To suggest that Parliament before the Great Reform Bill of 1832 was in any meaningful way democratic is extremely dishonest. Just ask the members from Old Sarum.
To argue that a House elected on an extremely limited franchise and interested mainly in simultaneously defending elite interests against the pretensions of the monarch and the demands of the mob is equivalent to the current Congress in the United States is also dishonest
To argue that a House elected on an extremely limited franchise and interested mainly in simultaneously defending elite interests against the pretensions of the monarch and the demands of the mob is equivalent to the current Congress in the United States is also dishonest
True. The current Congress is mainly concerned with defending elite interests and enabling the pretensions of the President.
I go in public all the time without the faintest thought that I need a firearm with me just in case. Why is this guy anything but a coward for feeling that he does? It's certainly not bravery.
No it is not. How many times must it be said that libertarianism is political? I would not say it has no values, because some measure of values must be inscribed into law (I guess...), but libertarianism is not a philosophy.
Apparently good tags are not a libertarian value, either.
Non aggression being a CORE libertarian value.
No it is not. How many times must it be said that libertarianism is political? I would not say it has no values, because some measure of values must be inscribed into law (I guess...), but libertarianism is not a philosophy.
I go in public all the time without the faintest thought that I need a firearm with me just in case.
That's because you are a spoiled little child. Guys and gals like you who are just about 10 years older than you can tell you that that fear was there and palpable.
Would you guys stop talking about it and actually do something? I'm sure sternly worded t-shirts impress everyone when you come down from the help desk but at some point you'll have to "start slitting throats". Please start your revolution, you badasses.
I believe that would have been a much better sign to carry. It aligns better with the message Kostric claims was intended (not sure I buy his claims, he picked his words too carefully, and changed the Jefferson quote in a way that made it more aggressive. I think he has been back-peddling to make the quote seem less aggressive than it was originally intended. Maybe because he realized he was being too aggressive and wanted to clarify, maybe to be sure he had "plausible denial" if anyone took his suggestion seriously and acted. Who knows.)
Please engage Sean W. Malone on the "non-aggression" principle as a core of libertarianism. The last time Kostric was discussed, he was pretty adamant about it being the foundation upon which all of libertarianism was built.
PicassoIII | September 4, 2009, 9:23am | #
Know who else is on that 'truther' list?
Ralph Nader.
Yes, he's a dyed in the wool progressive, but hardly a lunatic. Some even find him occasionally, uh, right.
PicassoIII I saw this on another thread and misunderstood your position. My apologies.
I hate to say it, but I've got to agree with Raimondo on this one. While Kostric certainly has the legal right to display his sign while openly carrying, that does not negate the damage that he and his fellow troofers are doing to the movement.
It's time the movement cleaned house. These guys are not libertarians. They want to stop immigration and post troops on the border. Most want protectionist policies. They are socially intolerant and call traditional libertarians "libertines". Most are for marijuana legalization, but you mention decriminalizing cocaine or meth and they freak out. Racists and anti-semites infect their ranks. And they openly talk about violent armed resistance.
If we don't have enough people to vote the bums out of office, what the hell makes you think we have enough people to win an armed revolution against the largest and best equipped army in the world?
Neu - when Sean says that, he means as a principle of governance. I highly doubt that Sean ever means to ascribe as a personal value, which is how I interpreted what Piccassoll wrote. I don't think it's a pedantic point (but then again, I never do).
Yes, but probably different than yours.
Then knock it off with the bullshit. If you something to say about why this limit and that limit aren't valid, then say it.
Libertarism is both a philiosophical stance and a political movement. The basis of the philiosophy is the absolute right of self-ownership. The political side assumes that by basing itself on the non-initiation of force. A belief in self-ownership implies a belief in the non-initiation of force.
I think we would better off empahaisizng the philiosophy rather than the mechanisms of that philosophy.
It doesn't occur to you guys that a guy with a big fucking gun might seem more threatening to average people than the looming specter of socialism does?
"I go in public all the time without the faintest thought that I need a firearm with me just in case. Why is this guy anything but a coward for feeling that he does? It's certainly not bravery."
Because you feel safe in a world that's most definitely not safe, you believe that anyone who doesn't feel that way is a coward?
Fuck you, you pathetic limp dicked piece of shit. I'm one of those 2.5 million a year who've had to draw down on a human being because of an imminent threat to me and my family. Oh yeah, I guess I'm a coward because I was able to keep harm from befalling my family? Fuck you.
You don't want to carry? That's your right, and I'll defend your right to not carry a firearm. But don't you fucking dare accuse those who do of being cowards. No, it's not bravery that makes us carry, it's reality. Bad shit happens every day, and sometime it might happen to you. I don't have fire extinguishers in my house because I expect a fire, or anything else, it's because shit happens and houses catch on fire.
You have lead a sheltered life you pathetic sub-human. Consider yourself lucky. I hope you choke on your boyfriend's load.
Well, Sean will have to speak for himself of course, but I do think he would be closer to Sugarfree on this than you...unless I am misunderstanding your point.
Carry all you want. Don't expect me to consider you brave for feeling the need to carry a big fucking gun to a peaceful public event--and don't be surprised if someone finds that it's you who is the one generating the threatening atmosphere with your big fucking gun.
To expand on my last sentence, you need popular support for an armed resistance to succeed. Less than 2% (and that's being generous) of the populace does not a popular movement make.
The comparisons of our situation to Colonial America are erroneous. They had local democracies, but had no say whatsoever in the governing of England itself. The colonies didn't engage in armed resistance against Virginia, Pennsylvania and New York, they engaged in armed resistance against Great Britain.
A revolution in a democracy consists of voting one group out and voting your own group in. Yet we have managed to elect one, only one, bona fide libertarian to state or national office in over twenty years. And only a handful of quasi-libertarians. Face it, we don't have popular support.
Libertarianism is both a philosophical stance and a political movement.
It is not a philosophical stance. It doesn't tell me how to think or what to think. I don't reference libertarianism when I think "Should I lie or tell the truth?" "Should I steal or should I pay for it?" "Should I hit this guy or should I not hit this guy?"
You're the asshole calling people cowards because they're facing the reality that bad shit happens. I never called myself brave, and I don't know anyone who carries that thinks it makes them brave either. Of course, your reading comprehension has always been suspect, because no one has said carrying a firearm makes one brave.
Of course, you don't seem to realize that NO object makes someone brave. Bravery is within the person themselves, and a gun is just a fucking tool, kind of like you expect that the gun can be a useful tool.
And as for this part: "and don't be surprised if someone finds that it's you who is the one generating the threatening atmosphere with your big fucking gun."
Then they need to get over their own fucking hoplophobia and get a fucking grip. My gun isn't a threat. If *I* am a threat, it doesn't matter what the fuck I have, I can cause you harm. If I'm not a threat, then the presence of a gun doesn't change that.
But I guess you and your ilk don't believe that humans can actually be decent people without government intervention in every activity.
While violent crime in the US is way more common than it should be, the chances that you will be the victim of a violent crime perpetrated by someone carrying a gun is smaller than the danger you will be seriously injured by a lightning strike.
That said, guns are the weapon of choice among murderers in the US.
Carrying guns is the flag burning of the right wing.
I support the right of all persons to exercise either, but... tactically really really stupid.
This is a political meeting, act politically. In the event that insurrection is required, you will be informed where your armed resistance is required.
And I say this from the point of view from someone who has tried to carry the Libertarian banner at anti-war rallies. The Lesbian Organic Loggers for a Livable Wage just would not. Shut. Up.
Oh, and Tony, sweetie, libertarians are not Republicans. I just bring that up again because if you keep managing to ignore that, you might be of sufficient density to replace gold for backing the currency -- and we really need that now.
TAO,
Fair enough.
Libertarian politics (to my mind) insist that war be a last resort and justified by an attack of another nation on our territory.
Oh and of course "Declared by an Act of Congress"
Better?
And yes, you are being a bit pedantic. It's ok, it's technically correct. But without a 'philosophical' base a political platform becomes nothing but empty reactive posturing, sort of like most Ds and Rs these days.
Seriously, it's really hard to separate. George Will made the same 'mistake' on Colbert once. Defining the core 'values' of liberalism vs conservatism; Equality vs Freedom.
It doesn't occur to you guys that a guy with a big fucking gun might seem more threatening to average people than the looming specter of socialism does?
No, because criminals don't openly carry their weapons dipshit.
I go in public all the time without the faintest thought that I need a firearm with me just in case. Why is this guy anything but a coward for feeling that he does? It's certainly not bravery.
You're a mind reader now, huh? Maybe he just likes to? Maybe he wants to be prepared just in case? Do you have a fire extinguisher in your house? If you do, then you better throw that shit out you goddamn coward.
I don't reference libertarianism when I think "Should I lie or tell the truth?" "Should I steal or should I pay for it?" "Should I hit this guy or should I not hit this guy?"
There's a difference between a stance and an ideology. You either believe in self-ownership or you don't. It is self-ownership that answers those very questions you posed. Just because you (and I, for that matter) have internalized it into instinct, doesn't mean it isn't a belief system.
Just because you believe something to be true doesn't make it obvious. There are bilions of peole who can't understand the principles and effects of self-ownership. They don't share our philosophy. We should persuade them.
It is self-ownership that answers those very questions you posed.
Not...really. How would "self-ownership" answer whether I should cheat on a test? Cheat on my (as of yet hypothetical) wife? Whether I should get some work done or continue fucking off on here, for example?
I remember a time not that long ago when some libertarians were trying to distance themselves from some other "crackpots"
And who was the loudest bitch attacking all libertarians who had a problem associating with bigots and lunatics? Justin Raimondo.
Raimondo is fine with associating with and worshiping a lot of serious nutjobs and bigots, but some guy carries a gun and wears a mild t-shirt, and now we have a fucking problem?
FWIW, the "non-violent" Lew Rockwell and some of his buddies have certainly endorsed state violence in the past and some continue to do so. This is all a bunch of bullshit.
I agree though, this armed guy and his revolutionaries will never win. So it is much better for libertarians to spend all their time at neo-Confederate events, writing op-eds supporting police brutality, and attending Self-Hating Homosexual and Jewish Anti-Semite conferences,etc.
I'm guessing if the guy were a black panther carrying a gun you'd all be falling over yourselves to an equal extent defending his patriotism and bravery.
For the record, I support the Black Panthers in their historical attempts to openly bear arms in bad neighborhoods for the purpose of keeping crime (including police abuse) under check, something they did with good effect. Until...
The state government, terrified of the idea of blacks defending themselves (especially against the state's beloved police), began the process of legislatively proscribing the loaded (read: useful) open carry of weapons -- which lawful practice the Black Panthers were using, in the absence of an ability to get concealed carry permits from the Alameda County sheriff or Oakland Police (both of which are notably racist in practice, despite their employing of African-Americans), to effect armed patrols.
The Black Panthers decided to march on Sacramento, armed, to protest the disarmament of blacks facing police brutality carried out with impunity. This happened in 1967.
Tactically, their protest was unwise, as it helped this questionable piece of legislation pass easily, once people saw "them armed, uppity blacks" on TV "invading the state capitol" -- as they were portrayed by detractors.
Morally, it was quite proper. Were it to have had the planned "Rosa Parks effect" instead (although the outcome is predictable in retrospect), I would levy not a single criticism against what they did.
It wasn't until COINTELPRO infiltrated the Black Panthers, shortly after all this (who knows? Maybe it was even behind the misguided armed march on Sacramento...) and made concentrated efforts to move the organization in an aggressive/criminal direction, for the ultimate purpose of sabotaging their political efforts, that the Black Panthers became the largely negative group we think of today.
And so what if the Panthers were Black Nationalists? I suspect I probably would be too, if I were black and living in Oakland in the 60s.
And, as for those Panthers who, after a careful study of their country's laws, effected armed patrols in the face of police criminality: yes, I laud their PATRIOTISM and BRAVERY.
I'm guessing if the guy were a black panther carrying a gun you'd all be falling over yourselves to an equal extent defending his patriotism and bravery.
Well, since I haven't defended anyone's "patriotism and bravery", probably not. But I would defend his right to carry a weapon in public.
As you've been told before, this isn't a Republican site, so I don't have a problem with any group of people carrying guns. Unlike some folks, I don't equate them to things like bravery or cowardice (though you have somehow missed that repeatedly). They're just tools that can be used for good or ill, depending on their wielder's intentions. The same can be said for hammers, wrenches, axes, knives, and cars.
Not...really. How would "self-ownership" answer whether I should cheat on a test? Cheat on my (as of yet hypothetical) wife?
Self-ownership for you, self-ownership for others. Those two acts involve committing fraud, which violates another's rights. If you believe in self-ownership, you would abstain from such actions.
It doesn't occur to you guys that a guy with a big fucking gun might seem more threatening to average people than the looming specter of socialism does?
I remember moving from what I considered a moderately conservative culture in Iowa to Arizona in the mid-80s.
I also remember being stunned the first time I saw a guy with a holstered pistol pushing a cart through the grocery store.
The locals actively encouraged me to get over my liberal ways and stopping making a big deal of seeing guns in public.
It really didn't take that long. So there's hope for everyone, including Tony, eventually.
I'm guessing if the guy were a black panther carrying a gun you'd all be falling over yourselves to an equal extent defending his patriotism and bravery.
Those two acts involve committing fraud, which violates another's rights. If you believe in self-ownership, you would abstain from such actions.
I don't think anyone's "rights" are infringed in the case of adultery.
But what of actions that are not out-and-out fraudulent, just dickish? Not tipping at the restaurant? Cutting someone off in traffic? Calling your mom on mother's day?
Face it, guys, self-ownership as a guiding philosophy is pretty terrible.
The Angry Optimist: Libertarianism 'doesn't tell me how to think or what to think. I don't reference libertarianism when I think "Should I lie or tell the truth?" "Should I steal or should I pay for it?" "Should I hit this guy or should I not hit this guy?"'
Stealing is unlibertarian. Libertarianism is a political philosophy -- an ism -- on the proper role of force and which behavior (peaceful) should be tolerated.
See TAO thinks it's perfectly appropriate to badger and bully and interfere with the privacy of people he disagrees with. Of course libertarianism may pretend to be an all-encompassing worldview but I don't think it has much of a built-in role for manners.
TAO, I think he meant tolerated by the government. All political philosophies have to answer the question of what peaceable behaviors will be tolerated (by the state). The answer for libertarianism is "most if not all."
Any behavior that does not violate anyone's right of self-ownership is to be tolerated.
TAO, you seem to be conflating a philosophy stance with an ethical stance. One may inform the other, but they are not necessarily the same thing. Much like carrot, onion, and celery, self-ownership is the basis of my beliefs not the entire soup.
Libertarian What? no one in this country knows what the libertarian party is. At least they know who Ron Paul is. May the party needs MORE kooks and not less. Then maybe we could elect a few Libertarians.
Tony's talking about how I flame him out of existence by posting the link to his livejournal. Apparently linking to his public website is somehow a violation of his privacy. Who knew?
SugarFree and others - a philosophy is a comprehensive worldview. A philosophy should contain both ethics and politics. "Self-ownership" as the one-line solution to routine and not-so-routine ethical quandries sucks.
Since I've squandered another perfectly good year drawing breath and generally contributing to overpopulation and various carbon footprints, I suppose it's time to do something in celebration of my having survived a quarter century.
My children are older than Tony. This explains so much.
That's your right, and I'll defend your right to not carry a firearm. But don't you fucking dare accuse those who do of being cowards.
Interesting that someone who takes no responsibility at all for defending himself or others is calling those who are willing to shoulder the responsibility of doing so, and the risk that comes with it, "cowards."
That said, guns are the weapon of choice among murderers in the US.
They also seem to be the weapon of choice for people defending themselves in the US.
No, because criminals don't openly carry their weapons dipshit.
I'm guessing if the guy were a black panther carrying a gun you'd all be falling over yourselves to an equal extent defending his patriotism and bravery.
Listen dumbass. NO ONE has called Kostric "patriotic" or "brave". NO ONE.
I support the rights of black panthers to open carry.
I go in public all the time without the faintest thought that I need a firearm with me just in case.
Bullshit. If you were to be attacked, you would--what? Call a cop, right? A cop is just someone that you've hired to carry a gun for you. You flatter yourself that you're on some higher moral plane just because you don't touch the gun yourself?
Yeah, it's your gun. You bought it, and you're paying the guy carrying it.
but certainly it has at the very least the potential to drive away more moderate supporters of liberty, disaffected by the two major parties, who may otherwise be interested in supporting libertarian causes.
I don't think anyone's "rights" are infringed in the case of adultery.
Doesn't it basically violate the contract of marriage, though?
But what of actions that are not out-and-out fraudulent, just dickish? Not tipping at the restaurant? Cutting someone off in traffic? Calling your mom on mother's day?
Face it, guys, self-ownership as a guiding philosophy is pretty terrible.
Eh, point taken. Still, it's valid component to a good philosophy.
Tony | September 4, 2009, 12:34pm | #
It doesn't occur to you guys that a guy with a big fucking gun might seem more threatening to average people than the looming specter of socialism does?
1) nope. I'm not scared of guns. Regardless of size, color, bayonet lug, barrel length, magazine capacity or for any other reason. They are about as scary to me as a hammer.
2) The nut with the gun strapped to his leg is probably not going to shoot me because he doesn't want to go to jail. The one with the gun and a badge is much more likely to shoot me since he knows the worst he will most likely see is a career change.
3) you can spend your time fearing the lone man, or even the small groups, that wear guns. I'll spend my time worrying about the ones that shoot fire chiefs in court rooms, pastors, dogs, mothers, religious nuts, and a litany of other citizens that had their lives taken without recourse by our government.
I fear government far more than the local gun nut.
But it can be a more explicit and more active message when paired with other forms of communication (like a sign saying it is time to start using violence).
But I would defend his right to carry a weapon in public.
No, dumbass. But I would absolutely defend his right to openly carry a gun. The Black Panthers have historically been very good allies on the 2nd Amendment.
I'm guessing if the guy were a black panther carrying a gun you'd all be falling over yourselves to an equal extent defending his patriotism and bravery.
Actually, yes.
I have expended quite a few pixels defending the Black Panthers were were falsely accused of voter intimidation by bedwetting white boys. And I voiced my support for Eric Holder when he declined to pursue the matter.
I go in public all the time without the faintest thought that I need a firearm with me just in case. Why is this guy anything but a coward for feeling that he does? It's certainly not bravery.
What is cowardice? But the body's wisdom of its weakness. What is bravery? But the body's wisdom of its strength. The coward and the hero march together within every man. So to call one man coward, or another brave, merely serves to indicate the possibilities of their achieving the opposite.
Truth is, Our forefather's would have all been proclaimed terrorists today. Take Kostric and plunge him back to the end of the colonial period in America, and your child might be studying him as a hero in history, like Paul Revere, or the "Shot heard round the world". By this, I don't mean that I agree with him necessarily. What I am saying is that it took a lot of violence oriented free speech to bring this country into existence.
"Free speech" - I don't think Americans today even understand the word. Free thought, and free association are following the death of free speech close behind. Today we have laws that have ripped away the very things that Thomas Jefferson spoke to preserve, and that countless men spilled their blood for. I am so thankful for the lack of time travel technology, as if it existed someone from today might try to deny all generations their liberty instead of only mine, and my posterity. Like it or not, while you all sit around debating whether one man has a right to call for revolution and carry a gun, tyranny is coming to a neighborhood near you. Oh, it may not be next week, but when it is you standing, starving in line for the gas chamber, or your family dead and naked in a mass grave, we shall see how you view the man calling for liberty, and how you will feel about his right to carry a gun in public then. For history, is on the side that tyranny will come again, and when it inevitably comes it will be not because there were too many Kostrics in the world, but because there were not enough. Currently in America, there are far too few people who would slow our progression from liberty to tyranny, so our track seems to be on a faster course than is necessary to our own destruction. Do I think we should all gather in the street and pick up arms? NO! I think we should throw the garbage we have for politicians out, and find some real men who give a crap about our nation, and the generations who will follow after, and replace this government non-violently. We need people who believe in the Constitution and the Bill of Rights, not the corporate raiders who are lining the pockets of the present political bloodsuckers. What we need is to bounce every single one of them(except Ron Paul)out of office in 2010 and 2012, and replace them with average Americans who love their country more than they love themselves. Do I think this will happen? NO! I'm not sure there are enough of those people left in this nation to fill both houses of Congress and the Presidency. Instead we put people like Ted Kennedy in office for 42 years, and Bushes in for 16+. Man, are we stupid! We are also cruisin for a bruisin. Honestly, I don't think anyone has to worry here about Kostric starting a revolution. There aren't enough people in this country with the stomach to handle one, nor the guts to save themselves without one.
A gun in one hand and a sign in the other? A declaration of war?
Looks to me as though the firearm is holstered in a non-threatening and entirely legal manner. For all we know, he could have been carrying the firearm because he felt that there was a possibility some nut would attempt a mass-shooting and that was his way of possibly stopping it.
Why do some people automatically assume any presence of a firearm is a threat? I guess that means all the secret service agents who carry (but don't necessarily agree with the Beloved Leader) are a threat to the president.
The Angry Optimist, by "tolerated," I mean, "not dealt with through force." Even if you don't accept people eating meat or smoking crack, you tolerate them by not throwing them in a cage.
To carry that sign in one hand, and a gun in the other, is a declaration of war. A war, I hasten to add, that Kostric and his fellow revolutionaries cannot possibly hope to win. [...]
This goes counter to the prevailing argument commonly expressed on Antiwar.com that First World, highly bureaucratic armies are no match for decentralized insurgencies that are embedded in the people.
Yes because somehow the Libertarian Movement isn't already marginalized by the illiterate majority. You have no rights, the patriot act lets the Feds write their own warrants. If they had any just cause, they'd go get a warrant. As for a gun going off, obviously this author has never shot a gun.
I have no problem with people carrying guns, or signs quoting Jefferson's more radical ideas, but Raimondo is right in this instance. The sign wasn't a direct quote from Jefferson, it was a call to action, by an armed protester, to start the bloodletting.
I'm really surprised the Secret Service let it go, but that was probably a smart decision on their part, to avoid escalating the situation and inviting more serious activities at later events.
All that being said, the actions of one person don't marginalize a movement, or reflect badly on others in that movement, since libertarians don't believe in guilt by association.
The secret service didn't let anything go. There was nothing to let go. Just like the SS said he was not inside, and posed no threat. They gave no more thought to the situation once they asked him to move from LoS on the motorcade and he did. Willingly and without complaint.
Would you guys stop talking about it and actually do something? I'm sure sternly worded t-shirts impress everyone when you come down from the help desk but at some point you'll have to "start slitting throats". Please start your revolution, you badasses.
'mantooth', you sure claim to know a lot about homosexuality. Please project more, moron.
It is bound to end in a violent incident: Indeed, there have already been confrontations between the "tea-baggers" and union thugs at those town-hall meetings.
Justin Raimondo is a Rachel Maddow libertarian?
Damn, I have trouble keeping up with the diversity of the "left wing" of libertarianism
Not sure I was claiming anything. Just have noticed a pattern with your comments. But hey, at least this time you ended with an insult instead of your usual threats of sexual violence. I'm proud of you.
"This was widely interpreted as a not-so-subtle threat to the President, personally. And I fail to see how it could be understood in any other way"
No it was not a personal threat to the President. It was a threat to an out of control Government and a reminder to the politicians of what will happen if they overstep their roles from servants to despots.
The problem with the current crop is they think we are a democracy --- they won so anything they want they can do. We need to remind them that this is a constitutional Republic.
We will not go quietly into the shackles of servitude.
lighten up Dennis
I think libertarianism would be just fine without William Kostric and Justin Raimondo.
But, hell, I'll take any fellow-travelers I can get.
It is bound to end in a violent incident: Indeed, there have already been confrontations between the "tea-baggers" and union thugs at those town-hall meetings. It is only a matter of time before a gun goes off, either by accident or by intention.
Due to the confrontations between tax protesters and British soldiers - this is bound to end in a violent incident. It is only a matter of time before a gun goes off, either by accident or by intention, and five Bostonians will die. -- Justin Raimondo, Feb 1770
From wikipedia, for anyone who doesnt get my post:
The Boston Massacre was an incident that led to the deaths of five civilians at the hands of British troops on March 5, 1770, the legal aftermath of which helped spark the rebellion in some of the British colonies in America, which culminated in the American Revolution. A tense situation because of a heavy British military presence in Boston boiled over to incite brawls between soldiers and civilians and eventually led to troops discharging their muskets after being attacked by a rioting crowd. Three civilians were killed at the scene of the shooting, and two died after the incident.
I think we got it robc. It's fine to encourage violent overthrow of a democratically elected government because you don't like its policies.
It marginalizes the libertarian movement.
Hehehe.
The best thing we got going for us are folks like Tony. Keep up the good work, dude.
It marginalizes the libertarian movement.
I too snickered a little, then wished for drink.
Tony, shut the fuck up.
It marginalizes the libertarian movement, and gives the professional "extremist"-hunters as well as the Obama-ite left a reason to tie a seemingly violent "fringe" with individuals and groups working to preserve what remains of our economic and civil liberties.
Liberals "marginalize" everyone who ever so slightly deviates from their opinions
as "extremists." Did Kostric do anything illegal? No, so STFU.
It's fine to encourage violent overthrow of a democratically elected government because you don't like its policies.
I really can't disagree with this. Of course I'm having a "Hoist the black flag and slit throats" week.
It's fine to encourage violent overthrow of a democratically elected government because you don't like its policies.
Well, sure. What's special about democracy?
Tony,
It's fine to encourage violent overthrow of a democratically elected government because you don't like its policies.
Since the british parliament was democratically elected, I guess I agree with you.
First time for everything.
Oh, yes: shut the fuck up, Tony.
That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security.
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. - That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, - That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness.
Was Parliament democratically elected at that time, robc? I thought it wasn't really for at least a few generations.
Some people in the Civil Rights movement advocated violence to achieve its ends, some people practiced it. Its rank-and-file were subject to surveillance, harassment, and arrest. It didn't stop them, it won't stop us.
There are fruit loops at the fringes of any movement. That doesn't invalidate the core goals of the movement either conceptually or perceptually.
Too damn slow again.
Zombie Jefferson is faster than you.
You know, it's kind of fun to rant about revolution. But the fact of the matter is, when it comes, it won't be one that anyone here likes.
Except for maybe Tony.
Fortunately, I don't think I'll see one in my lifetime.
Was Parliament democratically elected at that time, robc?
Newton was democratically elected to the House of Commons. Parliament had been democratic for a long, long time before 1770.
This was widely interpreted as a not-so-subtle threat to the President, personally.
Only a truly paranoid idiot could come to this conclusion.
CN,
But the fact of the matter is, when it comes, it won't be one that anyone here likes.
Historically, the odds are that your are correct. And that is why we are generally "disposed to suffer". But there comes a breaking point and as long as you have a chance....
Because, let me guess, no no I got this... torture, denial of due process, extraordinary rendition, wiretapping, a phony war--not quite enough abuse to warrant overthrow of the government. But a public healthcare option? TYRANNY!!!
Rights not used are rights lost. The problem is that few exercise their right to open possession of personal arms so Kostric is odd man out.
Raimondo is wetting his bed for nothing; as for damaging the libertarian brand; doubtful since after all these years libertarians haven't broken through to even 'permanent gadfly' status in legislative bodies.
With [Ron] Paul appearing to endorse this sort of behavior-or, at least, not oppose it-he is encouraging more of the same.
If I've learned anything from being a Paul supporter and just what I've read, it's that he really operates on a different mindset than most when it comes to these "in his name" issues. He doesn't see the need to comment on everything he can, he doesn't see a purpose voicing his support or opposition to things that aren't laws on his desk (Some exceptions apply). I think it's unfair to run to him and demand a statement every time someone who supported him does something. The guy just doesn't have the ego for that.
Also, inb4 Paultard/Truther
Because, let me guess, no no I got this... torture, denial of due process, extraordinary rendition, wiretapping, a phony war--not quite enough abuse to warrant overthrow of the government. But a public healthcare option? TYRANNY!!!
Oh for fuck's sake. WE ARE NOT REPUBLICANS!
Because, let me guess, no no I got this... torture, denial of due process, extraordinary rendition, wiretapping, a phony war--not quite enough abuse to warrant overthrow of the government. But a public healthcare option?
A couple of years ago, I told my extremely conservative parents that George Bush should be impeached for warrantless wiretapping.
Shut the fuck up, Tony.
It is bound to end in a violent incident: Indeed, there have already been confrontations between the "tea-baggers" and union thugs at those town-hall meetings.
Slow down, there, buddy. Before you get your lace panties all in a bunch, you might want to stop and think about three things:
(1) There already has been violence at these meetings, none of it initiated by the protestors, armed or not.
(2) The presence of armed citizens at protests might actually keep the union thugs in line, thus reducing violence.
(2) Self-defense is a virtue; the use of violence to end violent aggression is a good thing.
BTW, by characterizing the protestors as teabaggers, you let us all know that you are not to be taken seriously.
Warty,
From wikipedia (ellipses are mine):
The British House of Commons was created to serve as the political power base and voice for the free subjects of the realm, originally selected from the business and merchant classes of each local area to represent all the Sovereign's subjects who were not Lords Temporal or Spiritual...
The name of the House does not originate from the fact that it represented the 'common' people, but rather from the fact that the constituencies represented were based on the commons (land areas) of England. The House of Commons was thus elected ...
Throughout their histories, the British and Canadian Houses of Commons have become increasingly representative, as suffrage has been extended. Both bodies are now elected via universal adult suffrage.
So, some sort of democractic form from the beginning.
Bush was a piker compared to Woodrow Wilson.
And Obama is a piker compared to FDR.
I think we'll end up surviving both administrations.
Tony,
I got this... torture, denial of due process, extraordinary rendition, wiretapping, a phony war--not quite enough abuse to warrant overthrow of the government.
Listen dumbass, were your reading this site a few years ago? Nothing has changed around here.
Maybe halfway, robc.
I think we'll end up surviving both administrations.
The problem is no one unwound Wilson or FDR. The pikers are standing on the shoulders of giants.
Clearly being Ayn Rand novel carrying weenies has gotten Libertarianism so far. maybe it is time for a different approach.
Warty,
Nah, commons was fully democratic, just with limited suffrage. 🙂
The key is that Commons surpassed Lords in importance somewhere along the way.
yo, fuck Justin Raimondo. This is the guy who posted screeds on his blog about how Reason sabotaged the Ron Paul campaign.
Speaking of which, he doesn't think that Ron Paul's name being plastered all over a newsletter which called MLK a "gay pedophile" and complained about "fleet footed niggers" in Washington should put a black mark on Paul's record; but he thinks him showing up at the same event as a guy with a gun and a sign with a Jefferson quote on it puts a black mark on libertarianism in general? Does. Not. Compute.
Raimondo is wetting his bed for nothing
Gee, there's a shock. Raimondo spends a majority of his time whining about what the other libertarians are doing wrong. If it weren't for various flavors of "No True Scotsman" his website would be about 5 lines long.
This is more of the same. I heard this exact same argument from the RKBA crowd, too. We shouldn't exercise our rights because it makes the pinks and the normals nervous and it isn't doing us any good. Bullshit. Every time somebody like Kostric shows up and nothing happens, it helps us. The more times it happens, sooner or later it ceases to be news. It makes us look like harmless eccentrics.
Then, when the secret instructions for revolution come, we'll take them all by surprise.
Tony, you might try pulling your head out of your ass long enough to note that the abuses of the Obama administration are ADDITIONAL TO the abuses of the Bush administration and all previous administrations. It's called the breaking point, you airheaded shitcock, and people are getting a lot closer to it.
robc,
I must admit that my "breaking point" is nowhere on the horizon. Again, from a historical standpoint, this has all happened before, and will all happen again -- assuming the fucking Cylons don't kill us all, or that the LP doesn't take control, which is less likely than the thing with the Cylons.
So the only reason you didn't get your tea party started then was because you're impotent? Good, I was getting worried. I guess I don't remember seeing morons with guns at Bush events because he had you carted off for so much as wearing the wrong lapel pin.
I haven't read any of the comments yet. Why am I suspecting much unbridled insanity will be contained in them?
Oh yeah, this is H&R.
🙂
I love how Tony assumes there's a one-to-one correspondence between H&R posters and tea partiers.
Shut the fuck up, Tony.
I tried to come up with some kind of defense, but all I've got is "Well, he's probably a harmless nut."
Let's send Tony over to bite his trigger finger off.
Just to be safe, I mean.
Ok so Raimondo thinks the libertarian "movement" is ill served by a guy who uses his right to carry while protesting on private property near an area where the President will eventually be speaking...later on in the day, but condemning and wanting to know the source of article upon article of racist and jewish conspiracy content that bears the name of the biggest libertarian figure in recent memory, during the zenith of his popularity, is somehow pedantic.
I guess if William Kostric was sent there by Lew Rockwell Raimondo would be cool with it, even if he shot the whole place up.
Damnit Kostric, if you could just give Raimondo a few extra site hits you would be a fearless fighter for first and second amendment rights.
So the only reason you didn't get your tea party started then was because you're impotent? Good, I was getting worried. I guess I don't remember seeing morons with guns at Bush events because he had you carted off for so much as wearing the wrong lapel pin.
Tony,
1) Shut the fuck up.
2) The groundswell we are seeing now is the result of a policy change that will affect the people who are protesting personally. When the government engages in nefarious foreign adventurism or denies the rights of an unpopular minority, people of good conscience denounce it, but Joe Six Pack could care less. When you come after J6Ps wallet, you'll see the shit hit the fan. What do you think the last revolution this country had was about?
CN,
Again, from a historical standpoint, this has all happened before
No it hasnt. Bush and Obama are adding on to the historical shit.
Dunno,
Gotta agree with Justin on this ... mostly.
Very correct on this being an 'out of context' combo. Enforces Ron Paul/libertarians = gun nuts/militia to the unwashed masses.
He did put the tea-baggers comment in quotations aping the liberal MSM.
A little off base that Rep Paul needs to 'counter' this strongly though.
It's sort of like Michael Medved telling the 'birthers' they need to STFU because it makes some conservatives look like 'cranks'.
Gotta tell ya, i roll my eyes whenever some pundit includes, and emphasizes Obama's middle name. That's pretty cranky too.
As long as we still have the ballot box, we don't need to resort to the cartridge box. Bostonians, circa 1770, had no such option.
Raimondo has a long long tenure in the libertarian movement. Can anyone cite quotes from his past that are surprisingly belligerent towards the government? Seems to me he was a black flag anarchist at one time, no? Maybe he's just mellowed out.
Tony,
Did you not see anti-war protests during the last administration.
We supported them in the same way we support the tea-parties. Generally from afar and with lots of snark, but it is support, all the same.
"What do you think the last revolution this country had was about?"
Taxes much lower than we are currently paying.
Tony doesn't deserve an answer, but I'll give it to him anyway.
Libertarianism is about maintaining personal autonomy. Progressivism is all about giving up personal autonomy "for the good of everyone".
The evils of the Bush administration hacked away at personal autonomy mostly by whacking off big chunks of protection from unwarranted search, The average guy or gal on the street was unlikely to see a direct impact on his or her life unless he or she got caught up in the drag net.
The evil of health care reform is intended to impact each and every one of us a soon as the government can crank up the machinery. This results in a direct impact to the autonomy of everyone right now.
Hence, people carrying signs and in some cases carrying guns.
I must admit that my "breaking point" is nowhere on the horizon.
Mine, too. Of course, the horizon I'm talking about is the one behind me, not the one in front of me.
To carry that sign in one hand, and a gun in the other, is a declaration of war.
Raimondo has such anti-war tunnel vision that his thinking has ceased.
And the gun is in a holster, not in his hand. Perhaps Raimondo should switch from cigarettes to pot because he apparently has glaucoma, too.
I wear my t-shirt w the Mencken quote ("Every normal man must be tempted at times to spit on his hands, hoist the black flag, and begin to slit throats.") Does that make me dangerous?
I carry a gun 24/7, ever since my neighbors and their two beautiful daughters were brutally murdered in their own home by criminal animals.
I will not disarm unless required to by statute (court buildings, schools during school hours or functions, etc).
Don't see any reason to disarm at a public meeting; in fact, based on the behaviour of many of the union idiots, I have more reason to be armed.
If I am ever attacked by a group of people that put me "in fear for my life" I am justified in using deadly force to stop the threat.
And I will.
Oh, oh, oh -- this is too good:
Raimondo's website consistently published propaganda generated by Randall (Ismail) Royer, a former CAIR employee now doing a 20-year federal sentence for terrorist activities. Recently, one of Royer's associates, Ahmad Omar Abu Ali, was charged with plotting to assassinate President Bush in collaboration with al-Qaida.
So, he's fine with publishing Randall Royer and his merry band of Bush-assassins, but a guy with a sign at a rally alluding to a 1700s statement from Thomas Jefferson about resisting dictatorship is dangerous?
I seem to remember lots of posts by Raimondo in 2001 about how the jooos brought down the WTC, for what that's worth.
Oh, by the way.
I have spoken many times in front of my city council while openly carrying firearms. Usually, I am disagreeing with the latest proposed tax increase. Never been arrested, never even been questioned.
Tony,
Better get mike's finger too.
So, he's fine with publishing Randall Royer and his merry band of Bush-assassins, but a guy with a sign at a rally alluding to a 1700s statement from Thomas Jefferson about resisting dictatorship is dangerous?
Well, yes, because Raimondo disagrees with Kostric. The benchmark for libertarianism in Raimondo's head is how much you agree with Raimondo.
I don't think it's worth the effort to discuss Raimondo (or Tony, for that matter) but I do think there's a legitimate discussion to be had about the image that a guy like Kostric portrays and how it impacts the libertarian movement. I get where he's coming from, and I'm sure many others here do as well, but certainly it has at the very least the potential to drive away more moderate supporters of liberty, disaffected by the two major parties, who may otherwise be interested in supporting libertarian causes.
There is a lot of really fuzzy logic and misrepresentation for the sake of the story in his article.
The man was there not to debate. He stated he didn't want the policy implemented. He was never a part of the debate he was a part of the protest to oppose the legislation. Two distinctly different things.
The paragraph or two attacking associations should be familiar to anyone who has ever uttered the "l" word in public or unfamiliar social settings. Kind of funny such a superficial tirade would come from a self described libertarian that left the LP for oddly similar reasons to start his own political group. Pot, this is Kettle. Kettle, this is Pot.
I do like the carrying a gun endangers the 2nd argument. You know who generally makes comments like that? The same people that say things like, "I think the second amendment grants the right to own a gun, but..." Oddly, or not, comments like this are common among LEO.
For the record, if I ever get 15 minutes of fame, I think it's okay to protect your property with force. Even if that property is a silly plant. The whole drug dealer firing on cops hyperbole is a joke. I guess he supports the drug war and taking of property based in the drug war.
Not exactly a shining article. The cognitive dissonance, contradiction, MSM style based hyperbole, poor comparisons, underlying fear of repercussions of opposing government and willingness to apparently remain afraid.
The last two paragraphs of advice are, well pathetic. There really isn't a lot to say about them. The fear or denouncing civil disobedience is a nice little cherry on this turd of an article.
This article is Fractal Wrongness^n
In 1295, burgesses were allowed to sit in Parliament. Sometime during the reign of Edward III, Parliament was split into two houses.
The deposition of James II in 1688 was the turning point. It's an interesting speculation what would have happened had parliament allowed colonial representatives to be seated.
Oh, while were at it.
William ... please, tuck in the shirt, get a shave and dump the frat boy hat.
Seriously, you're embarassing us.
KTHXBye
After further pondering, yup, dumb.
I even have a Gadsden on order myself, but Kostric totally ends up checking off all the boxes on someone's (negative) stereotype list.
There's a difference between asking someone to be PC vs not unnecessarily provocative.
Oh, and what CluMedSux said.
ClubMedSux,
You may disagree with me on this, but in my mind, anyone who freaks out because a guy has a holstered pistol is an extremist. Moderates dont think a second think about it.
So, how could this guy drive moderates away?
Quoting Jefferson is now an "act of war"?
How low we have sunk.
robc,
Because having the right to do something doesn't necessarily make it wise. To me the guy comes across as a paranoid coward. Surely we can have political debate without the implicit threat of violence.
That's not very likely ClubMedSux.
The difference between the movement and the mainstream duopoly is the substance:style ratio. Libertarianism has enough good ideas presented compellingly by intellectual heavyweights that most pretentious hacks can be strung up by their own poor arguments.
The Democrats and Republicans, on the other hand, are intellectually bankrupt and run by the empty suits most capable of appealing to the lowest common denominator.
To sum up: The D/R have no substance, but are heavy on style (such as it is), while the libertarians have plenty of meat, but no personalities. You can claim to be libertarian by having no personality, but once people discover you have no substance either, you lose your power faster than Bob Dole an hour after popping his pill.
PicassoIII | September 4, 2009, 10:53am | #
Dunno,
Gotta agree with Justin on this ... mostly.,/i>
truthers agreeing with each other? no fucking way!
Tony,
Surely we can have political debate without the implicit threat of violence.
As Jefferson made quite clear, the implicit threat of violence is always a part of political debate. Wearing a gun changes that NONE AT ALL.
the libertarians have plenty of meat, but no personalities
Penn Gillette?
Drew Carey?
Not that I want them running for Prez, but they are "personalities".
Justin Raimondo, it's a threat against our enemy, The State.
It's too bad there are so many wimps like you who just love the all government, all the time, in every hole.
Surely we can have political debate without the implicit threat of violence.
We're trying, but Team Blue keeps bussing in beefy thugs to intimidate people.
Oh, and wearing a weapon does not equal an implicit threat of violence.
Tony: "Surely we can have political debate without the implicit threat of violence."
Hahahahahahah!
Tony, just how do you think the government derives its power?
You're right, it's more like explicit.
anyone who freaks out because a guy has a holstered pistol is an extremist.
I repeat what I said earlier. It seemed to apply again.
2) The groundswell we are seeing now is the result of a policy change that will affect the people who are protesting personally. When the government engages in nefarious foreign adventurism or denies the rights of an unpopular minority, people of good conscience denounce it, but Joe Six Pack could care less. When you come after J6Ps wallet, you'll see the shit hit the fan. What do you think the last revolution this country had was about?
I'll post Tony's response to save him the effort. He'll inject race into this by making a distinction between Joe Six Pack (WASP) and unpopular minority (everybody else, but occasionally he refers to them as brown people or those people). Then he will go further and say we only defend the rights of WASPs here on this site, and subsequently accuse us of being racist.
Does anyone know what handle Kostric uses on H&R? Just curious.
I'm not freaking out, I'm saying he comes across as paranoid, cowardly, and ignorant. And when one of his paranoid, cowardly, ignorant friends decides to actually engage in violence, just see how much good it will have done for your movement.
"To carry that sign in one hand, and a gun in the other, is a declaration of war...."
Except that he had his sign in BOTH hands and his gun strapped to his leg in a state where open carry doesn't even require a permit. While I respect Justin Raimondo greatly on his antiwar stance, I have a sneaking suspicion he doesn't really like open carry without a permit as a standard of law, at all. I saw the guy in question in interviews and clips of him almost disinterestedly, but politely responding to franetic alarm of those who agreed with Raimondo, and I think he was a very peacable guy who was expressing himself on an issue he considers important. If an incident with a gun had occured, I suspect he'd have been the one using his to defend people, not attack them.
I don't know him, but from all facts I have, I'm on his side. I think his sign was a figurative, not literal, call to 'taking back the country', and I think those who have their panties in a twist about this should remember why the first and second amendments exist and lighten up.
It isn't as if he bit off someone's finger, or something.
Concern troll is concerned.
Clearly being Ayn Rand novel carrying weenies has gotten Libertarianism so far. maybe it is time for a different approach.
Both of Rand's major works endorse acts of property destruction under certain circumstances.
A character in Atlas commits open acts of violence against the state, with the obvious full approval of the author and the narrative mouthpiece of her philosophy.
Is there any violence in Anthem? I can't remember.
There's less distance between Rand and these guys then it might immediately appear.
Raimondo's only really good point is his observation that a revolution in America could not possibly succeed. That being the case, revolutionary rhetoric becomes a sort of pose, and makes the speaker something of a joke. I talk smack all the time, but mainly just for a basic verbal catharsis - it never escapes me for even a moment that the American state could not be defeated unless it was severely weakened by some random external event, on the scale of a small asteroid strike. Without some one in a billion event like that, our state is more eternal than Orwell's ever dreamed of being. So we may as well not talk about watering the tree of liberty or any other adolescent fantasies like that.
He only comes across as paranoid, cowardly and ignorant because fearful, paranoid, hoplophobes believe that gun=badguy until that person is wearing a superhero costume police uniform. And estimated 2.5 million people each year successfully defend themselves with a firearm, and yet he's paranoid simply because he has a gun and a quote from a founding father?
Someone needs to learn to not be scared of shit.
I'm not freaking out, I'm saying he comes across as paranoid, cowardly, and ignorant.
Man, between Tony and Raimondo we're just full up with the Kettle v. Pot debate today, aren't we?
I'm not freaking out, I'm saying he comes across as paranoid, cowardly, and ignorant.
This says far more about you than it does about him.
Actually, Tony's behavior in this thread is the best argument in favor of Kostric's action that I can think of.
Since his area has open carry, the only reason people would be afraid or concerned is because Kostric's action is unusual. If you saw hundreds of people open carrying every day, eventually from sheer ennui you would stop being so afraid of it.
Therefore, the best thing people who support open carry can do to support it is to open carry. If they can make the activity ubiquitous, maybe people like Tony will stop wetting their pants about it.
Once upon a time people shat their pants with fear if they saw an automobile. That doesn't happen so much any more. Hmmmmmm now why could that be?
Open carry is legal and shouldn't be an issue.
One of the reasons I prefer it to concealed carry is the fact that it functions on two levels. It provides you with your weapon, but also sends a message. That message is always at least "I will use violence to protect myself." But it can be a more explicit and more active message when paired with other forms of communication (like a sign saying it is time to start using violence). Those that are denying that the gun+sign message would not be reasonably read as a threat are, well, in denial. If Kostric was all about non-violence, he should have chosen a different quote, or reworded the quote he used ("Is it time to start watering the tree of liberty?" - my suggestion).
RC Dean,
I believe the man who had his finger bitten off the other day was a "protester" who was punching a "supporter" in the face. His finger got bitten off on his second punch. Not all of the protesters are peaceful victims. Thugs are showing up on both sides.
PR wrote:
truthers agreeing with each other? no fucking way!
Straw man much?
As much as i would love to pin 9/11 on W and Dick ... puhleaze.
No false flag either, while i allow some possibility that an ally (supposed) of ours MAY have had a hint that something was up and didn't tell us, that's as cranky as i get.
I find Raimondo a curiousity more than anything else; a gadfly on the gadflies.
Like others there is respect for his primary 'work'; Antiwar. Non aggression being a CORE libertarian value.
To suggest that Parliament before the Great Reform Bill of 1832 was in any meaningful way democratic is extremely dishonest. Just ask the members from Old Sarum.
To argue that a House elected on an extremely limited franchise and interested mainly in simultaneously defending elite interests against the pretensions of the monarch and the demands of the mob is equivalent to the current Congress in the United States is also dishonest
That message is always at least "I will use violence to protect myself."
Don't tread on me.
To argue that a House elected on an extremely limited franchise and interested mainly in simultaneously defending elite interests against the pretensions of the monarch and the demands of the mob is equivalent to the current Congress in the United States is also dishonest
True. The current Congress is mainly concerned with defending elite interests and enabling the pretensions of the President.
Or was that not your point?
I go in public all the time without the faintest thought that I need a firearm with me just in case. Why is this guy anything but a coward for feeling that he does? It's certainly not bravery.
Apparently good tags are not a libertarian value, either.
No it is not. How many times must it be said that libertarianism is political? I would not say it has no values, because some measure of values must be inscribed into law (I guess...), but libertarianism is not a philosophy.
That's because you are a spoiled little child. Guys and gals like you who are just about 10 years older than you can tell you that that fear was there and palpable.
Frankly, you're being disgusting.
This was widely interpreted as a not-so-subtle threat to the President, personally.
Personally politically whatever...i am sure it all has the same meaning to the hack who wrote this.
Impotent Rage + Homosexual Panic = JB Post.
Would you guys stop talking about it and actually do something? I'm sure sternly worded t-shirts impress everyone when you come down from the help desk but at some point you'll have to "start slitting throats". Please start your revolution, you badasses.
kinnath,
I believe that would have been a much better sign to carry. It aligns better with the message Kostric claims was intended (not sure I buy his claims, he picked his words too carefully, and changed the Jefferson quote in a way that made it more aggressive. I think he has been back-peddling to make the quote seem less aggressive than it was originally intended. Maybe because he realized he was being too aggressive and wanted to clarify, maybe to be sure he had "plausible denial" if anyone took his suggestion seriously and acted. Who knows.)
mantooth - just out of curiosity, do you have a limit?
Mine is if there is ever reinstitution of the draft. That would be the throat-slitting moment.
TAO,
Please engage Sean W. Malone on the "non-aggression" principle as a core of libertarianism. The last time Kostric was discussed, he was pretty adamant about it being the foundation upon which all of libertarianism was built.
TAO,
Yes, but probably different than yours. My hackles are raised more by church/state interactions. Not so much by universal health-care.
PicassoIII | September 4, 2009, 9:23am | #
Know who else is on that 'truther' list?
Ralph Nader.
Yes, he's a dyed in the wool progressive, but hardly a lunatic. Some even find him occasionally, uh, right.
PicassoIII I saw this on another thread and misunderstood your position. My apologies.
I hate to say it, but I've got to agree with Raimondo on this one. While Kostric certainly has the legal right to display his sign while openly carrying, that does not negate the damage that he and his fellow troofers are doing to the movement.
It's time the movement cleaned house. These guys are not libertarians. They want to stop immigration and post troops on the border. Most want protectionist policies. They are socially intolerant and call traditional libertarians "libertines". Most are for marijuana legalization, but you mention decriminalizing cocaine or meth and they freak out. Racists and anti-semites infect their ranks. And they openly talk about violent armed resistance.
If we don't have enough people to vote the bums out of office, what the hell makes you think we have enough people to win an armed revolution against the largest and best equipped army in the world?
Neu - when Sean says that, he means as a principle of governance. I highly doubt that Sean ever means to ascribe as a personal value, which is how I interpreted what Piccassoll wrote. I don't think it's a pedantic point (but then again, I never do).
Then knock it off with the bullshit. If you something to say about why this limit and that limit aren't valid, then say it.
Libertarism is both a philiosophical stance and a political movement. The basis of the philiosophy is the absolute right of self-ownership. The political side assumes that by basing itself on the non-initiation of force. A belief in self-ownership implies a belief in the non-initiation of force.
I think we would better off empahaisizng the philiosophy rather than the mechanisms of that philosophy.
So much for writing on a computer without auto-spell check.
It doesn't occur to you guys that a guy with a big fucking gun might seem more threatening to average people than the looming specter of socialism does?
TAO,
I'm not questioning any one's limit. We have commenters here saying that they have passed their limit. I'm asking them to act on it.
"I go in public all the time without the faintest thought that I need a firearm with me just in case. Why is this guy anything but a coward for feeling that he does? It's certainly not bravery."
Because you feel safe in a world that's most definitely not safe, you believe that anyone who doesn't feel that way is a coward?
Fuck you, you pathetic limp dicked piece of shit. I'm one of those 2.5 million a year who've had to draw down on a human being because of an imminent threat to me and my family. Oh yeah, I guess I'm a coward because I was able to keep harm from befalling my family? Fuck you.
You don't want to carry? That's your right, and I'll defend your right to not carry a firearm. But don't you fucking dare accuse those who do of being cowards. No, it's not bravery that makes us carry, it's reality. Bad shit happens every day, and sometime it might happen to you. I don't have fire extinguishers in my house because I expect a fire, or anything else, it's because shit happens and houses catch on fire.
You have lead a sheltered life you pathetic sub-human. Consider yourself lucky. I hope you choke on your boyfriend's load.
TAO,
Well, Sean will have to speak for himself of course, but I do think he would be closer to Sugarfree on this than you...unless I am misunderstanding your point.
Tomcat1066,
Carry all you want. Don't expect me to consider you brave for feeling the need to carry a big fucking gun to a peaceful public event--and don't be surprised if someone finds that it's you who is the one generating the threatening atmosphere with your big fucking gun.
To expand on my last sentence, you need popular support for an armed resistance to succeed. Less than 2% (and that's being generous) of the populace does not a popular movement make.
The comparisons of our situation to Colonial America are erroneous. They had local democracies, but had no say whatsoever in the governing of England itself. The colonies didn't engage in armed resistance against Virginia, Pennsylvania and New York, they engaged in armed resistance against Great Britain.
A revolution in a democracy consists of voting one group out and voting your own group in. Yet we have managed to elect one, only one, bona fide libertarian to state or national office in over twenty years. And only a handful of quasi-libertarians. Face it, we don't have popular support.
It is not a philosophical stance. It doesn't tell me how to think or what to think. I don't reference libertarianism when I think "Should I lie or tell the truth?" "Should I steal or should I pay for it?" "Should I hit this guy or should I not hit this guy?"
Go update your livejournal, Tony-troll.
truthers agreeing with each other
Wassssssssssssssssssssssssuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuup!!
Where's the lime jello? Your czar has a green job for you, bitch.
Tony,
You're the asshole calling people cowards because they're facing the reality that bad shit happens. I never called myself brave, and I don't know anyone who carries that thinks it makes them brave either. Of course, your reading comprehension has always been suspect, because no one has said carrying a firearm makes one brave.
Of course, you don't seem to realize that NO object makes someone brave. Bravery is within the person themselves, and a gun is just a fucking tool, kind of like you expect that the gun can be a useful tool.
And as for this part: "and don't be surprised if someone finds that it's you who is the one generating the threatening atmosphere with your big fucking gun."
Then they need to get over their own fucking hoplophobia and get a fucking grip. My gun isn't a threat. If *I* am a threat, it doesn't matter what the fuck I have, I can cause you harm. If I'm not a threat, then the presence of a gun doesn't change that.
But I guess you and your ilk don't believe that humans can actually be decent people without government intervention in every activity.
While violent crime in the US is way more common than it should be, the chances that you will be the victim of a violent crime perpetrated by someone carrying a gun is smaller than the danger you will be seriously injured by a lightning strike.
That said, guns are the weapon of choice among murderers in the US.
Carrying guns is the flag burning of the right wing.
I support the right of all persons to exercise either, but... tactically really really stupid.
This is a political meeting, act politically. In the event that insurrection is required, you will be informed where your armed resistance is required.
And I say this from the point of view from someone who has tried to carry the Libertarian banner at anti-war rallies. The Lesbian Organic Loggers for a Livable Wage just would not. Shut. Up.
Oh, and Tony, sweetie, libertarians are not Republicans. I just bring that up again because if you keep managing to ignore that, you might be of sufficient density to replace gold for backing the currency -- and we really need that now.
TAO,
Fair enough.
Libertarian politics (to my mind) insist that war be a last resort and justified by an attack of another nation on our territory.
Oh and of course "Declared by an Act of Congress"
Better?
And yes, you are being a bit pedantic. It's ok, it's technically correct. But without a 'philosophical' base a political platform becomes nothing but empty reactive posturing, sort of like most Ds and Rs these days.
Seriously, it's really hard to separate. George Will made the same 'mistake' on Colbert once. Defining the core 'values' of liberalism vs conservatism; Equality vs Freedom.
No, because criminals don't openly carry their weapons dipshit.
You're a mind reader now, huh? Maybe he just likes to? Maybe he wants to be prepared just in case? Do you have a fire extinguisher in your house? If you do, then you better throw that shit out you goddamn coward.
I don't reference libertarianism when I think "Should I lie or tell the truth?" "Should I steal or should I pay for it?" "Should I hit this guy or should I not hit this guy?"
There's a difference between a stance and an ideology. You either believe in self-ownership or you don't. It is self-ownership that answers those very questions you posed. Just because you (and I, for that matter) have internalized it into instinct, doesn't mean it isn't a belief system.
Just because you believe something to be true doesn't make it obvious. There are bilions of peole who can't understand the principles and effects of self-ownership. They don't share our philosophy. We should persuade them.
YO Van,
Any liquor in that?
No, because criminals don't openly carry their weapons dipshit.
Some do...just saying.
Not...really. How would "self-ownership" answer whether I should cheat on a test? Cheat on my (as of yet hypothetical) wife? Whether I should get some work done or continue fucking off on here, for example?
Yeah, but they can be easily identified by their badge and uniform.
So Justin Raimondo has upstaged even Reason in the Sensitivity Sweepstakes?
This is gonna be one of those days. I think I'll just go back to bed and try to start the whole day over again.
I remember a time not that long ago when some libertarians were trying to distance themselves from some other "crackpots"
And who was the loudest bitch attacking all libertarians who had a problem associating with bigots and lunatics? Justin Raimondo.
Raimondo is fine with associating with and worshiping a lot of serious nutjobs and bigots, but some guy carries a gun and wears a mild t-shirt, and now we have a fucking problem?
FWIW, the "non-violent" Lew Rockwell and some of his buddies have certainly endorsed state violence in the past and some continue to do so. This is all a bunch of bullshit.
I agree though, this armed guy and his revolutionaries will never win. So it is much better for libertarians to spend all their time at neo-Confederate events, writing op-eds supporting police brutality, and attending Self-Hating Homosexual and Jewish Anti-Semite conferences,etc.
Raimondo is a total enigma. One of those "contains multitudes" types that Whitman was singing about.
One of those "contains multitudes" types that Whitman was singing about.
So Justin is "hankering, gross, mystical, nude?" Ew.
I'm guessing if the guy were a black panther carrying a gun you'd all be falling over yourselves to an equal extent defending his patriotism and bravery.
For the record, I support the Black Panthers in their historical attempts to openly bear arms in bad neighborhoods for the purpose of keeping crime (including police abuse) under check, something they did with good effect. Until...
The state government, terrified of the idea of blacks defending themselves (especially against the state's beloved police), began the process of legislatively proscribing the loaded (read: useful) open carry of weapons -- which lawful practice the Black Panthers were using, in the absence of an ability to get concealed carry permits from the Alameda County sheriff or Oakland Police (both of which are notably racist in practice, despite their employing of African-Americans), to effect armed patrols.
The Black Panthers decided to march on Sacramento, armed, to protest the disarmament of blacks facing police brutality carried out with impunity. This happened in 1967.
Tactically, their protest was unwise, as it helped this questionable piece of legislation pass easily, once people saw "them armed, uppity blacks" on TV "invading the state capitol" -- as they were portrayed by detractors.
Morally, it was quite proper. Were it to have had the planned "Rosa Parks effect" instead (although the outcome is predictable in retrospect), I would levy not a single criticism against what they did.
It wasn't until COINTELPRO infiltrated the Black Panthers, shortly after all this (who knows? Maybe it was even behind the misguided armed march on Sacramento...) and made concentrated efforts to move the organization in an aggressive/criminal direction, for the ultimate purpose of sabotaging their political efforts, that the Black Panthers became the largely negative group we think of today.
And so what if the Panthers were Black Nationalists? I suspect I probably would be too, if I were black and living in Oakland in the 60s.
And, as for those Panthers who, after a careful study of their country's laws, effected armed patrols in the face of police criminality: yes, I laud their PATRIOTISM and BRAVERY.
It makes me really said that, every time I go to Tony-troll's livejournal, I am faced with him reminiscing about his birthday from two years ago.
Sadness.
I'm guessing if the guy were a black panther carrying a gun you'd all be falling over yourselves to an equal extent defending his patriotism and bravery.
Well, since I haven't defended anyone's "patriotism and bravery", probably not. But I would defend his right to carry a weapon in public.
As you've been told before, this isn't a Republican site, so I don't have a problem with any group of people carrying guns. Unlike some folks, I don't equate them to things like bravery or cowardice (though you have somehow missed that repeatedly). They're just tools that can be used for good or ill, depending on their wielder's intentions. The same can be said for hammers, wrenches, axes, knives, and cars.
Not...really. How would "self-ownership" answer whether I should cheat on a test? Cheat on my (as of yet hypothetical) wife?
Self-ownership for you, self-ownership for others. Those two acts involve committing fraud, which violates another's rights. If you believe in self-ownership, you would abstain from such actions.
It doesn't occur to you guys that a guy with a big fucking gun might seem more threatening to average people than the looming specter of socialism does?
I remember moving from what I considered a moderately conservative culture in Iowa to Arizona in the mid-80s.
I also remember being stunned the first time I saw a guy with a holstered pistol pushing a cart through the grocery store.
The locals actively encouraged me to get over my liberal ways and stopping making a big deal of seeing guns in public.
It really didn't take that long. So there's hope for everyone, including Tony, eventually.
I'm guessing if the guy were a black panther carrying a gun you'd all be falling over yourselves to an equal extent defending his patriotism and bravery.
Yes, actually.
I don't think anyone's "rights" are infringed in the case of adultery.
But what of actions that are not out-and-out fraudulent, just dickish? Not tipping at the restaurant? Cutting someone off in traffic? Calling your mom on mother's day?
Face it, guys, self-ownership as a guiding philosophy is pretty terrible.
The Angry Optimist: Libertarianism 'doesn't tell me how to think or what to think. I don't reference libertarianism when I think "Should I lie or tell the truth?" "Should I steal or should I pay for it?" "Should I hit this guy or should I not hit this guy?"'
Stealing is unlibertarian. Libertarianism is a political philosophy -- an ism -- on the proper role of force and which behavior (peaceful) should be tolerated.
Yes to the former, no to the latter. How does libertarianism determine what peaceful behavior will be tolerated?
See TAO thinks it's perfectly appropriate to badger and bully and interfere with the privacy of people he disagrees with. Of course libertarianism may pretend to be an all-encompassing worldview but I don't think it has much of a built-in role for manners.
TAO, I think he meant tolerated by the government. All political philosophies have to answer the question of what peaceable behaviors will be tolerated (by the state). The answer for libertarianism is "most if not all."
Tony, what the fuck are you talking about?
Tony, what the fuck are you talking about?
It's Tony. Do you really give a shit?
Any behavior that does not violate anyone's right of self-ownership is to be tolerated.
TAO, you seem to be conflating a philosophy stance with an ethical stance. One may inform the other, but they are not necessarily the same thing. Much like carrot, onion, and celery, self-ownership is the basis of my beliefs not the entire soup.
Libertarian What? no one in this country knows what the libertarian party is. At least they know who Ron Paul is. May the party needs MORE kooks and not less. Then maybe we could elect a few Libertarians.
Tony's talking about how I flame him out of existence by posting the link to his livejournal. Apparently linking to his public website is somehow a violation of his privacy. Who knew?
SugarFree and others - a philosophy is a comprehensive worldview. A philosophy should contain both ethics and politics. "Self-ownership" as the one-line solution to routine and not-so-routine ethical quandries sucks.
Since I've squandered another perfectly good year drawing breath and generally contributing to overpopulation and various carbon footprints, I suppose it's time to do something in celebration of my having survived a quarter century.
My children are older than Tony. This explains so much.
guns are the weapon of choice among murderers in the US.
Guns are the weapon of choice among murderers everywhere. They just cant always act on their choice.
Justin Raimondo does not understand that the Southern Poverty Law Center is not taken seriously by free men.
Well I'm quick for my age. I was done being a libertarian by 9th grade.
Guns are the weapon of choice among murderers everywhere.
You really can't enjoy it unless you can look directly into their eyes as the blade penetrates.
That's your right, and I'll defend your right to not carry a firearm. But don't you fucking dare accuse those who do of being cowards.
Interesting that someone who takes no responsibility at all for defending himself or others is calling those who are willing to shoulder the responsibility of doing so, and the risk that comes with it, "cowards."
That said, guns are the weapon of choice among murderers in the US.
They also seem to be the weapon of choice for people defending themselves in the US.
No, because criminals don't openly carry their weapons dipshit.
Some do...just saying.
As anyone who reads Radley Balko knows.
I'm guessing if the guy were a black panther carrying a gun you'd all be falling over yourselves to an equal extent defending his patriotism and bravery.
Listen dumbass. NO ONE has called Kostric "patriotic" or "brave". NO ONE.
I support the rights of black panthers to open carry.
Fuck off if you arent going to learn to read.
I go in public all the time without the faintest thought that I need a firearm with me just in case.
Bullshit. If you were to be attacked, you would--what? Call a cop, right? A cop is just someone that you've hired to carry a gun for you. You flatter yourself that you're on some higher moral plane just because you don't touch the gun yourself?
Yeah, it's your gun. You bought it, and you're paying the guy carrying it.
Well I'm quick for my age.
Not really. I would say you're still living the high-school, rah-rah, progressive fantasy.
but certainly it has at the very least the potential to drive away more moderate supporters of liberty, disaffected by the two major parties, who may otherwise be interested in supporting libertarian causes.
The bill of rights aren't open for debate. Sorry.
I don't think anyone's "rights" are infringed in the case of adultery.
Doesn't it basically violate the contract of marriage, though?
But what of actions that are not out-and-out fraudulent, just dickish? Not tipping at the restaurant? Cutting someone off in traffic? Calling your mom on mother's day?
Face it, guys, self-ownership as a guiding philosophy is pretty terrible.
Eh, point taken. Still, it's valid component to a good philosophy.
We beg to differ.
I dont know why it has taken me this long, maybe I thought he would turn into joe or something, but Tony is finally going into incif.
Buh bye.
1) nope. I'm not scared of guns. Regardless of size, color, bayonet lug, barrel length, magazine capacity or for any other reason. They are about as scary to me as a hammer.
2) The nut with the gun strapped to his leg is probably not going to shoot me because he doesn't want to go to jail. The one with the gun and a badge is much more likely to shoot me since he knows the worst he will most likely see is a career change.
3) you can spend your time fearing the lone man, or even the small groups, that wear guns. I'll spend my time worrying about the ones that shoot fire chiefs in court rooms, pastors, dogs, mothers, religious nuts, and a litany of other citizens that had their lives taken without recourse by our government.
I fear government far more than the local gun nut.
I would say since we have an amendment process, everything in the Constitution, including the Bill of Rights, is open to debate.
Rights themselves, on the other hand, are not.
But it can be a more explicit and more active message when paired with other forms of communication (like a sign saying it is time to start using violence).
Only to an idiot.
No, dumbass. But I would absolutely defend his right to openly carry a gun. The Black Panthers have historically been very good allies on the 2nd Amendment.
Uh...that's what pretty much what I said in that part you quoted.
I'm guessing if the guy were a black panther carrying a gun you'd all be falling over yourselves to an equal extent defending his patriotism and bravery.
Actually, yes.
I have expended quite a few pixels defending the Black Panthers were were falsely accused of voter intimidation by bedwetting white boys. And I voiced my support for Eric Holder when he declined to pursue the matter.
Whoops, blockquote malfunction. Tony's quote should have been in there. Sorry about that.
Ah, Ok. I was trying to figure out why you were calling me a dumbass when we agreed. Figured it was a misquote, but sometimes you can't be to sure.
Unless of course my tax dollars are paying for their education. Which is why my tax dollars shouldn't be paying for their education.
Wrong thread. Fail again.
I go in public all the time without the faintest thought that I need a firearm with me just in case. Why is this guy anything but a coward for feeling that he does? It's certainly not bravery.
What is cowardice? But the body's wisdom of its weakness. What is bravery? But the body's wisdom of its strength. The coward and the hero march together within every man. So to call one man coward, or another brave, merely serves to indicate the possibilities of their achieving the opposite.
The complete letter by Thomas Jefferson where the quote in question was obtained
http://www.theatlantic.com/issues/96oct/obrien/blood.htm
Truth is, Our forefather's would have all been proclaimed terrorists today. Take Kostric and plunge him back to the end of the colonial period in America, and your child might be studying him as a hero in history, like Paul Revere, or the "Shot heard round the world". By this, I don't mean that I agree with him necessarily. What I am saying is that it took a lot of violence oriented free speech to bring this country into existence.
"Free speech" - I don't think Americans today even understand the word. Free thought, and free association are following the death of free speech close behind. Today we have laws that have ripped away the very things that Thomas Jefferson spoke to preserve, and that countless men spilled their blood for. I am so thankful for the lack of time travel technology, as if it existed someone from today might try to deny all generations their liberty instead of only mine, and my posterity. Like it or not, while you all sit around debating whether one man has a right to call for revolution and carry a gun, tyranny is coming to a neighborhood near you. Oh, it may not be next week, but when it is you standing, starving in line for the gas chamber, or your family dead and naked in a mass grave, we shall see how you view the man calling for liberty, and how you will feel about his right to carry a gun in public then. For history, is on the side that tyranny will come again, and when it inevitably comes it will be not because there were too many Kostrics in the world, but because there were not enough. Currently in America, there are far too few people who would slow our progression from liberty to tyranny, so our track seems to be on a faster course than is necessary to our own destruction. Do I think we should all gather in the street and pick up arms? NO! I think we should throw the garbage we have for politicians out, and find some real men who give a crap about our nation, and the generations who will follow after, and replace this government non-violently. We need people who believe in the Constitution and the Bill of Rights, not the corporate raiders who are lining the pockets of the present political bloodsuckers. What we need is to bounce every single one of them(except Ron Paul)out of office in 2010 and 2012, and replace them with average Americans who love their country more than they love themselves. Do I think this will happen? NO! I'm not sure there are enough of those people left in this nation to fill both houses of Congress and the Presidency. Instead we put people like Ted Kennedy in office for 42 years, and Bushes in for 16+. Man, are we stupid! We are also cruisin for a bruisin. Honestly, I don't think anyone has to worry here about Kostric starting a revolution. There aren't enough people in this country with the stomach to handle one, nor the guts to save themselves without one.
Little Bit Farm
OH MY GOD! HE'S GOT A GUN!
I'm-so-scared!
A gun in one hand and a sign in the other? A declaration of war?
Looks to me as though the firearm is holstered in a non-threatening and entirely legal manner. For all we know, he could have been carrying the firearm because he felt that there was a possibility some nut would attempt a mass-shooting and that was his way of possibly stopping it.
Why do some people automatically assume any presence of a firearm is a threat? I guess that means all the secret service agents who carry (but don't necessarily agree with the Beloved Leader) are a threat to the president.
The Angry Optimist, by "tolerated," I mean, "not dealt with through force." Even if you don't accept people eating meat or smoking crack, you tolerate them by not throwing them in a cage.
Dangerous man with gun at town hall
Just can't watch this enough.
sage,
Nice Master Po quote
Master Po is my favorite blind Chinese monk.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sUxjahek0f8
Tony's brownshirts fucked up my link.
Watching Kung-Fu has given me the wisdom of the East, while enjoying the comfort of the West.
Master Po is my favorite blind Chinese monk
Mine too. Plus, I'm always hoping for the chance to ask Jennifer Aniston to come over to my place to watch Kung Fu.
To carry that sign in one hand, and a gun in the other, is a declaration of war. A war, I hasten to add, that Kostric and his fellow revolutionaries cannot possibly hope to win. [...]
This goes counter to the prevailing argument commonly expressed on Antiwar.com that First World, highly bureaucratic armies are no match for decentralized insurgencies that are embedded in the people.
Yes because somehow the Libertarian Movement isn't already marginalized by the illiterate majority. You have no rights, the patriot act lets the Feds write their own warrants. If they had any just cause, they'd go get a warrant. As for a gun going off, obviously this author has never shot a gun.
What's with the homophobia?
I have no problem with people carrying guns, or signs quoting Jefferson's more radical ideas, but Raimondo is right in this instance. The sign wasn't a direct quote from Jefferson, it was a call to action, by an armed protester, to start the bloodletting.
I'm really surprised the Secret Service let it go, but that was probably a smart decision on their part, to avoid escalating the situation and inviting more serious activities at later events.
All that being said, the actions of one person don't marginalize a movement, or reflect badly on others in that movement, since libertarians don't believe in guilt by association.
The secret service didn't let anything go. There was nothing to let go. Just like the SS said he was not inside, and posed no threat. They gave no more thought to the situation once they asked him to move from LoS on the motorcade and he did. Willingly and without complaint.
Impotent Rage + Homosexual Panic = JB Post.
Would you guys stop talking about it and actually do something? I'm sure sternly worded t-shirts impress everyone when you come down from the help desk but at some point you'll have to "start slitting throats". Please start your revolution, you badasses.
'mantooth', you sure claim to know a lot about homosexuality. Please project more, moron.
It is bound to end in a violent incident: Indeed, there have already been confrontations between the "tea-baggers" and union thugs at those town-hall meetings.
Justin Raimondo is a Rachel Maddow libertarian?
Damn, I have trouble keeping up with the diversity of the "left wing" of libertarianism
JB,
Not sure I was claiming anything. Just have noticed a pattern with your comments. But hey, at least this time you ended with an insult instead of your usual threats of sexual violence. I'm proud of you.
If he didn't break the law or infringe on the rights of others, I have no problem with his actions.
"This was widely interpreted as a not-so-subtle threat to the President, personally. And I fail to see how it could be understood in any other way"
No it was not a personal threat to the President. It was a threat to an out of control Government and a reminder to the politicians of what will happen if they overstep their roles from servants to despots.
The problem with the current crop is they think we are a democracy --- they won so anything they want they can do. We need to remind them that this is a constitutional Republic.
We will not go quietly into the shackles of servitude.
I still think thigh holsters are the gai unless you're usually wearing 8+ AR15 mags and other gear around your waist. Its all for show.