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Mexico

Mexican Libertarians Use Social Media to Build Movement of Millennial Activists

Mexico's Libertarian Party is taking cues from classically liberal counterparts in Costa Rica, Colombia, and Argentina.

Elizabeth Nolan Brown | 1.12.2016 10:35 AM

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Large image on homepages | Mexican Libertarian Party/Facebook
(Mexican Libertarian Party/Facebook)
Libertarian Party of Mexico/Facebook

A burgeoning libertarian movement is making its way across Latin America and Mexico is no exception, according to the PanAm Post, which recently interviewed Mexican Libertarian Party spokesman Francisco Javier Combaluzier. Although the party has not yet gained official recognition, said Combaluzier, "many citizens"—especially those in the younger generations—are getting involved nonetheless. 

Asked about the "biggest challenges" for libertarians in Mexican society, Combaluzier responded: 

There are very few of us who call ourselves [classical] liberals or libertarians, primarily because we are not taught to identify with these labels. There is little time devoted in schools to studying libertarian thinkers, philosophers, or economists.

However, after talking to people on social media, we have realized that many agree with our views, despite not being able to identify them as libertarian. In that sense, one of our most important goals is to make people aware that their intuition of how things should be is actually rooted in libertarian principles. That way, they will understand why they shouldn't be voting for collectivist candidates.

Combaluzier said he's been inspired by the rise of classically liberal thought, activism, and even electoral successes in places such as Costa Rica, Colombia, Panama, and Argentina. In Costa Rica, the Libertarian Movement Party—established in 1994—currently holds four of 57 spots in the country's Legislative Assembly. Combaluzier's emphasis on electoral politics in Mexico, however, puts him at odds with the Mexican Libertarian Movement, which seeks "to spontaneously bring about anarchism" and focuses efforts outside the electoral process, he said.

And then we have libertarians like myself who believe we need to get in elections to achieve a peaceful change. We can't wait for it to happen spontaneously, or by giving lectures that people may or may not attend. We think that in the next five years we can organize a critical mass of young people who are savvy social-media users, and create a movement that can draw considerable support.

Read the whole interview here. 

In America, Hispanic voters tend to poll almost as high as whites when it comes to libertarian leanings. In a Pew Hispanic Center poll from 2014, for instance, about 11 percent of all Hispanics, 12 percent of whites, and three percent of blacks identified as libertarian. There's some evidence this trend may be driven by millennials. Other recent polls found that while Hispanic Americans overall lean more Democrat than Republican, Hispanic millennials are much more likely than older counterparts to identify as independent (53 percent) and less likely to identify as particularly religious.

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NEXT: Black and Brown Politics and the State of the Union, With Kmele Foster

Elizabeth Nolan Brown is a senior editor at Reason.

MexicoHispanicLatin AmericaLibertarianism
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  1. MiloMinderbinder   9 years ago

    ?Un momento Libertario?

    ?Qu? piensan los Millenials mexicanos?

    1. Fist of Etiquette   9 years ago

      Where my comment section gone?

    2. dan'o en barrel   9 years ago

      Solo en mis sue?os… Las escuelas ense?an que es vitruoso para utilizar la ley para cachar negocios, due?os de departamentos y recibir lo maximo posible del gobierno.

  2. Irish ?s ESB   9 years ago

    This reminds me of the time Salon blamed everything wrong with Honduras on libertarians.

    “The greatest examples of libertarianism in action are the hundreds of men, women and children standing alongside the roads all over Honduras. The government won’t fix the roads, so these desperate entrepreneurs fill in potholes with shovels of dirt or debris. They then stand next to the filled-in pothole soliciting tips from grateful motorists. That is the wet dream of libertarian private sector innovation.”

    When the government fucking blows and spends all its money on corruption, cocaine, and prostitutes, it’s somehow a refutation of libertarianism that people fix the roads anyway.

    1. commodious spittoon   9 years ago

      Their obsession with roads of all things is bewildering. I think they’re pining for the days of huge national improvements schemes and fixate on highways as emblematic of their grand designs, despite the fact that their environmentalist wing would try to kill off any undertaking, their labor wing would run up the expense, their feminist wing would bitch about the paucity of women concrete pourers, etc.

      Wait, it’s not bewildering at all. A national works regime would keep the graft flowing and all their schizophrenic elements fighting one another.

    2. Suell   9 years ago

      People fixing roads themselves? Sounds like Somalia to me. Ahhh, Somalia, it has been far too long and I miss its golden coast. I can’t wait to visit again, I hear there will be an Ayn Rand theme park and heroin vending machines.

    3. Zeb   9 years ago

      Not sure how that is a problem with libertarianism. The roads get fixed and some dirt-poor people make some money. Where’s the downside?

      1. commodious spittoon   9 years ago

        Not enough government graft. Voluntary efforts don’t count unless the government takes a cut. It’s, like, the social contract, man.

      2. Loki   9 years ago

        The “downside” is that the government isn’t fixing the roads by giving contracts to their buddies, and that these dirt poor people are making money through honest labor instead of being given welfare checks.

  3. Irie   9 years ago

    interesting article. all the Libertarians i know (as well as i) are “ethnic” Libertarians. we have discussed how many of us consider the LP the party for ethnic cultures in the usa.

  4. Crusty Juggler   9 years ago

    I am disappointed in Rand Paul because he did not use his national presence to espouse general, easy-to-understand, libertarian viewpoints, which could have spread over social media had some influence not only in America, but in other countries.

    Us super-cool millennials do enjoy our privacy, or at least we think we do, and that should be an issue that libertarians worldwide should focus on. We also like the brown hordes. Join us, brown hordes!

    1. Elizabeth Nolan Brown   9 years ago

      Join us, brown hordes!

      If only they’d had you on the Paul campaign =)

      1. Crusty Juggler   9 years ago

        Tell me about it.

        1. Heroic Mulatto   9 years ago

          You misspelled “whores“.

          1. Crusty Juggler   9 years ago

            I would if I could, too…

            1. Heroic Mulatto   9 years ago

              If I could wear a hot-dog themed shirt, I would.

              1. Frank Frankelson   9 years ago

                Well, here is a potential solution. Provided you don’t want to be taken seriously.

                1. Heroic Mulatto   9 years ago

                  *squints at forum name*

                  I’m not sure I trust someone who is obviously the scion of Big Hot Dog.

      2. Citizen X   9 years ago

        When Crusty says he is “on” a thing, he does not mean what you want “on” to mean, ENB.

        1. Crusty Juggler   9 years ago

          X, for the last time I am hopping on your thing. Stop asking.

    2. Krabappel   9 years ago

      Well, we like to put on a sombrero, eat tacos and drink fishbowl margaritas at least.

  5. lafe.long   9 years ago

    one of our most important goals is to make people aware that their intuition of how things should be is actually rooted in libertarian principles.

    It’s as simple as that, really.

    Penchant for mexican ass sex notwithstanding.

  6. Irish ?s ESB   9 years ago

    ” puts him at odds with the Mexican Libertarian Movement, which seeks “to spontaneously bring about anarchism” and focuses efforts outside the electoral process, he said. ”

    It’s good to see the vaunted libertarian tendency to be realistic about what’s achievable has spread to Mexico.

  7. Zeb   9 years ago

    But I’ve been told repeatedly that Mexicans and Central Americans are born socialists and that their cultures are incompatible with libertarianism and free markets. How can this be?

    1. SugarFree   9 years ago

      Shh. Remembering things people say only makes them angry.

    2. Pat (PM)   9 years ago

      Well now that there is one guy in Mexico speaking for an unofficial, unrecognized political party with no electoral successes, clearly that was incorrect.

  8. Old Man With Candy   9 years ago

    Jesus, we’ve even outsourced libertarianism.

    1. Heroic Mulatto   9 years ago

      Since 1971…

  9. Cdr Lytton   9 years ago

    What’s their version of Mexican ass pot?

    1. Warty   9 years ago

      Salvadore?os, la coca?na, y sonando

  10. Anomalous   9 years ago

    In Mexico, Hayek tends to be associated with Salma, not Friedrich.

    1. Libertarian   9 years ago

      And the U.S. is any different? We might as well abolish the border.

    2. Libertarian   9 years ago

      Never forget:
      https://www.pinterest.com/pin/553661347918781015/

      1. Marty Comanche   9 years ago

        My opinion of MRAs just went from “meh” to “wtf”. How did so many people simultaneously come to the same idiotic conclusion that this comment was a dig at males and not at the human species?

  11. Libertarian   9 years ago

    “There is little time devoted in schools to studying libertarian thinkers, philosophers, or economists.”

    Ha! As an American student, I was absolutely DRENCHED in libertarian philosophy in the public schools. There was barely time to cover any other subject.

  12. ant1sthenes   9 years ago

    A burgeoning libertarian movement is making its way across Latin America and Mexico is no exception, according to the PanAm Post, which recently interviewed Mexican Libertarian Party spokesman Francisco Javier Combaluzier. Although the party has not yet gained official recognition, said Combaluzier, “many citizens”?especially those in the younger generations?are getting involved nonetheless.

    Doing the jobs Americans won’t do.

  13. Old.Mexican   9 years ago

    You could’ve asked me. I am a member and one of the administrators of the Facebook page for the PLM.

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