Dave Smith: What Is a Libertarian?
Dave Smith joins Zach Weissmueller and Liz Wolfe for the first episode of Just Asking Questions.

In this inaugural episode of Just Asking Questions, podcaster Dave Smith joins the show to tackle a fundamental question: "What is a libertarian?"
Smith spearheaded the Mises Caucus takeover of the Libertarian Party (L.P.), telling Reason's Nick Gillespie at the party convention in 2022 that the new L.P. needs "a game changer," someone capable of "re-sparking the Ron Paul Revolution" in the lead-up to the 2024 election.
In this episode, Smith discusses what has transpired in the Libertarian Party since the convention, his past and present disagreements with Reason-style libertarians, whether politicians are incompetent, evil, or both, and his greatest libertarian "white pill" for the future.
Watch the full conversation on Reason's YouTube channel or on the Just Asking Questions podcast feed on Apple, Spotify, or your preferred podcatcher.
Watch the full video here and find a condensed transcript below.
Liz Wolfe: So for our first question: What is a libertarian? What beliefs are disqualifying for libertarians to hold today?
Dave Smith: To me, libertarianism is the belief in self-ownership, private property rights, and the non-aggression principle. I think that's the best philosophically sound definition of it that isn't circular. It's not just a definition like someone who believes in freedom or maximum freedom or something like that. So a libertarian would be someone to me who believes in that. And I would argue that almost everyone who calls themselves a libertarian, whether they would agree with my definition or not, whenever they're arguing for a libertarian position, it's completely consistent with all of that.
Now, what beliefs are disqualifying to you is tough to quibble about, because, I don't know. Gary Johnson wanted to legalize pot, but not any other drugs or not any harder drugs. I'm not going to say he's not a libertarian, but I would say he's not a libertarian on heroin, if that makes sense. That just completely contradicts what libertarians believe. So I don't know exactly.
Although I will say there are certain things, to me, like war and peace is the biggest issue. And people who support wars, I really do not consider them libertarians. I just think that if you are for freedom and against the government, there is no worse government policy in the world than war. There's not even a close second. And that tends to violate more freedom than any other policy.
Wolfe: Where do you encounter pro-war libertarians?
Smith: If you want to listen to Ted Carpenter, who just left Cato, he gave like a 45-minute speech on how much there is at some of these libertarian organizations. I just had a debate with Austin Petersen, who was an L.P. candidate for president years ago. I mean, I think they're out there. Certainly, during the Ukraine war, there were a lot of people who called themselves libertarian who were very quick to say you are a Putin propagandist for bringing up the fact that us giving a blank check to this war has done nothing but kill hundreds of thousands of people. So they exist.
Zach Weissmueller: But there can be wars that libertarians would support, right?
Smith: Yeah. I think the American Revolutionary War would be legit, yes. If you're invaded by an army, you have a right to violently try to get them out. But not too many of those.
Weissmueller: That's where it starts. You put the non-aggression principle at the center of libertarianism, and that's where it starts to get a little murky for me because I think that there would be legitimate wars of self-defense. But how would you square that with the non-aggression principle?
Smith: If there's an invading army, I think that, by definition, they are the aggressors. I think it's reasonable. Am I going to split hairs down to the point that like this other soldier in that uniform hasn't fired a shot yet, so is he fair game? I would say, yes. You rolled in with an invading gang and you've given up your rights.
Weissmueller: With the Ukraine-Russia war, for instance, the libertarian-type people who were siding with Ukraine in that war saw Ukraine as repelling an invader. I presume your objection to that is more so about America's involvement, not necessarily the Ukrainians?
Smith: To be clear, I think that Ukrainians have a right to self-defense and they have a right to stay and fight for their territory if that's what they wish to do. But there's a lot more to that picture.
My problem is American involvement and NATO's involvement going way back for decades. This intentional policy of trying to needle the Russians over and over again and then finally being surprised when it resulted like this.
Ukrainians have a right to defend themselves. If someone pulls a gun on you and asks for your wallet, you have a right to fistfight that guy. It's not necessarily a good idea. And so that's more been my thing with Ukraine. You're fighting a fight you can't possibly win. This was blasphemy for me to say for the last couple of years, but now everybody has come around to acknowledge that even with the blank check from America over these two years, they just have no shot of winning. So now we're right back to negotiating time. And yeah, I'd be against Americans being forced to fund a war which both armies are being forced to fight because these are two conscripted armies, after all. So there's nothing libertarian about that.
Weissmueller: Where it starts to get complicated for me is when you're talking about the role of America's military. You and I share a libertarian genesis. I became a libertarian a few years before Ron Paul made his run. But Ron Paul's 2008 run was certainly energizing for me. However, there are times when it seems as if some libertarians automatically choose the side that America is not funding like in the case of Ukraine. However, there is a self-interest for America's defense to make it costly to Russia. Is there not something to that?
Smith: That is the thinking in D.C., at least for the most part. Putting some type of penalty on Russia for invading is in America's interests. Let's just be really brutally honest, the cost of that is hundreds of thousands of Ukrainian lives. If that's a cost you're comfortable paying, fine, but maybe take that Ukraine flag out of your Twitter bio because you're really the most anti-Ukraine person.
But then again, maybe it would have been in America's best interest if democracy had swept the region in the Middle East. And then they were all like Jeffersonian Republicans or something like that. But that plan doesn't seem to be working out too well. I think that the U.S. dollar as the reserve standard of the world is probably in more jeopardy right now than at any point in my lifetime. This has driven Russia and China to be much closer allies. You've seen almost a real crack to the unipolar world, where it's not even clear that we really are in a unipolar world anymore.
My perspective on the Russia thing is that obviously that Vladimir Putin is wrong to invade and the war has been horrific. I do think that not living in a libertarian universe, living in the real world, and trying to have some type of reasonable modern expectations for what governments are going to do, is the idea that Vladimir Putin said for years, "You cannot expand your military alliance to Ukraine, that is off the table. That is my red line." And they knew this. I mean, there's that great memo. If you've never read it, "nyet means nyet", where the current CIA director privately writes to Condoleezza Rice and is like, listen, this is for real. This is their red line. And there is just no way America would tolerate that. I mean, can you imagine if Russia was like, "We're bringing Mexico into our military alliance?" What do you think the reaction from Washington D.C., would be? "Absolutely, you are not." And we would send troops there in a second if that was the plan.
Just before the war broke out Vice President Kamala Harris was over there saying we're still bringing NATO in and it's still the plan. There is no powerful country that would have reacted differently. That doesn't mean it's good or it's right, but my takeaway from that is like, why would we be so stupid as to keep doing this for no benefit other than, like, world domination?
Weissmueller: Look at what just happened in Israel, what did the U.S. do? The U.S. sent one of our largest aircraft carriers to the Mediterranean to prevent all these other players from getting involved. The idea is to stop this from escalating into a regional war. That would seem to be in America's self-interest, to stop that escalation. And it's relatively low cost—we're just going to park this carrier here. Would that fall within your definition of conforming to the non-aggression principle?
Smith: Well, I mean, no, not really. I'm a complete noninterventionist on all this stuff, so I don't support that. It's not the most egregious thing that the American military has ever done on the scale of things to be outraged by. But look, you're looking at one tiny little element of this huge conflict and being like, "Well, look, this one thing here was done, you know, that could prevent a wider war."
The whole thing only exists because the U.S. has been propping up this status quo for 60 years. And the fact that we think we're going to maintain this thing where we say, "We're going to prop up Israel, we're going to make it so that the entire global community, which has been outraged about the treatment of Palestinians since 1967, we'll veto everything at the U.N. We'll ignore all of these global human rights organizations. We're going to prop up dictators in Egypt and Saudi Arabia." And then it blows up. The takeaway to me isn't we do have to sometimes prevent these wars from happening. The truth is that none of this should be America's business. If you're anything that considers yourself a libertarian, or you 70 percent agree with me or whatever, that doesn't come with being the world empire.
There is no such thing as a restrained, constrained constitutional republic that is also the empire of the world. War is the health of the state. War always grows the government for other purposes other than just the war. Civil liberties are lost the most during times of war.
Wolfe: These are themes that we were touching on in a recent stream where we interviewed Russ Roberts, who I think comes at this issue from a very different perspective than you do. But the thing that I wish more libertarians would grapple with is the difference between the aspiration of the role America plays and figuring that out from where we currently are. What is the appropriate approach to get to where we want to be?
I think we can all recognize that the U.S. has been funding Israel and supporting Israel for a very, very long time. And I think many good libertarians would say, "Hey, you know, it's long past time to cut Israel off and allow them to really stand on their own two feet. They have the ability to do that." But realistically, that's not something we can do right now. We can't just fully cut off funding right now and expect there to be no awful ramifications that would stem from that. So the thing that I always struggle with is, how do you get from point A to point B?
Smith: I think I kind of reject the assumption that it would be some type of disaster if we were to cut off aid to Israel right now. It would put enormous pressure on them to negotiate. That's really what they'd have to do. This isn't 1948. Israel isn't in a state of war with all the Arab surrounding nations.
Wolfe: This is the precise argument that many people make for why we should have cut them off from U.S. funding and support before. But if we do that right now, surely that does have ramifications beyond what they would have been had we done that in 2019, right?
Smith: No, I agree it has ramifications, but I'm just saying that like they might be very positive. Israel has been at peace with Egypt since the 1970s. They're at peace with Jordan. They're at peace with Saudi Arabia. They bomb Syria constantly. Syria never responds to them. It's not even like an issue. Iran might funnel some money to Hamas, maybe some to Hezbollah. Israel, if they didn't have the backing of the United States of America, would be heavily incentivized to actually deal with the Palestinians to actually work out a real peace process, not this pretend one, to grant them their independence, and to stop occupying their areas.
Part of the reason Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and now Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu are so willing to be provocative is because they know they have the baddest bully in the world that has their back. And if they didn't, they might be like, "Okay, well, look, we really got to think about this." Maybe we shouldn't just bomb the hell out of Gaza right now because that might actually piss off the world, you know? And so, there's this tremendous moral hazard that we create when we, as the strongest country in the history of the world, are like, "We have your back."
Weissmueller: Israel is making very tough moral choices right now and they're making choices that I don't always agree with. And to have us being perceived to be joined at the hip with every bomb that they're dropping is a very bad situation. So I would like to see us get disentangled. On the other hand, I think that at the moment, they have my moral support. It's not a war crime to root out Hamas to the degree that that's possible.
Smith: I don't think there's reason to believe that Israel is going to really take the gloves off if America stops backing them. I think it would be much more reasonable that they would be more concerned coming from a slightly more vulnerable position. Israel won a war in 1967 and they've been holding these people ever since. And they just don't have a right to do that.
Wolfe: You mean the West Bank. It's worth noting also that the situation in Gaza has changed in the last 16 or 17 years.
Smith: Yes, absolutely. But I'm just saying, they won the war in 1967. They have literally not granted these people their independence since then. If you want to talk about what's happened over the last 15 years or so, they then took on an intentional goal of supporting Hamas specifically so that Palestinians could never get their independence. So they could never get their state.
In their own words, Benjamin Netanyahu and all types of top government-level people said "This is our plan." And for this reason, we are going to support Hamas because no one will ever grant them statehood as long as Hamas is in control.
Wolfe: If you are making a case that the Israeli government errors and fucks up in a million ways, I totally agree with that.
Smith: I'm coming at it from the point of view of being like, "Oh, well, listen, I do kind of root for them and they do have the moral right to do this." But we're talking about the guys who had an intentional policy of propping up this terrorist organization to use them so that they could never grant the Palestinian people who, just like the Israelis, are separate from their government, so that they could never grant those people their own independence and autonomy. And then it blew up in their face.
If you look at the numbers, they've dropped more bombs than we did in a year in Afghanistan, in Gaza over a few weeks. And so, no, I don't look at that situation and go like, "Oh, well, they do have the moral right to root these people out." The people who did October 7 all deserved to die.
But I'm sorry, when your plan was to prop up a terrorist organization so that the people in Palestine never get their autonomy, and then you use that as an excuse to then just start slaughtering them.
Wolfe: I do want to stifle some of my greatest Zionist shill thoughts and move us back in the direction of actually what libertarians should aspire to be. I think we have established that libertarians aren't generally war hawks and we are not generally Hamas shills or even Zionists. Zach, how do you look at this question of what is a libertarian defining yourself totally independent of Dave's or perhaps in response to it?
Weissmueller: There's a lot of overlap. Unsurprisingly, I see libertarians as extreme skeptics of state power. And the reason for that is that we are against violent monopolies and for voluntary association to the degree that it's possible. And that is because of self-ownership. We believe in the idea of self-ownership, self-authorship, you control your own destiny, and you write your own story.
The way I like to think of it is this phrase: "right to try," like you should have the right to challenge monopolies. And that is something I think libertarians across the board recognize. The state is a monopoly on violence and they use that monopoly to create other monopolies. We've got Elizabeth Warren out there always talking about monopolies. I think she was just tweeting about a sandwich shop monopoly that she's going to break up. But the real monopolies are created by governments.
I think where the differences come in is that we have different reasons for thinking that monopolies are bad. But my reason for thinking monopolies are bad is because I believe that experimentation and competition create progress and prosperity.
Wolfe: I agree. And my definition is perhaps even simpler. Libertarians don't look to the government to fix what ails us. I think libertarians ought to have and generally do have a high degree of comfort with voluntary action existing in civil society outside from government. Libertarians, I think, frequently gravitate toward voice, but also I love the strain of libertarians that gravitate toward exit, trying to exist outside of government institutions.
I look at people living off the grid and people choosing to homeschool. There are so many ways that people can just kind of prove out the idea that we actually don't need the government to take care of us in a gazillion ways. We sometimes prosper far, far, far outside of the purview of the state. And in fact, people can be so much freer to live better lives that way.
Obviously, the non-aggression principle is pretty core to all of this. But I think libertarians just positionally tend to be people who take incentives seriously and second-order impacts consequently unintended consequences. And I really appreciate how libertarians are so frequently asking this question of government policies. Well, what are the alternatives or what are bad incentives that could possibly be created by this? I love how libertarians focus on tradeoffs, and it drives me absolutely insane that so much of the left and the right seem to never entertain the possibility that a government policy could actually lead to awful unintended consequences.
Smith: I pretty much agree with what you guys are saying. The definition I give is the core of the philosophical belief. But I agree with everything both of you guys said. And I just think that the fundamental libertarian insight is that what the government is, as you said, a monopoly on violence. I don't even know if that's the perfect way to say it.
They have a monopoly on the legal initiation of violence. They can do it legally. To me, it's like, if you believe in morality at all, which almost everybody does, and there are some people who just reject it entirely, but almost everyone in the political realm agrees. If you listen to Bernie Sanders, he'll say it's immoral that there is this income inequality.
But if you believe there is such a thing as right and wrong, then I would say inherently morality has to transcend what organizations we create. In other words, if you think murder is wrong, and you were on a deserted island and there's no government and there's no rules and someone murdered somebody, that would be just as morally wrong there as it is here. There just doesn't happen to be a legal system or police or whatever. But the morality has to be the same. Otherwise, we're not really talking about morality.
If any other group of people did what the government does, we wouldn't know what to call it right away. You would just be like, "Oh, this is the Mafia or this is a criminal" like taxation is theft, or you're just forcing someone to give you their money. You know, wars are mass murder campaigns. If anybody else, any other group of people decided like, we deem ourselves the regulators and we're going to go around and start regulating these businesses, you'd be like, "Oh, no, you're a gang." Like you're a criminal organization. And so if you believe in morality, I think it has to be the same whether the government does it or not. And that voting doesn't somehow change the moral characteristics of what a group of people do.
Weissmueller: We don't know if the absence of this legitimate monopoly on violence is a stable situation, like it's something that is yet to be seen. I'm open to the possibility that everything could be privatized one day or something. That's why I favor this definition where it's a little bit more experimental and you're saying, let's try to not have the state do this thing that we're all used to the state doing.
Smith: Fair enough. And I'm not even like, I don't want to do a whole anarchy versus minarchy thing because, in today's day and age, it seems so crazy because we're so far from both. So then it's like you're completely against monopolies and you recognize that monopolies just lead to these terrible results. Why is it just writing laws and courts and police and military or things that have to be run by a monopoly? If we're saying that monopolies, especially violent monopolies, are really bad at producing things, then why would it be that they are really bad at producing things in every other field, but the most important things must be run in the worst way to produce things? Otherwise, we'd all be living in a dystopia.
Wolfe: I like what you're saying and you surely will not find this to be satisfactory or something particularly earth-shattering, but I do believe in a little bit of the unique power of the U.S. Constitution and some of the structures outlined in it. I think many a liberal who did their Trump hysteria op-ed piece and acted like American democracy was horribly imperiled during the Trump years, don't place very much faith in our Constitution and don't place very much faith in our court systems or in federalism or in the abilities of this very complex system of checks and balances.
And I think we're libertarians, right? There are lots of things that we could sit here and point to and say, well, surely the Constitution has failed us and X, Y, and Z ways. However, with that massive caveat, I do think constitutional limits have done a pretty good job of ensuring some of these state institutions have actually done a decent, but imperfect job of serving their intended function.
Smith: I'm not saying that there are examples here where some unconstitutional policy has been struck down. But if you want to zoom out and just look at how good the Constitution has done at limiting government, I mean, we're the biggest government in the history of the world, by far. The biggest organization in the history of the world is the U.S. federal government by any metric.
Weissmueller: Just saying that it's the biggest government in history doesn't really capture the fact that this is not the most tyrannical government in history.
Smith: I would bet we have more federal employees in D.C. than China has. I don't know for sure. But look, in terms of how much money it spends and how many bases it has abroad. And so if you're going to judge America, you can't just judge America based on, like, "Hey, it's kind of nice to live in Brooklyn." You have to judge it on Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, Libya, Somalia, and Yemen. We have killed millions of innocent people just in the last 20 years. I'm not even going to go back to Vietnam.
Weissmueller: This is foreign policy where we have a lot of agreement. America is not living under tyranny by historical standards. America has a flawed foreign policy, to say the least. That does not justify throwing out all of the constitutional protections, all the pro-liberty aspects of the U.S. government, and saying we're going to throw the baby out with the bathwater. That is where I think we butt heads a little with your camp.
Smith: The goal should be a thousand Liechtensteins, you know? There are positive qualities that different countries have.
Weissmueller: Let me pick up on the Liechtenstein point because this is essentially the strategy of the Mises Caucus that took over the Libertarian Party. Nick Gillespie interviewed you in Reno during the Mises Caucus takeover of the Libertarian Party in May 2022. He asked you what you want to see the L.P. doing in the years leading up to the 2024 election, which are now rapidly approaching, and this is what you said: "If we're ever going to get to a free society, we're going to need a lot more people who desire a free society. And what we need here is a game changer, unlike, say, Bill Weld." So do you think that the new Libertarian Party is poised to deliver a game changer?
Smith: Well, I hope so. That's what I try to do, right? I'm always trying to do that. I think the Mises Caucus taking over the Libertarian Party was necessary for there to be a chance for the Libertarian Party to do that. We're still fighting a very uphill battle. Anybody who believes in liberty is fighting an uphill battle.
You could say that big donors have walked away from the Libertarian Party since they came in. The truth is that there was basically a civil war within the Libertarian Party. And no matter what happened in Reno, believe me, if we had lost in Reno, we represented like 80 percent of the party. I mean, tons of people would have walked away from the party.
The truth is that when lockdowns came, the old Libertarian Party basically rolled over and took it and didn't want to say anything. And in fact, the only comments they would make would be like, "Well, we do think you should stay home." If they're not even going to try to stand up for liberty, then I don't care if some big donors will support you and are alienated by us.
And again, the Jo Jorgensen campaign. I mean, this is like a total embarrassment. Jo Jorgensen would go to give speeches where a crowd full of people in masks were forced to be socially distanced in a park where a father had been arrested a week earlier for having a catch with his son. And talk about the drug war or how socialism is bad or something like that, and not even want to touch the moment that she was living in. So in terms of like, can the Libertarian Party spark like the next Ron Paul movement? Well, no, not if it's doing that. It has no chance.
Wolfe: When I look at Angela McArdle and Michael Heise and the Mises Caucus takeover and Jeremy Kauffman, I don't really see champions for the things that I value.
Smith: So first of all, I hate the Twitter edge-lording and posting that stuff. I just hate it. I hate all of that. I've been on record about this for years.
Now, there's one state affiliate in New Hampshire where that is their entire thing. And they've basically been at war with the Mises Caucus. But there's also been on the other side, non-Mises controlled state affiliates that do like a ton of this just engagement farming, shock-value stuff. And I just don't like it. I just don't like any of that. What got people excited about libertarianism to me was Ron Paul giving history lessons and this stuff is just lame.
Weissmueller: There was this awful messaging that existed before, this very out-of-touch messaging, during one of the most insane years in modern history. And so this new leadership came in. They came in pretty hot. And now they've dialed it back a little bit.
I looked into some of the numbers coming into this, some of these were compiled by the Mises Caucus' enemies, the Classical Liberal Caucus. What they compiled here is that revenues are down historically when you adjust for inflation and not only big donors, but monthly donors are down. And I looked into the actual reports behind the numbers and it's all accurate except the Libertarian Party did not adjust for inflation, which seems like something you should do.
Smith: Well, what do you mean? Raise prices? So what's your takeaway from that?
Weissmueller: My takeaway is that revenues are down monthly.
Smith: But that's if you have a job where you're making a hundred grand a year and then you just keep your job and someone's looking at that and says, "Dude, your income is way down from there." I mean, yes, that's true. If you're blaming the Federal Reserve, then I'm with you. But if you're blaming the Mises Caucus for that, I don't think that is correct.
Weissmueller: Well, I'll leave it for the audience to judge whether that is good or bad. But what do you think is going on here internally?
Smith: Just to be clear, I have no position in the Libertarian Party. And if you talk to Angela or someone like that, I'm sure she could give you a much better answer than this. I just do stand-up comedy and podcasts about this stuff. But from what I understand, there was this major problem with this software thing. I don't exactly know the details of it. This is something that started before the Mises Caucus took over… A big basic disaster of transferring data. So I think that hurt them a little bit.
But regardless of any of that, I think that the state of the Libertarian Party, no matter what happened at Reno, was going to be rebuilding. There's a lot of people who were very turned off by the Mises Caucus in the Libertarian Party. And there were a lot more people who were willing to go to fight for them and that's why we won.
There are these storms that come in where things are very sensitive to talk about. Like right now it's the Israel-Palestine storm that we're living in where it kind of takes a little bit of courage to talk about these things because you're going to get this backlash, the storms end and then it's like no one cares, like lab leak theory. And for me, libertarians have the most value when, in those storms, we're willing to stand up and say the courageous thing. This is what Harry Browne wrote When Will We Learn? on September 12 is the most amazing thing ever, because the day after 9/11, he had the courage. The only way this Libertarian Party thing is ever going to work and grow is if in those storms we have the courage to say things.
Wolfe: If you actually put any of these people in power, I'm not sure they would know the first thing about what to do with it or how to actually craft any sort of policy.
If you can't run an extremely small, speaking candidly here, political party and you're not able to keep your supporters in any way, why would anybody trust your competence overall? I mean, who's even running for president this year, Right? It's important not to draw overly broad conclusions about that, but say you wanted to take your argument seriously and you wanted to look for these small green shoots that are poking up through the dirt as to the ways in which the Mises Caucus takeover has been successful, where would you tell us to look?
Smith: There have been local elections that they've won. And that stuff does matter. There are people we've gotten on school boards and on city councils and mayors. And I think a couple of sheriffs.
The Mises Caucus has launched this project, Decentralized Revolution, which I think is a really great template for how the Libertarian Party should run. And it's very different from the way it's been before. This is now targeting winnable elections with nullification powers. The idea is building this thing where the national party is kind of messaging and then trying to funnel that into like the local winnable elections with nullification.
I'll take responsibility, in some way, that a lot of my guys on Twitter can fly off the handle and say some wild shit. But the one thing I will say about my guys is they don't compromise on the libertarian stuff and they're not going to be afraid to say the thing that will get you a lot of backlash when it really matters.
Wolfe: I am so in favor of being bold and aggressive and courageous and truth-telling and saying that unpopular thing at an important time. I felt very riled up in the COVID days. I'm in favor of all of that. I'm in favor of that sort of boldness, but I don't see that in what the L.P. post-takeover is doing. And that's something that gives me pause.
Smith: I think to some degree you might be a little bit guilty of the same thing that I think the New Hampshire guys are guilty of. The truth is that there are 50 state affiliates and a whole bunch of them are doing exactly what you're saying you'd like to see done, but you're totally fixated on the one because they're saying this wild shit, even though everybody at the top of the Mises Caucus leadership has totally called them out for it and been like, "Hey, we think this is stupid and unhelpful." So I'm just saying that like there's a ton of those guys, there's a ton of the state party affiliates.
Weissmueller: I think we spent a good chunk of time there talking with the Libertarian Party, but for libertarians, what do you think libertarians should be doing differently to win?
Smith: So I'm a big believer in the Rothbardian populist idea. I think you see this with Javier Milei, right? This is the way it can be done. This is the way to do it—to tap into this kind of populist streak, particularly at a time when the elites have so mismanaged everything and talk to people about how they're being ripped off.
And then the problem with populism always is that it's completely devoid of any type of theory. You know what I mean? Like, that's basically the issue with the New Right in general, there's just no theory there. It's just everything they're against. But libertarians already have that. It's like libertarians have all the theory, but we're missing all of the populism to make it appeal to people.
Ron Paul really is who our blueprint should be. And Ron Paul had a lot of things going against him. He's the greatest living hero in America to me as far as I'm concerned. He wasn't the best public speaker. He wasn't the most charming guy. He was older when he really got very popular. He had a way of connecting ideas and knowing what's going on in the world right now and then connecting it to the average person and how this is screwing you over. So that to me is always like my blueprint.
Libertarians are way too removed, just in theory, and that's not what anyone except us cares about. To me that was the most impressive thing about Ron Paul was that this guy was a country doctor who just knew more.
Weissmueller: Looking at the motivations of why government actors are doing what they're doing, I think that saying that they're all a bunch of goofballs is not the right way. But also saying that people in government are particularly nefarious or evil isn't helpful. I subscribe to just basic public choice theory where they're driven by the same incentives that the rest of us are.
Smith: But to your point about the same incentives that drive all of us. There's some truth to that. But that's almost like if there's some young man out there who's incentivized to get laid so he tries to charm a girl and take her out on a date. And then there's another 25-year-old who rapes a girl. They may have had the same incentives to some degree, but those are not the same type of people.
By the way, did you ever hear Hillary Clinton on tape laughing about getting a child rapist off when she knew he was guilty? Laughing about it like she just thinks it's hilarious. These people at the top level of government are horrifically evil people who will knowingly put in place a policy where innocent people will die, they'll lie through their teeth to sell the policy, and their buddies will all get rich off of it. The top levels of our government are permeated with violent sociopaths who are very comfortable doing very evil things.
This is true in media too. That woman from ABC who was caught on the hot mic talking about how she broke the Jeffrey Epstein story, but they pulled it from her. One of the crazy things about that hot mic is that she was upset about not being able to break the story. If you listen to her, it's not what you think any normal person should be upset about.
Wolfe: A hefty portion of the media class is obsessed with their own bloated and frequently wrong sense of moral superiority, as well as this just astonishing self-importance that God made them journalists. And they're God's gift to man.
Smith: Think about how evil that is. She didn't even quit. You didn't quit and go break this story anyway. You just stayed there. What? Because of the paychecks. Good. So you're telling me you had a story about a child rapist ring with the most powerful people in the country implicated in this story? I'm not saying she goes home and kicks her dog in the face every day, but I'm saying what she is doing in her professional life is something morally repugnant. And that's how I feel about the highest levels of government and media. That there's just this mass compliance now. I'm not trying to get all Alex Jones on you here. And I don't like to jump down to conspiracies that I can't prove. But it is totally reasonable to look at something like the Epstein thing, to look at Bohemian Grove, to look at these things and go, yeah, there's something going on here that's pretty weird.
Weissmueller: What I'm saying is it's structural. Hayek even had an essay about why the worst get to the top. And it's because the incentives of power do tend to draw certain personalities. So you might even be right that there's a disproportionate amount of sociopaths or psychopaths in government, just like there are in corporate America.
Smith: Yeah, that's why there's so many pedophiles who are baseball coaches or little league coaches. That's why there's so many abusive people who are cops because these positions draw in those types of people. Right? That's part of the natural cycle of it.
Weissmueller: But the reality is that it's the power structure itself.
Smith: But both can be true at the same time, right? I think both of those things are true. I think, yes, power corrupts. The mix of democracy and big government draws out the most dumbed-down slogan to play to the most uninformed voter. This is why Donald Trump did so well, because Donald Trump is like, "I'll do you one better. I'll talk like a kindergartner." And but really, it's not as if any of the others are much better than that.
Look, by definition, politics is going to attract people who want to rule over other people. That's what the magnet is there. The problem is this mix of big government and democracy, which are very related. So you have to appeal to a population who, by definition, aren't going to know much about politics, because that's true about everything. Only a small percentage of people have expertise in any field. Right? So then you have that. And then because the government is so big there is so much power being wielded that it's inevitably completely corrupted. I mean, what is our federal government going to spend this year over $6 trillion, isn't it? If you're spending $6 trillion, somebody is going to be actively lobbying to get that power.
Weissmueller: This right-wing that you mentioned does exist, the natcons [national conservatism], or whatever we want to call them, they just want to install their version of a virtuous leader to impose their vision of the world. We have these corrupt degenerates running the government and we need, good, virtuous Caesars running the government. I worry sometimes about that populist strategy. This is a pattern you see throughout history; the socialists wreck things and then the right-wing, the fascists, or whatever form they take, come in and impose right-wing dictatorship or whatever.
Smith: I basically think you're almost exactly right. That tends to be like this pattern that's played out over time. You could see this where there'd be these awful right-wing movements as a response to communism like all throughout the world in the 20th century. I think, almost to me, that's why you need this libertarian populism even more, because it's one of the most important components to put out this right-wing fire.
You got to try to harness that populist energy, but in an explicitly libertarian way. The only answer here, and this is the great libertarian insight, because fundamentally, we're kind of like a compromise that's almost like a truce. Like you don't get to impose your view on them and they don't get to impose their view on you. But you both get to do what you want to do, right?
Weissmueller: Do you think that most people at their core are more libertarian or authoritarian?
Smith: I don't really know the answer to that. And I don't spend too much time thinking about that. What I know is that I was totally compelled when these ideas were introduced to me and I know that we're not at our ceiling. You know what I mean? Everywhere I go, and I travel a lot, every single city I'm in, every single town, every single show, somebody comes up to me and goes, "You're the reason I'm a libertarian. You introduced me to this, and then I found this and then I found this and then it all made sense."
I want to introduce this line of thinking to as many people as I can. But I never, in my mind, think we need to get 51 percent of the population to be libertarians because then we can win some elections. Because the truth is that like, nations are never moved by 51 percent of the population. Let's say there's a few million. Could we get that up to 20 million?
The truth is, if you talk to the average person on the street, you just go stop a random person right here and you ask "What do you think of Ron Paul?" Most of them won't know what you're talking about. At best, they think you're talking about Rand Paul, and they definitely would not be able to really articulate and explain to you what the libertarian position is. There's still so many people who have never come in contact with a lot of these ideas. So my thing is like let me try to say it in the most compelling way on the biggest platforms that I can get on and try to get as many new people on board as we can.
Wolfe: The related question that I have for all of us, not just Dave, is what is your libertarian white pill? What's the thing that makes you the most optimistic about where things are headed?
Smith: Let me give the Gene Epstein case for radical optimism, which I always love. This just speaks to my soul. But what he said was, "If you were sitting around in 1845 and you said to your buddy, I think in 20 years slavery is going to be abolished. They'd be like, you're out of your mind. The slave trade is at the height right now, like slavery is right. It's just been an institution for all of human history." In what world could you imagine that in the next 20 years, across the West and in the United States of America, there's just not going to be slavery anymore? But that crazy guy would have been right.
There are moments like that where things that were seen as just inevitable institutions are just gone and they don't come back. Look in the year 2002 and I remember the whole year of war propaganda leading up to the war in Iraq. And like, that was just it. It didn't matter if you got your news from Fox News or The New York Times or MSNBC or anything, it was just unanimous. They sold the story and there was just no one else. There were other people, but they didn't have a platform. But now it's like you have Joe Rogan and Tucker Carlson and then just like a million different shows that have their shows that we don't even know about with half a million followers. There's probably 50 shows that we all don't know about with half a million people watching that show all the time. And so much of that, those dissident voices are getting out there now. I think for the first time maybe in human history, the monopoly of governments over the receiving of information has been broken. I think they're freaking out about that. I see this as an enormous white pill. I have kids. There's no option for me to be a pessimist.
This interview has been condensed and edited for style and clarity.
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“that’s more been my thing with Ukraine. You’re fighting a fight you can’t possibly win.” Whether that is blasphemy or not, it’s also wrong! Many people thought the American Revolution was a war the colonists could not win, and we very nearly lost it before King George III realized it was too costly to continue. The Ukrainians have ALREADY won by denying the Russians success in conquering the entire territory of the Ukraine and even winning back some of the lost turf. No one on this Earth knows for sure how the war in Ukraine will end, if it ever does, but the limiting factor right now is weapons, not willpower or the Non-Aggression Principle.
I wonder how the Russians expect to win the IED-dodging phase in the Ukraine when the Soviets lost the IED-dodging phase in Afghanistan.
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They don't EXPECT to win! This is a war of grandeur for the new would-be emperor of the new Russian Empire. The only thing worse than losing is admitting that he's not winning.
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Fucking LOL!
The Ukrainians have ALREADY won… No one on this Earth knows for sure how the war in Ukraine will end
OK, Tony. If they've ALREADY won then how can 'no one on this Earth know for sure how it will end'?
Russia’s own, plainly stated goal was never to take all of Ukraine and you might not understand where Crimea will sit once this shakes out, but that has more to do with your fantasies than anything regarding reality or libertarianism.
Oh! Well! That's okay then. All those columns bogged down on their way to Kyiv in the first days were just a decoy for the real target of the Russian oligarchs. All of those attacks on Kyiv were just diversions. And of course, you swallow anything "Russia" states plainly hook, line and sinker. So now we know exactly what your position is.
All those columns bogged down on their way to Kyiv in the first days were just a decoy for the real target of the Russian oligarchs.
Yes, literally. And you do realize that "The Russian Army is stalled out on the road to Kyiffffuh! narrative dried up two years ago".
Look, I can't know what is in Putin's head or his Generals' heads, but that's LITERALLY what I would have done. Send thousands of Russians towards Kyiffffuh, scare the crap out of Ukraine, force them to pull all their major forces back to prepare for a siege of their crown Jewel city, then quietly refocus on Crimea, Donbass, and all the other Russian speaking towns and villages in Eastern Ukraine.
But he's so much more of a strategist than any of those Russian generals, or you, Paul. C'mon. He knows what's going on.
Don’t worry, the secretary of defense has just threatened to send American soldiers there to die, if congress doesn’t approve funding Ukraine.
Millie has already committed treason so why shouldn't they just go fully rogue.
And they've also already lost by having a large part of their male population killed and their infrastructure destroyed. So they can keep control of some territory full of people who don't want to be part of the country.
I believe they just opened combat military service to *checks reports* everyone. Talk about equity.
^ found the fed
You think the idea was to conquer 100% of Ukraine?
Russia has the Donbass and the ethnic Russians, the uninterrupted land bridge to Crimea, and the Black Sea ports.
Ukrainians have ALREADY won by denying the Russians success in conquering the entire territory of the Ukraine and even winning back some of the lost turf.
Whether you know it or not, you're parroting the Victoria Nuland/Anthony Blinken Shrike Neocon version of the war.
The Western globalist narrative has crumbled mightily in just the last few weeks, Zelensky has all but admitted the Spring Offensive has completely failed, and victory is now being "redefined" by same as "We haven't lost the whole country" which was never Putin's stated goal. There is currently rumblings of a coup inside Ukraine with Zelensky and Zaluzhnyi sniping at one another, the Mayor of Kiev making noises about Zelensky's failures as a leader, and apparently Western intriguers trying to work out who the next titular leader of Ukraine will be.
Western press has only just begun to slowly, but steadily hint around the edges of just how bad things are for the Ukraine Army, thus ditching the fist-pumping Trans Unit of Ukraine shit, and now publishing heart-wrenching interviews with no-shit real Ukraine soldiers who talk about how they're barely hanging on with their fingernails.
And remember, this is what western officials referred to as "a good deal-- we could fight the Russians and only expend Ukrainian blood".
You're a thoroughly evil moron.
Get eradicated, tumor.
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Reason-style libertarians are libertines at best and matriculate towards non-elite progressives that also want to skirt the rules they support for others.
What Is a Libertarian?
I can tell you what it's not.
It's not those who've advocated for vaccine and mask mandates. It's not those who continue to push the Steele Dossier even though it has been long discredited. It's not those who think mutilating children is a good idea (that seems to go against the NAP).
Dave Smith called this out in the interview.
Chemjeff hardest hit.
Thank you dearly for posting the transcript.
Plus 1000% - ramped up to 11.
"What Is a Libertarian?"
A miserable little pile of secrets! But enough talk! Have at you!
^This is the only correct answer.
"The whole thing only exists because the U.S. has been propping up this status quo for 60 years."
While this is true, it falls far short of the full truth. There is no possible doubt that US foreign policy has made the world political situation what it is today, for better or worse. Having said that, there is no possible way he - or anyone else for that matter - can know what the world political situation would be like today if we had followed a much more non-interventionist policy. Although I am a pretty strict non-interventionist myself, it is because I BELIEVE that the world would be a better place now, not because I can prove it. I believe that every interventionist step along the way caused bad things to happen at the time that CAN be supported with factual evidence. I believe in the principle involved that that evidence supports. Helping Ukrainians fight a war to repel the Russian aggressors may have caused thousands of deaths, but I believe that some things are worse than death; the vast majority of Ukrainians apparently also feel that way, as did a significant segment of American colonists in 1775.
Helping Ukrainians fight a war to repel the Russian aggressors may have caused thousands of deaths, but I believe that some things are worse than death; the vast majority of Ukrainians apparently also feel that way, as did a significant segment of American colonists in 1775.
British Colonists, Americans, or just Colonists because notably distinct from the Ukraine situation, America as corrupt former province of
RussiaEngland didn't exist in 1775 and, in many ways, really more apt to say a significant segment of Americans felt some things were worth defending to the death in 1860 too.Not that I entirely disagree with the latter group of Americans, just, you know, more apples to apples and not libertarians to WEF money-laundering mouthpieces.
found the deep state employee
Although I am a pretty strict non-interventionist myself
Before one can be a non-interventionist, you have to believe there's something out there to "intervene" in. And once you have something you've identified as a discrete political entity that can be intervened in, then ones __________ without borders concept of the world falls flat.
Infortunadamente for late stage Libertarianism Plus, that violates the Dalmia principle.
I don't know what that has to do with my position; and I'm only vaguely conversant with the Dalmia Principle so I won't try to defend it here. An interventionist is someone who identifies situations they want to intervene in, finds excuses to justify their interventions and then tries to get others to join in with the intervention. In the case of American interventionist foreign policy, making the world safe for democracy, preventing the third world dominoes from falling to socialism, opposing terrorism everywhere around the globe, defeating drugs and protecting our vital national economic interests - i.e. "oil" - justifies covert operations, military attacks and invasions, propping up pro-American dictatorships, drone attacks (on children! oh, well ...) and spending American taxpayer funds. As a non-interventionist I oppose all of those things. All clear now?
Many Trump Cultists here in the Peanut Gallery falsely believe that conservatism and libertarianism are the same. They cite Texas as the "perfect dreamy state" in this country.
But Cato ranks Texas dead last in personal freedom:
https://www.freedominthe50states.org/personal
Conservatism is just as freedom-hating as progressivism is. Now turn your QAnon attacks on me, Trump Cultists.
Pluggo4CP, why do you have a 2 at the end of your name?
You Hastert conservatives project a lot.
Hastert deserves to rot in prison for life, just like everyone else that peddles the materials that you have posted here.
Why so you think you have this dysfunction?
Maybe he IS Hastert.
Speak for yourself. I'm not the one who posted hardcore CP here, got his handle banned and the thread cleansed, and then decided to come back and lie about it.
He really should take the honorable way out and commit suicide.
Pluggo and honor have never even been within 10 miles of each other.
I'm sure he found an 8 year old named Honor once.
Hastert, nor anyone else besides you who posts here, have linked child porn.
Now fuck off, and go commit suicide before you rape another child.
why does anyone feed the troll?
Sadism.
It seems more like masochism to me, but...
It typically shuts the pedophile up. He’ll often post one response about his twinsie Hastert or something about an airport bathroom. Then usually radio silence.
Nothing you QAnon HAstert types can do to shut me up.
Ronald McFondled, did you ask Santa for a new clown suit?
Look around at what's going on in the world around you, asshole. Everywhere we look, from this comments section to Argentina to the Netherlands and beyond, more and more people hate your fucking guts and have just about had enough of you and all the other shitheads like you. Read the fucking room.
Except reply with facts. Often from within the very links you post. After that you stfu for about 24 hours.
All you had to do was not post kiddie porn links like the rest of us, but you couldn't do it.
Would be good if they posted their meteic analysis and not the answer. Texas is most likely predicated on incarceration driven on illegal immigration. But can’t dig into that analysis and Cato hides it is they ignore the secondary issues of illegal immigration. Why the rankings favor the NE which doesn’t see the negative externalities. Basically it is CATOs issue bias more than anything else. They include drugs and such while ignoring regulations or covid policy. The latter have far more restrictions on freedom. That is their bias.
Funny you bring up CATO as they were addressed in the interview. They even tried to argue vaccine mandates as a libertarian position. Lol.
Every state that seriously tried to lock down should be tied for 50th place.
You're exactly the asshole I was talking about above. BTW, the overall freedom on that page shows a completely different picture. Texas is #17 there, well ahead of Illinois (#39), New York (#50), and California (#48).
You lie and you misrepresent while being one of those assholes I was talking about still pushing the Russia shit.
You're the liar. I said "personal freedom" and linked to that page only.
Yours is an example of conservatives who don't give a fuck about personal freedom.
You misrepresented it for your own ends, dip. Cato is using a combination of factors. You deliberately chose the one to make a red state, Texas, look bad.
It’s what he does. No an iota of honesty within him.
He also fucks children.
He is a pedophilic Jimmy Carville with Down Syndrome.
Lizard Wolfe is another. By association Zack will henceforth be suspected of fantasizing about bullying girls for Jesus, Robert Dear and Ceausescu.
Boaf sides! Seriously, it really is boaf sides. People get into a tribal mentality where they think the other sides is always wrong and their own side never wrong. Bullshit. Republicans may not be bad as Democrats in the ways that Democrats are bad, but they are just as bad in other ways. Boaf sides want to rule over other people and they want to expand the size and scope of government to do it. Even boaf sides deep in the heart of Texas.
While I think Dave Smith is a tool, he at least gets it. The problem is not Joseph Robinette Biden, the problem is the government. At all levels. Take Biden out of the government and he's just a slightly creepy old fart.
"The problem is not Joseph Robinette Biden"
Joseph Robinette Biden is definitely part of the problem.
Anarchy has been such a huge success in Russia, Cuba, Korea, China, Nam... And lookit how voters line up to endorse anarchist parties with their ballots outside of the dumpster-fire trainwreck of communo-fascist Argentina! Smith, Hummel, Rottbutt, Tokyo Pink and all other anarco-whackjob infiltrators are what has stopped LP vote share growth since before Ayn Rand spat on girl-bullying mystical prohibitionist Reaganites.
Nobody here lists Texas as a “perfect dreamy state”, especially those of us who live here, fuckwad.
But the idea that we are the worst on personal freedom shows just how far Cato has fallen (it’s because of abortion, isn’t it?)
Hemp twigs, roots and seeds are a felony in Texas, and fugitive slave laws urge male bigots to hunt and kidnap pregnant women who seek to escape ACROSS ANY BORDER.
I want to thank Liz for knowing what a transcript is.
A trans narrative we can all support.
Your reply is not transparent.
Is this a transgression?
transformative either way.
I appreciated the transaction.
I was looking for a gender bender, I saw it as a transmission.
If a mink changes gender, is it a transfur?
But can she define a manuscript?
Can she drive a manual transmission?
At their core, successful risk takers/wealth creators are more libertarian leaning.
Populism is the opposite of libertarianism, Mr. Smith. It’s this idea that I see on the extreme left and, now with Bannon and the right (Breitbart on unions), that the population can just refuse to take risk and is guaranteed a paycheck that puts them into a middle class lifestyle in a middle class neighborhood. Everything is “guaranteed” or a life without risk.
You’re going to run out of risk takers. The far left Jacobins know that you’ll run out of risk takers and the state will run everything. The far right is upset that they work really hard and have a new next door neighbor that gets everything subsidized or free.
whatever 'far right' means, its not that.
Listing Bannon's left wing populist positions as though that represents the far right. Interesting.
"Right" is euphemistic doublespeak for mystical bigot. Televangelists, Radio Priests, Comstockists, Prohibitionists and Mohammedan Sharia Taliban are the same thing in that essential sense. That christianofascists struggle to mask their meaning is evidence they finally realize that sane folks can see through them. "Left" are irrational looters too... just a little less lovestruck by invisible male companions.
Wolfe: I agree. And my definition is perhaps even simpler. Libertarians don't look to the government to fix what ails us.
Poor Chemjeff.
Reason hires reactionary Republican editor.
– Fat Boy
Slim?
The skinny on Fat Boy is that he ain’t slim.
If we would just do what they want, they wouldn’t have to force us.
/also jeff
If you're invaded by an army, you have a right to violently try to get them out...this other soldier in that uniform hasn't fired a shot yet, so is he fair game? I would say, yes. You rolled in with an invading gang and you've given up your rights.
So, he's in favor of military action to secure our southern border and stop the invasion?
Dave Smith still campaigning against Gary Johnson, and he's not even going to be on the ballot. Sheesh.
Gary Johnson did well enough campaigning against Gary Johnson. He doesn't need help from Dave Smith.
It takes a saboteur to try to backstab the one LP candidate who increased our spoiler vote share by some 350%, and whose 4 million votes reshuffled the electoral votes of 13 states. It is thanks to anarco-infiltrators pushing terrorist importation and girl-bullying, Anschluss LP votes that membership and donations ALL plummeted and are plummeting now!
I think that the U.S. dollar as the reserve standard of the world is probably in more jeopardy right now than at any point in my lifetime. This has driven Russia and China to be much closer allies. You've seen almost a real crack to the unipolar world
The first sentence is nonsense. The US dollar is currently 58% of total reserve globally (with an additional 36% from other Western currencies that are only derivative/secondary reserves - they won't ever run structural deficits to provide sufficient currency). That's 94% of total. China only provides 2.5% (Russia/Iran/NorthKorea/etc zero because no one in their right mind would trust them to fulfill their end of a reserve currency 'responsibility'). Yes 94% is less than the 95% of 1995 or the 97% of 1980 (the only time there was a legitimate potential for a change in reserve currency) or the 99% of 1965. But you might not want to hold your breath waiting for <50%.
Otherwise - I appreciate what you're saying about the Rothbard Caucus or the LP. I disagree with where that Rothbardian paleopopulism leads precisely because I've read that old Rothbard strategy stuff (with the benefit of 30 years hindsight). I HOPE you're right - but I won't hold my breath.
Dave Smith: To me, libertarianism is the belief in self-ownership, private property rights, and the non-aggression principle.
If your "libertarianism" in practice consists of "I can take drugs and I don't care whether others have to pay for the consequences" and "defending yourself against a 75 year war of aggression violates the NAP", you fail to live up to these principles.
whether politicians are incompetent, evil, or both
Dave Smith would do well to ask that question about himself.
Yeah. I think the American Revolutionary War would be legit, yes. If you’re invaded by an army, you have a right to violently try to get them out. But not too many of those.
The American Revolutionary War wasn’t based on any “invasion”. The colonies were British territories. The American Revolutionary War started because a vocal minority of colonists felt they had insufficient political representation and were taxed too much. Good luck trying to justify that from a libertarian perspective.
You know who was invaded by an army, and a genocidal army of intolerant ethno-nationalists? Three times? Israel: in 1948, 1967, and 1973. The aftermath of those unprovoked attacks created the refugee crisis in Gaza and the West Bank. Israel is fully within its rights to occupy those territories. It has proposed multiple settlements with its attackers, including transferring Gaza and the West Bank to Egypt/Jordan, all rejected by those attackers. Yet, Dave Smith analyzes that situation as if Israel was the aggressor and had some debt or obligation to fix a problem created by genocidal aggressors trying to erase Israel and its Jewish citizens from the face of the earth.
I can’t tell whether Dave Smith is ignorant or simply evil.
Come on now, living under a monarchy is the opposite of freedom or self determination.
Smith's claim that the American Revolutionary War started because of an "invasion" is wrong. Do we agree on that?
OK, so now you're saying that the Revolutionary War was justified because Americans were living under a monarchy. But that monarchy was much less oppressive and imposed much smaller taxes than the form of government we live under now. Furthermore, the majority of colonists were not interested in revolution.
So, the question is: are you and Smith saying that libertarianism justifies a violent uprising by a minority against our current government? Because that would seem to logically follow if you think the violent uprising against the British government was justified.
The British had the choice to accept the colonies breaking away, they sent soldiers instead.
And why should the British "accept" that? The people who wanted to break away were a minority. There was no referendum and no other legitimacy for their actions. And then why didn't the US accept the Southern States breaking away?
The point is that Smith's views make little sense from a libertarian point of view and show how limited the NAP is as a guide to real-world history or politics. In fact, Smith is starting from statist assumptions and then tries to concoct justifications from the NAP for his preferred policies.
"The people who wanted to break away were a minority."
This is of course, bullshit. There is no evidence that this enduring myth- spread by a marxist historian- is true. Indeed, we know for a fact that by the time of the Declaration, only around 1 in 5 colonists was willing to be counted as a "Loyalist". If there was division in the Colonies, it was not on the question of independence- the majority wanted independence. They had different opinions on how independence could be gained.
But the point is moot. The people elected representatives to the Continental Congress. Those representatives used the power vested in them to try and petition the King for concessions, and when he declined, they declared their Independence.
But that doesn't prevent a bunch of snarky elitists from repeating the myth in their best Ackshewallly! voice.
Christianity is a monarchy, and German National Socialism and Spanish Fascism are its most consistent expressions--leaving aside the Bert Hoover and BushBush disasters.
Smith is a leftist. They now call themselves civil libertarians. Taxes and redistribution or seizing an individual’s assets are not considered theft. Armed theft is not a crime.
There is no crime, only EQUITY.
Okaaayyy. In the sense that Ceausescu the communist dictator of Romania who used the violence of law to ban pregnancy termination and thereby increased the perinatal death rate and orphans in brainwashing camps is "left." Dave Smith wants men with guns to force women to reproduce at gunpoint, like Ron and Randal Paul. Justin turncoat Amash and inifltrators like Tokyo Pink the ousted and reinstated "secretary" of the anti-objectivist Austrian Mises LP. The original LP platform called for repeal of many laws forcing women at gunpoint.
The American Revolution started because slave holders in Virginia wanted to secede from Britain. Just like the US Civil War started because slave holders in Virginia wanted to secede from the USA, but it was no longer considered okay then.
I think he was thinking of the War of 1812, when Britain actually did invade.
Lexington and Concord are in Virginia? Ft. Sumter too?
I think that there would be legitimate wars of self-defense. But how would you square that with the non-aggression principle?
Assuming everyone agrees to agree on what constitutes a reasonable case of self-defense, how would defending yourself violate the non-aggression principle? What needs to be squared here?
What Is a Libertarian?
Based on my reading of reason, I have to believe it's a passive-aggressive communist. While on paper they purport to be opposites, in practice you end up with all the same shit.
That's just most of the writers here.
https://twitter.com/TuckerCarlson/status/1732856685591458056?t=KXp0rERl20Xr6kSEqADkKA&s=19
The Biden administration is openly threatening Americans over Ukraine. In a classified briefing in the House yesterday, defense secretary Lloyd Austin informed members that if they don’t appropriate more money for Zelensky, “we’ll send your uncles, cousins and sons to fight Russia.” Pay the oligarchs or we’ll kill your kids.
If Biden wants to kill any chance at reelection, he'll institute a draft and start a US-Russian war.
"your uncles, cousins and sons"
Sexists. They should send aunts and daughters too.
Of course they are sexist: they are Democrats.
Democrats consider women too weak and too stupid to fight or succeed on their own. According to Democrats, only men can be real women.
Uncles, cousins and sons? What happened to equal rights? What about our aunts and daughters?
Lloyd Austin should go first. Front of the line.
Israel, if they didn't have the backing of the United States of America, would be heavily incentivized to actually deal with the Palestinians to actually work out a real peace process, not this pretend one, to grant them their independence, and to stop occupying their areas.
So, in short, this guy has opinions but very few facts.
Let’s get specific here:
Israel, if they didn’t have the backing of the United States of America, would be heavily incentivized to actually deal with the Palestinians to actually work out a real peace process, not this pretend one, to grant them their independence, and to stop occupying their areas.
Israel has accepted every partition proposed by the UN in the past. Palestinians have rejected every partition. Palestinians consider all of Israel “their areas”. Palestinians want to ethnically cleanse Israel of Jews, just like Muslim Arabs have done throughout the Middle East. “Palestinians” even appropriated the name of Israelis, because Israelis used to call themselves “Palestinians”.
The reason Israel ended up with Gaza and the West Bank is because Egypt and Jordan attacked from there and Israel defended itself. Israel offered those territories to Egypt and Jordan, the countries that attacked them, the countries that wanted to eliminate the Jews from the Middle East, and Egypt and Jordan refused, because they calculated that keeping the Palestinians in misery served their purposes.
Israel is stuck with occupying Gaza and the West Bank because the aggressors in three wars have not stepped up, and have not been required to step up, to pay for their crimes.
There are more Muslims and Arabs in Israel than there are in Gaza. There are more Jews in Israel than have been ethnically cleansed from Muslim nations than there are people in Gaza. There is only one culture that is violently and virulently intolerant, that engages in ethnic cleansing, and that is unwilling to accept any peace settlement: the culture of Muslim Arabs.
Dave Smith is either historically completely ignorant or a deliberately liar about the history of the Israel/Palestinian conflict.
Just an idea. Would the absence of public land eliminate uncertainty about how to treat invaders/trespassers?
Legally, this issue is really not that complicated.
Until the 1948 war and Israel’s acceptance of the UN partition, Jews purchased all the lands they inhabited. The “public land” that was transferred as part of the partition was largely useless desert and swamps; as such, it was held by the Ottoman empire; it became habitable only after Israel's founding.
Arabs on Israel’s territory generally became Israeli citizens. That’s why there are 2 million Muslims in Israel today.
Another several million Israelis are refugees from persecution and ethnic cleaning by Muslim Arab countries, something nobody seems to give a f*ck about.
Israel got stuck with Gaza and the West Bank because Egypt and Jordan attacked from there. Israel occupied them as part of a defensive war; Israel offered the territories back to those nations and they refused because they thought they would benefit politically by keeping Palestinians in misery. In the way we usually handle property after a war, that really means that they are legally part of Israel now and that Israel can expel the non-citizens, just like what happened in the aftermath of WWII to many German areas.
These may not be libertarian property rights, since states are involved, but based on international law, this is pretty straightforward.
“Pro-Palestinian” advocates start with fairy tales as told by Fanon’s “The Wretched of the Earth”, the same fairy tales that people tell about Amerindians.
Maybe Harvard, Penn, and MIT should teach some actual history to their students, who seem to think Israel is a "colonizer" or that retaliating against a terrorist organization who wants you all dead is "genocide."
A.) I think he was talking about our southern border, not Israel, but I could be wrong.
B.) Israel offered the territories back to those nations and they refused because they thought they would benefit politically by keeping Palestinians in misery.
There's a bit more to it than that. There's also the fact that the places that did take Palestinians in mostly later ejected them because they fucked over their host countries, when said host countries weren't sufficiently enthusiastic about going out and picking another fight with Israel to "get them their land back".
Palestinians murdered a king of Jordan. Palestinians in Kuwait cheered the Iraqi invasion because Saddam was anti-Israel.
They're really just absolute fucking garbage.
No.
https://twitter.com/njhochman/status/1732891864368582729?t=FuWMsNs0K3atBOPbC0cFmw&s=19
Van Jones, February 2021: "We want the white majority to go from being a majority to being a minority — and like it."
This is the celebration parallax in action. "That's not happening and it's good that it is."
[Link]
A libertarian is someone who doesn't think it's okay when the government is spending money on something he supports, or banning something he doesn't like.
The problem regarding Ukraine is that Russia does not want to negotiate. They want to re-create the USSR and then some. We've seen what happens to Ukraine when Russian occupied territories. It's basically genocide - murder, rape, torture, destruction of Ukrainian cultural identity (burning books).
And no, Ukraine and Zelenskyy do not have the support of the US. He has to beg for our cast offs, despite our guaranteeing Ukraine's security when they gave up their nuclear weapons.
As soon as Russia is appeased, it will be back for more. And it won't stop with Ukraine or Moldova or Georgia. Eventually it will be a NATO country, like Poland. Poland has no illusions about US support, they are arming themselves to the teeth because they know it's coming.
Weakness vs Russia has also spawned new conflicts all over the world. Several coups in Africa. Venezuela might invade Guyana.
To quote a fairly libertarian author, force is the last refuge of the incompetent, because only the incompetent wait to the last moment to use force.
None of what you just wrote is accurate in the slightest
They want to re-create the USSR and then some.
Yes, in the sense that Russia wants a secure buffer against NATO. The root cause here is NATO's eastward expansion, in violation of the West's promises and against Putin's warnings for several decades.
And no, Ukraine and Zelenskyy do not have the support of the US.
That is correct: the US and Europe are viewing Ukraine as a way of weakening Russia and maybe getting control of Ukraine's fossil fuels.
As soon as Russia is appeased, it will be back for more. And it won’t stop with Ukraine or Moldova or Georgia. Eventually it will be a NATO country, like Poland.
That is correct: Russia will continue until there is a secure buffer between it and the West again. That's because NATO has turned out to be not a trustworthy partner for negotiations.
Now, what do you suggest we do about it? Start WWIII with Russia? Or give them the security guarantees they want?
With “libertarians” like this in charge of the LP, liberty in America is doomed. Blaming the victims: Netanyahu is at fault for Hamas terrorist attacks; and Zelenskiy is at fault for Russia’s invasion; because they PROVOKED them because they knew they didn’t have to accommodate terrorists and imperialists because NATO and the US would protect them from the consequences of their misbehavior! Wow … just wow …
Smith didn’t blame Ukraine, he blamed the US and NATO for deliberately provoking Russia. He also said that Ukraine was of course within their rights to fight back against the aggressor, but the US has no business putting our nose in the conflict.
Did we even read the same transcript?
Part of the reason Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and now Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu are so willing to be provocative is because they know they have the baddest bully in the world that has their back. And if they didn’t, they might be like, “Okay, well, look, we really got to think about this.”
Two examples of this being true in the last two days. One might think that Israel fighting what is being painted as an existential threat would focus Israeli attention on Hamas/Gaza and not try to be ipso facto provocative.
Instead Yoav Gallant (the defense minister) is now in the north of Israel telling folks that it is critical that Israel ‘move Hezbollah north’ immediately. IOW start a second front and bring Iran into the war.
And the two extremist assclowns in Netanyahu’s coalition just marched into the Al Aqsa mosque area (a provocative act that itself tends to cause intifadas when Ariel Sharon did it) advocating that administration over the Moslem/Xian religious buildings be transferred to Israel. IOW – let’s tear down everything non-Jewish and build a Third Temple and start a war with the entire Muslim world.
It’s quite clear that some people have every intention of making sure that ‘covering Israel’s back’ means a fuckload more than anyone is willing to tell Americans.
The sad part is that nonintervention always tends to be conflated with 'I don't give a damn about anything and therefore there's no need to even know what's happening'. So that when the shit hits the fan, that is precisely the group that knows nothing about how/why anything happens and therefore has no influence on nonintervention as a post-facto strategy.
Two examples of this being true in the last two days. One might think that Israel fighting what is being painted as an existential threat would focus Israeli attention on Hamas/Gaza and not try to be ipso facto provocative.
Israel isn’t “trying to be ‘ipso facto’ provocative”; that’s just something Smith made up.
Instead Yoav Gallant (the defense minister) is now in the north of Israel telling folks that it is critical that Israel ‘move Hezbollah north’ immediately. IOW start a second front and bring Iran into the war.
The US and France are pressuring Lebanon to “move Hezbollah north” so that there isn’t a second front in this war.
And the two extremist assclowns in Netanyahu’s coalition just marched into the Al Aqsa mosque area (a provocative act that itself tends to cause intifadas when Ariel Sharon did it) advocating that administration over the Moslem/Xian religious buildings be transferred to Israel. IOW – let’s tear down everything non-Jewish and build a Third Temple and start a war with the entire Muslim world.
It’s quite amazing that assclowns like you wring your hands over “appeasing Putin”, but you seem quite happy to appease Islamic extremists who actually have killed large numbers of Americans and really are committing ethnic cleaning, expansion, and subjugation of non-Muslims, whose declared goal is worldwide expansion and domination, who have large footholds in both the US and Europe already.
Gaza, Jerusalem, and the West Bank are territories that Israel occupied during a defensive war aimed at ethnically cleansing the Middle East of non-Muslims. Israel offered those territories back to the losers of those wars and they refused to take it back. By all rights, Israel can do whatever it wants with those territories now and send the refugees back to Egypt and Jordan for them to deal with. That may well be the only sensible resolution of this conflict.
Israel is fully within its rights to do with the Temple Mount whatever it wants to. Whether it is strategically a good idea to do so is a separate question, but an argument can be made that it should be destroyed just like Nazi monuments were destroyed and prominent Nazis were denied burial sites so that they don't become sites of pilgrimage for violent extremists.
It’s quite clear that some people have every intention of making sure that ‘covering Israel’s back’ means a fuckload more than anyone is willing to tell Americans.
I think conservatives are quite clear that radical Islam is our arch enemy; that most Islamic nations are sworn to destroy the West, Western societies, and Western liberalism. That is, they are quite clear that we have a billion plus arch-enemies around the world, people who view us the same way the Nazis viewed non-Aryans and who have the same kind of totalitarian, collectivist ideology. I think that’s pretty clear, isn’t it?
The problem is that you aren’t listening.
Dave Smith is a Jewish guy who believes that Israel kind of deserved its recent terrorist attack that killed the most Jews since the holocaust, at least according to his remarks on his podcast. I agree with him that the US shouldn't intervene in any way, and he's right about most other issues, and he's a funny comedian, but I'm done with this asshole.
"I chafe every single time I get a paper book bag in the grocery store versus a fucking plastic bag, because... there's just a huge contingent trying to make everyday life worse."
You and me both, Liz. This shit is what puts Democrats in last place on my ballots. Stop taking every opportunity to make my life more difficult and I might consider voting for you.
I gave this a listen and to be honest, if the rest of the interviews go like this one, I won't be listening for long. Let me start by saying that I am not a big fan of Dave Smith. I don't listen to his podcast. When he is on a podcast I subscribe to being interviewed, I generally have just buzz through it.
That being said, the man was INCREDIBLY patient through this interview. At no point did I think the Zack or Liz were really interested in his thoughts. They seemed to simply ask questions for the sake of attacking answers. Oftentimes, they would ask a question, he would begin a reply and they would immediately cut him off attacking his response even though hadn't had a chance to actually finish his answer. They also seemed to suggest he took positions that he never did. Smith has enough silly positions that the interviewers don't need to dishonest to make it seem like he has more.
At no point did I think the interview was actually trying to understand a person or his ideas. It's OK for interviewers to disagree. It isn't OK for them to set up an interviewee, interrupt interviewees or attach the worst motives to them. For example, someone I think who is really good at listening to others he disagrees with is Russ Roberts at ECONTalk or Bob Murphy (on any of his podcasts). Both seem to genuinely want to understand their interviewees even when they disagree with them.
Again, kudos to Smith for his patience on this one.
4/10 on the podcast
I love freedom, like the monks.
https://www.greattibettour.com/tibetan-culture/tibetan-monks