When I became a libertarian two decades ago, one of the first people I met was Mark Bodenhausen. Back in the days when Jimmy Blake was chair of the Alabama Libertarian Party, Mark was one of the small group who would gather regularly at Jimmy’s house for discussion and planning about how to spread our gospel of small government.
Over the years, I came to know Mark as a brilliant nerd, a principled libertarian, a pragmatic political thinker and as a caring human being. He went on to serve the Alabama Libertarian Party as its chair and as a candidate for a variety of offices. I was very saddened to learn that Mark died Thursday after a long illness.
I knew that Mark was sick, but I had no idea how serious the problem was. Last Sunday, former Alabama Libertarian Party vice chair Mike Rster posted a note on Facebook updating us about Mark. It sounded very serious, but I assumed it meant good news.
“The past 19 days have been trying,” Mike wrote. “Due to an aneurysm that caused two catastrophic bleeds in Mark’s brain, the doctors inserted a tube into his brain to relieve the pressure. In the course of the Mark’s treatment his liver failed and then his kidneys. He remained unresponsive for the 17 days.
“Two days ago he nodded yes and no for the first time since the initial bleed. His kidneys have stabilized although he still might require further dialysis. His liver is causing a problem with blood clotting. He has had multiple units of blood and blood products. Once his blood platelet count is sufficient he is scheduled for three surgeries….
“We anticipate a lengthy recovery and rehabilitation period for Mark. He still has a long way to go.”
Bloomberg: Policing what you eat part of ‘government’s highest duty’
It can take a lifetime of work to overcome abusive ‘programming’
They won’t listen to arguments; they might listen to honest art
Change sometimes happens slowly, not in the grand leap that we want
How do you suppose invention of ‘truth machine’ would affect you?
Sex abuse of powerless rampant; denying its serious harm obscene
What makes good science fiction? Aya Katz and I discuss ‘Podkayne’
Unity sounds nice, but truth is we need freedom to go our own ways