What’s the difference between a libertarian and an anarchist? About 10 years.
It’s an old joke — and there are variations of it — but there’s some truth to it, because it’s a story that I’ve heard a number of times. In fact, it’s my story, too.
Most of us who’ve completely give up on the state started out in one of the mainstream political parties and then converted to the Libertarian Party, because we concluded that smaller government made sense and that there should be no distinction between economic and personal liberty. Republicans talk a good game about economic freedom, but they want to control your personal life. Democrats mostly talk a good game about personal (social) freedom, but they want to control your economic life. We see the contradiction of either of those positions, so we begin advocating the libertarian ideal of small government and freedom in all areas. For many of us, though, there’s a further step.
If you oppose government control on philosophical grounds, you soon run up against the issue of whether any form of the state can be morally justified. For many of us, we’ve reluctantly had to come to the conclusion that the state is immoral. Not just a “big state.” It applies to any state that claims the power to rule over the people and property that happens to fall within a certain geographical area — unless those people are there by their own choice and if they have other realistic choices.
FRIDAY FUNNIES
Police mistakenly attack innocent man while hunting graffiti tagger
What would your obit say about you — if you could write it yourself?
Best years of our lives? For me, teen years were start of feeling like alien
More dependence ahead now that half of households get U.S. checks
Be afraid, friends: Chicken Little says the sky is falling somewhere
We’re in summer reruns this week
Out-of-touch Keynesians still think ‘digging ditches’ is a good idea
Maturity sees world’s ugliness with more melancholy than anger