Have you met the new neighbors? They’re the ones who moved in next door with the 12-foot-tall rock concert speakers and the complete set of electric guitars and amps that make your bedroom windows rattle when they fire up each day at 5 a.m.
It wasn’t so bad when they were just papering the front of the house with old heavy metal posters, but things really turned odd when they set up the firing range in the side yard — where she does drunken target shooting with automatic weapons and he does nude interpretive dance with a parrot riding on his curly head. Cool, huh?
Isn’t this what paradise looks like for libertarians and anarchists? Don’t we want people to be able to do anything they want, just as long as they stay on their side of the property line? Well, yes and no. Let’s separate fact from hyperbole.
Most people assume that libertarians and anarchists want to live in a world with no rules. For some percentage of freedom lovers, that’s true. They don’t really care what anybody else does, just as long as they keep the weirdness on their own property. These folks don’t mind living in ugly, junky neighborhoods with people who have all sorts of weirdness going on in full view.
I’ve known quite a few people who claim to feel this way. I’m not one of them.
Muslims protecting Christian church remind us there’s good in all groups
In ’98, Ron Paul warned U.S. policy was leading to terrorist attacks
What if all truth and all beauty can be traced back to one source?
Do you obey petty rules? Or do you fight The Man in hopes of change?
FDA’s war on margarine is really an attack on your freedom of choice
Tuesday’s Senate vote reminds me of German ‘Enabling Act’ of 1933
What if writing from the ‘AI me’ sounds just like I’d written it?
There are three kinds of lonely — and I don’t know which this is