Germany had several
state elections over the weekend. The
big (relative) winner was the AfD – Alternative for Germany (Deutschland) –
party.
The party is led by an individual who has suggested German
border guards should open fire on illegal immigrants.
This is consistent with one of my contentions: open borders
in a world of decisions forced by the state leads to conflict and a reduction
in liberty. A state with the power to
shoot illegal immigrants (as if this isn’t horrendous enough) has the power to
shoot you.
It is easy to talk about open borders in theory (albeit open
borders is bad libertarian theory). Applying
libertarian theory in this world – a world
with borders managed by states – presents many challenges. I argue that there is no “pure” libertarian
answer possible.
But “open borders” is not even consistent with libertarian
theory. I don’t know about the rest of
you, but I manage the borders to my property.
I cannot think of any interpretation of libertarian theory that comes to
another conclusion.
The only alternative to open borders isn’t closed borders. And neither of these two respects the right –
grounded in libertarian theory – for the property owner to decide.
In any case, the AfD is one backlash.
Another thing that libertarian theory doesn't really speak to.
ReplyDeleteA 'libertarian state' with open borders for property owners. A foreign billionaire (let's call him Soros) hates people of your ethnicity and spends million or billions of dollars bringing in foreigners that are known to be prone to violent conflict with out groups. A libertarian society of this sort would be destroyed by simple Darwinian pressures.
A one word solution: HOPPE!!
ReplyDeleteA brilliant man. Unfortunately, instead of taking time to understand him, some too quickly offer knee-jerk reactions.
DeleteWell, he IS German!! :)
DeleteJust asking. Why does HHH live in Istanbul?? (funny, so different from that OTHER HHH, eh?)
DeleteWhy Istanbul? No idea.
DeleteAmong many other things, he opened my thinking to the connection of culture and libertarianism.