A running summary of my posts on topics of libertarianism
(left, center and right) and culture.
Bleeding
Heart-Thick-Milquetoast-Left-Wine Spritzer Libertarians: I was asked to
compile a list of my posts on the above-mentioned topic by someone interested
in the subject. This post offers links
to dozens of posts I have written in rebuttal to prominent libertarians and
Austrians who I believe have distorted or destroyed the philosophy. I am often not kind.
Is
There Hope for the Bleeding Hearts?: Matt Zwolinski decides to dive deep
into his support for a Basic Income Guarantee.
Rest assured, he still lands at the wrong answer.
Obamacare:
Oh So Libertarian!: Believe it or not.
Libertarians
and Culture: perhaps my first real grasping at this topic, prompted by the
Supreme Court ruling on gay marriage.
Family
as Foundation: Somewhere, somehow, society will require – even demand –
governance. I vote for the family as the
basic governance unit.
Libertarian
Crusades?: Alexander McCobin, wants to take the LGBT battle overseas. I suggest he first visits one of the seven
where homosexuality is punishable by death.
Left-Libertarians: A deep-dive into the history and roots of
left-libertarian thinking, through the writing of a prominent advocate of this
view, Kevin Carson.
Antonio
Gramsci Libertarians: It turns out that the
left-libertarian desire to require “libertarian” to mean “libertine,” thus
radically transforming culture, has something in common with Gramsci’s
communist plan to transform society.
While the left-libertarians predict an outcome that conforms to the
non-aggression principle, it is the communists who are realistic about the direction
society will take when culture is destroyed.
Hoppe’s
Realistic Libertarianism: Having been quite
critical of “thick” libertarians of the left, I was challenged to take Hoppe on
in the same manner. I was glad I did; it
was an eye-opening journey – as several of the following posts will
demonstrate.
Hoppe
and Immigration: The subject of immigration
examined through the lens of property rights.
A novel thought, one that more libertarians might consider.
Dances
With Elephants: A mosquito dares tread on
the immigration battleground of two giants, Hoppe and Block.
Compared
to What?: It is easy to write about
immigration in libertarian theory applied to a libertarian world. It gets a little tougher to apply this
libertarian theory in this world. Jacob
Hornberger asks: Are immigration controls a good thing? I say, good?
Compared to what?
The
State and Land: Who owns government
property? Can the state own land? What does this have to do with immigration
and culture?
Open
Borders: Case Study: Merkel gave open
borders libertarians their biggest wet dream ever – a real life case study to
see how their theory works out in the real world. Let’s see how it’s going so far.
Why
Culture Matters: A generally accepted
culture goes a long way toward reducing opportunities for conflict. Culture evolving slowly and naturally,
through voluntary associations, occurs daily and is generally harmless. Culture changed dramatically, via war or
other government pronouncements for example, is often quite destructive of
social order; which then results in calls for someone to do something – by
force. This might be why government
works so hard to destroy culture.
Libertarian
Open Borders: As noted, Merkel gave
libertarian open borders advocates a great opportunity to examine their theory being
put into practice. I have seen not one
such advocate take advantage of this magnificent gift and write a case study
using this example in defense of the position.
In this post I ask if anyone else has seen such an examination.
Borders
Neither Open or Closed: Richman Gets it Right: Sheldon
Richman, a prominent left-libertarian, gets it right: libertarian borders are
managed.
The
Silence is Deafening: Noting that I had
received hundreds of comments on my several posts on open borders and culture,
my two most recent posts Libertarian Open
Borders and Borders Neither Open or
Closed: Richman Gets it Right, received almost no feedback. Why so little feedback on these two, after
hundreds of comments previously? I
wonder….
Borders
and Culture: I respond to a critique
offered by one Paul Bonneau. In it, I am
criticized for views that are common to his – I don’t get it. Further, other critiques are in response to
things I have never written. Still, you
might find it a worthwhile read….
The
Real Action is in the Reaction of the Opposition: Imagine
my surprise to find that the clash of cultures in Germany on New Year’s Eve
resulted in calls for draconian police action.
Merkel’s open borders: just following the Saul Alinsky playbook.
The Camp: My humble attempt at integrating the storyline from
the novel The Camp into today’s real
world.
Backlash
on Open Borders: Once again, imagine my
surprise to find that open borders in Europe results in a political backlash,
moving toward calls for even more authoritarian government measures.
Borders,
Culture, and Decentralization: Guess what
(although it shouldn’t be a surprise)?
Murray Rothbard understands the value of culture in checking and reducing
the power of the state!
Open
Borders in THIS World: As I introduce the
post: “Merkel’s open borders pronouncement is the gift that keeps on giving in
this libertarian debate about borders and immigration.” It turns out you cannot have open borders
without government intervention.
Property,
Discrimination, and Exclusion: A brief,
self-administered quiz, aimed to help you explore your own views on the topic.
The
Preconditions: An exploration of one of the
responses to the above, self-administered quiz.
Libertarian
Open Borders: Oxymoron in Theory and Practice: In
this post, I examine the harsh reality when open borders in theory butts up
against Angela Merkel’s open borders policy in practice.
Dialogue (Such as it is) With Jacob Hornberger on Open
Borders
Libertarian:
Left, Center, and Right: Recognizing that
the application of libertarian theory in a world populated by humans needs to
take into account…humans.
Culture
and Liberty: A common culture – and a
culture beyond merely the NAP – is necessary if we are ever to move closer to a
libertarian society.
Finger Food:
where I comment on Nicholas Sarwark, Libertarian Party Chair, and his inability
to see the connection of libertarianism and states rights.
Nicholas
Sarwark Replies: well, the title explains it – frankly, he only makes
things worse for himself.
Apparently
Some Confusion?: Someone asks Walter Block
about something he believes is contradictory on my part. I decide to respond anyway.
The
Logical Inconsistency of Open Borders...: Inconsistent
in anarchism, impossible in minarchism.
Food
for Thought: Culture and kinship; something
will govern.
Get
Off (on) My Lawn: Culture matters if you
want peace.
Evolving
Culture and Adherence to Abstraction: Sheldon
Richman defines libertarianism into a one-person phone-booth.
Jacob
Hornberger Carries Sheldon Richman’s Water: Hornberger
decides to reply to the above post on behalf of Richman.
I
Will Keep This One Simple: Libertarian theory does not hold a simple, yes /
no answer on the topic of immigration and borders.
Open
Borders: No Answer in the Non-Aggression Principle: An answer to open
borders and immigration cannot be deduced via the non-aggression
principle. For anarchists, as there is
no state and therefore no state borders, the only borders are private – and
these, most certainly, will not be “open.”
For minarchists, how will the state serve its “defense” function without
knowing who crosses its borders and for what purpose?
Rothbard
and Open Borders: Rothbard on open borders and culture.
Uncomfortable
Questions: Questions that should be faced by any libertarian theorist
attempting to provide application to the real world.
Immigration:
A Human Right?: Bryan Caplan is more left-wing than the United Nations on this
topic.
Why
They Hate Rothbard: The libertarian left (meaning, mainstream libertarians)
hate Rothbard because he does not embrace every conceivable,
culture-destroying, made-up, positive “human right.”
Mises
on Immigration and Nation: Joe Salerno has done an excellent job of
capturing and summarizing Mises’ view on this topic. Given his background, Mises is rather
qualified to speak on both.
Sloppy
Language Results in Sloppy Thinking: Words have meaning; the term “nation”
is an important concept.
Nation: What
do communists, global democrats, and many libertarians have in common? According to Rothbard, it is hate of the
nation.
Musings
on Immigration and Running From the Truth: One of the aforementioned
libertarians writes openly about his hatred of nation; other, more polite,
libertarians want to pretend such hatred is not at the base of the open borders
crowd.
Kulturkampf!:
Rothbard writes of the culture war – finally taken up by the right (in 1992).
The
“Future” of Whose “Freedom” Foundation?: Immigration as a human right? Not again!
Liberté
sans Fraternité?: Is liberty possible without fraternity, some other
cultural aspects that bind community together?
NAP Time:
My response to several topics raised on the value of culture. My frustration comes shining through, as in
the face of overwhelming evidence to the liberty-destroying results of
destroying culture in Europe, such can be denied.
No True
Scotsman: It is acceptable – and some would say required – that a true
libertarian would support all manner of libertine behavior. One thing and one thing only is not allowed
to receive support from a true libertarian: religion. Really.
Why?
Success!: My
first breakthrough with Walter Block on the topic of immigration and open
borders. This post specifically deals
with the vast expanses of government controlled land: who owns this?
And the
Dying Cheer: Man is most free when law comes from God (or common,
historical, culture), and not when man is invented by the enlightened.
Block
and bionic Duke it Out: My second breakthrough with Walter Block, wherein
he is at least considering that his libertarian position on immigration and
borders might not be libertarian after all.
Man
Destroys God: Friedrich Nietzsche, of “God is dead” fame, understands the negative
ramifications of this better than most.
The
Story of a Donkey: A tale of when guests start deciding that they own the
place
The
Soros Dilemma: If George Soros privately financed one million [insert your
choice of peoples from Africa, the Middle East or Central Asia] immigrants into
your county (county, not country), would you – as a libertarian – object?
Reset
with Anonp: a conversation intending to summarize, to some degree, my view
on open borders and immigration in this
world.
From
Immigrants and Refugees to Terrorists: The title says it all, but it is not
a story about today or the future; we have seen this play out before.
Who
Leads When There Are No Rules?: For anyone who desires to live with and
amongst humans, I argue that the only viable choices in answer to this question
are either a) custom and culture or b) dictate.
And when there are no rules, the worst will become the dictator.
By
Whose Standards?: Value is subjective.
This applies to far more than economic transactions. Application of the NAP requires turning the
subjective into objective. By whose
standards is the objective to be defined?
For Than:
My continued dialogue with a feedbacker.
Among other topics, we both recognize that liberty and utopia are not
synonymous on what we each choose to compromise is quite different – and, I
believe, the important question.
Where
There’s Smoke There’s Fire: A thought experiment, putting to the test the
intersection of culture and the NAP in a world occupied by humans. Must be read
in conjunction with this,
for those who cannot understand fiction writing as a tool.
Better
Dead Than Traditionally Wed: Left-libertarians prefer nuclear war to
traditional Christian values.
My
Journey So Far: Many libertarians fail to deal with the spaces in between,
the gray that defines life. In this
post, I attempt to summarize my journey through the gray.
Libertarian
Neo-cons: Reason Magazine
doubles-down on the call to war with Russia.
Libertarian
Neocons for McCain: Another Reason
Magazine piece, the title says it all.
Paradoxe
de la Lumière Noire: Jeff Deist gave a talk at the 2017 Mises
University. Libertarians who ignore the
fact that people have ties to family and geography are foolish
libertarians. I refer to them as
communists.
Communist
Libertine Trigger Warning: The reaction from left-libertarians to Deist’s
above-mentioned talk. Needless to say,
they didn’t like it.
“It’s
Just Tyranny!”: Jordan Peterson suggests that those who complain about the
patriarchal order really don’t understand what they are talking about.
The
Controlled Opposition: Jeffrey Tucker’s reaction to events in
Charlottesville. My title says enough.
Open
Borders for Israel: I offer four prominent libertarian advocates for open
borders (Jacob Hornberger, Sheldon Richman, Steven Horwitz, and Jeffrey Tucker)
the chance to make the same case for Israel.
As of this moment, almost three weeks and no response.
Jeffrey
Tucker for National Review: Tucker first defines the term “nation” out of
existence, before finding some way to describe the United States as a nation.
Jordan
Peterson and the Bible: He touches on many aspects of the importance of
culture to a surviving and thriving society.
Charlottesville:
Beginning with the events in Charlottesville, I move through the relationship
between libertarians and the alt-right – and wonder why no one has to apologize
for being a communist?
Musings
on Left-Libertarians: Open borders libertarians are anti-Semites, no way
around it.
The
Closing Chapter: My reflection on this topic of libertarians, culture, and
the liberal tradition. I decide to take
a pause, as it is possible I understand less about this topic than I might have
thought.
Let’s
Try a Little “Direct”…: An individual that knew me (the virtual me) about
as well as anyone wondered if I am after a white America – this prompting the
post immediately above. I decide to be
very direct in my response as opposed to my normal Socratic discussion with the
audience.
Més Que
un Club: The secession vote in Catalunya has split libertarians. I offer my thoughts.
Secession:
Libertarians who disapprove of the possibility of Catalunya secession should
face the consequences of sitting in fantasyland – the state employed violence,
enforcing this “libertarian” position.
The
Conundrum of Liberty: Libertarians can be very good on property, but leave
unstated the implication: the right to discriminate.
Libertarianism
and the “Alt-Right”: A brief overview of a speech by Hans Hoppe at the 2017
Property and Freedom Society conference; this speech is covered in extensive
detail in the next post.
I Love
Hans Hoppe!: Does this need explanation?
A
Woman of the Winnili: After writing
2000 fawning words about Hoppe, immediately above, I receive a comment that
begins: “Hoppe is a mess...” Now, I
don’t mind contrary opinions, but it this the best way to start a constructive
dialogue given my position?
Walter
Block Solves the Greatest Unsolved Problem in Philosophy: Is it beneficial
– no, even necessary – to maintain a certain type of culture if one wishes to
move toward and maintain a libertarian society?
Walter replies “yes, and it is a conservative culture that values
tradition.” Sounds like Hans Hoppe!
NAP Time II:
Conversation 1,275,893 on the point that there is no libertarian answer to
borders and immigration in a world of state borders.
Leftist
or Libertarian?: A prominent left-libertarian takes issue with libertarians
who pay attention to Jordan Peterson; the reasons he offers have nothing to do
with the NAP and everything to do with a leftist agenda.
The
Left-Libertarians and the 0.000001%: a follow-up to the post immediately
above; it turns out that the left-libertarian in question is Steve Horwitz. His arguments will be meaningful to exactly
two people.
Borders
and Property: Jacob Hornberger makes my case regarding borders and
immigration.
What
I Learned at Murray’s Knee…: Murray Rothbard, in his essay “Nations by
Consent,” offers an examination of “nation” and open borders. Guess what?
Men are bound by much more than market exchange. Guess what else? You cannot derive open borders from the
non-aggression principle.
An
Adult Enters the Room: I examine as essay by Jesús Huerta de Soto in which
he describes a libertarian theory of free immigration. (Hint: it isn’t “open borders.”)
Negative
Liberty’s War on Nature: negative liberty buries the possibility of finding
liberty; a world of “thou shalt not” is insufficient as it ignores and even
attempts to destroy human realities.
NAP Time
III: My third dedicated post to this same commenter, “The NAPster” (you
will find the other two above). A
discussion on open borders, the lack of a pure libertarian answer in a world of
state borders, and a review of the various transitional positions. Once again, The
NAPster asks many questions and answers none in return.
Circumstances:
perhaps a successful strategy to move toward a libertarian world might not
include advocating for all of the various leftist and libertine aspects opened
up by the principle and instead focus on a couple of simple points.
The
One True Faith?: Is it really possible that libertarianism is the one true
faith? Which is more likely to occur: a
well-crafted theory of law in search of a society to adopt it or a tradition
and culture that provides the foundation for good law to emerge? As good law does not come forward from a bad
culture and tradition, which one should be upheld as the one true faith?
Israel:
7 Percent Legitimate: An example of libertarian cognitive dissonance that
does nothing other than turn reasonable people off from considering the
non-aggression principle.
Tribe
for Me But Not for Thee: A continuation of the topic regarding Israel. Three libertarians recognize the value of
tribe for Jews. At least one of these
three does not recognize the value of tribes for anyone else. To my knowledge, none of the three have
suggested open borders for Israel.
Principle
and Tradition: I am very grateful for many of those who comment at the
site. The best ones get me to think of
things in a different way, move me to change my views, or force me to better
put into words my thoughts. This is an
example of the last point.
Dilly Dilly:
Hans Hoppe on getting libertarianism right, in other words…not left. Hoppe includes an examination of the culture
and tradition of the Middle Ages.
An
Open Letter to Walter Block: This
one is a doozy. Walter offers that it
was OK to keep Jewish refugees out of Canada in the 1930s because they were
socialists and communists. When I ask
him how this squares with his open borders view, he says, no, they should have
been let in – even though they are socialists and communists.
Trade Winds:
It does not help the libertarian cause when prominent libertarian thinkers are
unable to consider the secondary and tertiary consequences of their
actions. Here is one prominent example.
The
Libertarian Movement: A series of exercises offered to examine the
question: is the difference of left / right more important toward achieving
liberty than the difference between those who label themselves libertarian or
not?
The
Imbecile: Murray Rothbard examines the idea that freedom need not be the
highest or only end in life for a libertarian.
Impractical
Ethical Ideas: Murray Rothbard offers that the difference of theory and
practice is fallacious. If a theory
can’t work in practice, it is bad theory.
The
Errors of Classical Liberalism: I am tired of getting brow-beaten for my
views on this; you can blame Jesús Huerta de Soto for this view. De Soto hints at a couple of significant
errors; I expand on these hints.
Integrating
Classical Natural Law and Libertarian Theory: An examination of this intersection
via an essay written by Carlo Lottieri.
A
Couple of Comments: A look at the relative value of culture vs. NAP purity,
and also a look perhaps a healthy view of victimless crimes.
Rothbard
and Customary Law: An examination of Rothbard’s consideration of ethics and
morals (both terms derived from the word “custom”) and the relationship of
these to law. Part Two of this
examination can be found
here.
Community
Found: One in a series of posts reviewing The Quest for Community: A Study in the Ethics of Order and Freedom,
by Robert Nisbet. To summarize: the
advance of individualism and “liberties” for the individual has corresponded to
and has in fact supported the growth of the State. The full series can be found here.
A
Touch of Velvet?: An examination of the value of common tradition and
community, through the real world events of the 2018 peaceful revolution in
Armenia.
This
Will Be Entertaining: Jordan Peterson asks the question: what [from the
Enlightenment] do you toss out the window before things get ugly? I suggest that it is the wrong question. Instead, the question that should be asked: what
is required to be reintroduced that the Enlightenment destroyed?
Name
Your Poison: Robert Nisbet examines the related events of the increase in
individualism and the increase in state power.
The following posts all cover this topic and Nisbet’s book:
Heresy: Frank
Van Dun presents the case that the non-aggression principle must be only a
subset of functional libertarian law.
What
Happened to the Promise?: Frank Van Dun examines the relationship of
classical liberalism and Christian Orthodoxy.
It
Isn’t Cultural “Marxism”: Marx went
after the means of production. It was
Antonio Gramsci that went after culture.
Libertarian
Communists: Brian Doherty is excited about his twice-in-a-lifetime
“evidence” of Ron Paul’s supposed bigotry.
Doherty proves my point that the line between libertarians and
communists is not very wide unless one understand the important difference (no,
it isn’t property).
Medieval
Libertarianism: a thorough examination of the connection between the
Catholic Church and liberty, offered by one who began his research as a
sceptic.
Contractual
Community: Is a “contract” (which I do not equate with “covenant”)
sufficient to create a libertarian community?
The dialogue continues here.
All
Men Are Created Equal: an examination of this very dangerous phrase.
Centrally
Planned Decentralization: Sounds ridiculous, doesn’t it? Bryan Caplan doesn’t think so.
Christianity:
Gerard Casey examines the relationship of Christianity and liberty. Guess what?
There is one.
Give
Me Liberty or Give Me Property Rights!: Frank Van Dun suggests that these
are not the same, despite the view of many libertarians.
The
Words of the Prophets: Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn suggests we can choose one
and one only: liberty or equality. An
additional post on the same topic: The
Fatherland of Philosophy
Leftism:
A Perfect Track Record of Failure: Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn examines the
left. Further posts include the
following:
Enemies
of Liberty: Open borders libertarians keep dangerous company, along with
the likes of Antifa, Democratic Socialists, and New World Order types. I wonder which side has a better grasp of the
implications of this scheme.
Finding
Freedom in an Unfree World: Gerard Casey examines the freedom in medieval
Europe after the fall of Rome.
Thomas
Aquinas and Law: Aquinas lays the moral foundation for natural law.
What
Moves You?: if libertarianism is rooted in individualism, we are in
trouble.
The
Peace of God: it was the moral authority of the medieval Church that drove
peace in decentralized Europe.
Liberty
Without God?: We look to many ideas of the Enlightenment as giving birth to
western freedom; instead, perhaps, it is what was lost in the Enlightenment
that cost us our freedom.
Is
Libertarianism Sufficient for Liberty?: Short answer? No.
There are specific cultural and moral foundations necessary if liberty
is our objective.
Open
Borders: As several thousand migrants travel north to the US border, it is
worth considering: libertarians who shout “open borders” are thinking about
liberty – but not your liberty.
Finding
That Which is Lost: An examination of liberalism through the lens of Ralph
Raico.
Two
Sides of the Same Coin: Individualism and the state, could these be two
sides of the same coin?
The
Enlightenment’s Critic of Reason: Edmund Burke offers a criticism of reason
unbound by tradition, reason fully individualized. It is an important lesson if one desires to
achieve liberty.
The
Journey’s End: Gerard Casey’s, not mine.
Western cultural norms must be replenished if we are to once again
recover liberty.
Natural
Rights and Morality: Can one have natural rights without natural moral
law? And what if that natural law
included some aspects not quite compatible with the non-aggression principle?
Anorexic
Libertarianism: How much thinner do we need to make libertarianism? We have purified libertarian theory based
solely on the non-aggression principle enough already. Let’s work on finding liberty.
A Parallel?:
Hans Hoppe offers an outline of the value of universal money (gold) with
multiple, competing institutions producing it (banks). This seems quite similar to the social /
political order of Medieval Europe.
A
Libertarian Grand Narrative: Hans Hoppe introduced the idea of introducing
a Libertarian Grand Narrative; this is extending by Daniel Ajamian via a
lecture given at the Mises Institute.
The
Argument for Open Borders: You will be shocked to learn that I agree 100%
with a libertarian proponent of open borders; the reason why I agree wont shock
you.
It Depends:
Is it possible for an anarchist to also be Christian? I guess it depends.
Libertarianism
or Liberty?: Is it our objective to purify theory, or is it to find
liberty? The convergence of natural law,
Christian ethics, and the non-aggression principle; I believe this is where
liberty will be found.
Universal
Libertarians: It’s no longer hidden like that crazy uncle on Christmas:
left-libertarians value the left far more than they value “libertarian.”
Regarding culture as a necessary, but not entirely sufficient, basis: Have you read Nelson Hultberg's "The Golden Mean: Libertarian Politics, Conservative Values"?
ReplyDeleteBTW, I have enjoyed your writings since way back when you sometimes posted at The Daily Bell.
--- Romey Ross [RomeyR@twc.com]