• neomis@sh.itjust.works
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    11 months ago

    Says “I’m a libertarian but I’m not one of those crazy ones”.

    My followup question is usually what’s your opinion on seatbelt laws and drivers licenses.

    • johker216@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      Both are necessary, there’s an argument to strengthen the latter, and neither violate the NAP. I’m not one of those crazy ones 😁

      • Rottcodd@kbin.social
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        11 months ago

        violate the NAP

        not one of those crazy ones

        These two statements contradict each other.

        The NAP is a substitute for laws for “libertarians” who can’t tolerate the thought of other people actually being free.

        The entire point is to have something that proactively justifies the forcible imposition of your will upon others. So the instant that somebody does something of which you disapprove, you can decree, by whatever rationale might serve, that it’s a violation of the NAP, so you’re now entirely justified in shooting them.

        • Eldritch@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          Not really. It only seems that way because most of us have only had experiences with the psychotic capitalist neo-libertarians of the Murray Rothbard school.

          Actual libertarians, left libertarians. Can definitely get pretty squirrely when you get out on the fringes of ideologic anarchists etc. But many are fairly rational and even generally pro social democracy.

          Right-wing libertarians are just an oxymoron. Under capitalism none of us can truly be free and we are all subject to the whims of wealth hoarding psychotic oligarch monkeys. They’ll tell you that you’re free not to work for them. The only problem is choosing not to work for them means choosing starvation, homelessness, and death. Which isn’t the sort of thing that should be considered a choice in any civil society. But absolute necessities for unsustainable systems such as capitalism.

  • JokeDeity@lemm.ee
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    11 months ago

    If this is what a fake libertarian is, there’s no such thing as a real one. This is every single libertarian I’ve ever conversed with.

    • C126@sh.itjust.works
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      11 months ago

      How many have you talked to? I’m guessing the root cause is your sample size is too small.

    • SeaJ@lemm.ee
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      11 months ago

      When I considered myself libertarian, I was not a fan of police brutality, pro LGBTQ rights, more open border, and legalized drugs. I still hold all of those views but have gotten a lot more to the left from am economics standpoint. A lot of that is die to my econ degree.

      That said, post 2016 I definitely noticed a ton of faux libertarians who were very defensive of Trump. If you voted for Trump, I don’t think you can consider yourself libertarian. I think I recall hearing that the whacko New Hampshire libertarians basically took over the party. Those guys are a bunch of racist fascists.

      • Kalcifer@lemm.ee
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        10 months ago

        If you voted for Trump, I don’t think you can consider yourself libertarian.

        I wouldn’t go so far as to draw that line at voting, as one could certainly be voting strategically – it’s possible that they don’t agree with many, if any, of Trump’s policies, but they were of the belief that voting for Trump would push policy in a direction that would be in their interest – this is, of course, a symptom of FPTP, and it could be possibly solved with a ranked ballot. That being said, I do completely agree that if one is a vehement supporter of Trump, and his policies in a similar fassion to the usual MAGA group, then they cannot call themselves a libertarian in good concience – there are many policies of, and actions by Trump that are very un-libertarian.

  • Rottcodd@kbin.social
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    11 months ago

    It’s funny, because I watched it play out in real time on Reddit.

    It all changed with the Tea Party. Not at first - a fact that the statists on both sides of the aisle want to bury is that the first couple of Tea Party protests were genuinely libertarian, and were in fact against the Bush administration.

    But when Obama was elected, the Republicans moved to co-opt the Tea Party, and succeeded, and both they and the statists on the left were then more than happy to pretend that it was always a Republican thing, since as much as they might differ on the details, they both agree that the idea of being free of government entirely cannot be allowed to prosper.

    And almost immediately, r/libertarian went to complete shit, as it was taken over by overt authoritarians who just want to eliminate all of the bits of the government they don’t like - like gun laws and public assistance of any form - so the rest of the government can then focus entirely on punishing people for being too liberal or too brown or too smart, and they themselves can be free to just shoot anyone they want.

    It took me a while to figure out that that change wasn’t limited to just Reddit - that libertarianism as a whole had been co-opted by those violently authoritarian shitstains.

    And it’s certainly not a coincidence that the net result of that is that there’s no longer an umbrella term in the US for people who just want people to be more free, and “libertarianism” has become just another variety of authoritarianism.

    • Kalcifer@lemm.ee
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      10 months ago

      that libertarianism as a whole had been co-opted by those violently authoritarian shitstains.

      I’m of the belief that the libertarian philosophy must be defended. We cannot roll over and let it be twisted and contorted to the wills of another. The same goes for the Gadsden Flag.

  • thefloweracidic@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    In the context of the comments here, no one really wants to give any libertarians the benefit of the doubt huh? Like maybe there are some folks out there who have a well thought out perspective and aren’t a caricature you learned about from memes.

    I’m not libertarian, I’m just tired of the brain dead political takes you can find on the internet.

    Maybe I should quit the internet.

    • makyo@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      I often say that the only thing more embarrassing than being a Libertarian is not growing out of it

      • Kalcifer@lemm.ee
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        10 months ago

        What do you think is embarrassing about libertarianism? What is so objectionable about resisting oppression? What is so objectionable about maximising each individuals rights, and freedoms?

        • makyo@lemmy.world
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          9 months ago

          You’ve hit on exactly what I think is embarrassing - Libertarians claim to champion those things but in practice they are all cover for ultra individualist ‘I got mine’ ways of thinking. I’ve seen that kind of thinking take over in some towns near me where they weren’t sure how they were going to repair streets or keep the streetlights on because “private entities will have a natural interest in handling those things” but they never do.

          I’m a huge fan of half of the libertarian platform - legal abortions, legalized drugs, etc. - but those are the things Libertarians seem the least interested in actually enacting. And that’s because sure maybe some of them support those ideas, but they like the idea of fewer taxes and fewer regulations to help their bottom line a lot more.

          It’s embarrassing because it is conclusive that we are better when we work together and combine our efforts, and Libertarianism only drags us apart.

          • Kalcifer@lemm.ee
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            9 months ago

            they are all cover for ultra individualist ‘I got mine’ ways of thinking.

            Maximizing individual freedoms is not implying that it is at the expense of the freedoms of others.

            I’ve seen that kind of thinking take over in some towns near me where they weren’t sure how they were going to repair streets or keep the streetlights on because “private entities will have a natural interest in handling those things” but they never do.

            Hm, streetlights would fall into a category of something called a natural monopoly. A Georgist would probably say that natural monopolies should be owned, or tightly regulated by the state – a monopoly is inherently anti-competitive, as a result, it is fundamentally opposed to a competitive free market.

            legal abortions

            I will say, with certainty, that there is borderline zero consensus across all libertarians on how abortions should be handled. This is a tricky issue. I personally think that any solution will lie entirely within the grey, rather than the black and white. I suspect that no solution will be agreeable to all.

            Libertarians seem the least interested in actually enacting

            This is a dubious statement – it falsely generalizes to all libertarians. It entirely depends on who you talk to.

            And that’s because sure maybe some of them support those ideas, but they like the idea of fewer taxes and fewer regulations to help their bottom line a lot more.

            While, yes, fewer taxes, and regulation increase profits, that’s not their only purpose. Reductions in those result in increases in scale of the free market. It could be argued, dependent on circumstance, whether such decreases are actually beneficial, or not, but, at any rate, reductions in taxes and regulations don’t only serve the purpose of lining the pockets of special interest groups.

            It’s embarrassing because it is conclusive that we are better when we work together and combine our efforts, and Libertarianism only drags us apart.

            While, idealistically, it would be great if all humans could work together, real life is unfortunately far from ideal.

            • makyo@lemmy.world
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              9 months ago

              I appreciate your point by point response but I need to clarify that I am not arguing with you about Libertarianism in theory but in a tual practice. it is one thing to get behind it theoretically, but to see how it works in practice and still support it is what I find embarrassing.

  • ToastyMedic@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    Mfw I vote for a 3rd party candidate who aligns with many of my ideals and both a Democrat and a Republican break down my doors screaming that I wasted my vote and should vote (person) because its (not the other person) even though I don’t agree with either shitheads policies or agendas.

    • diprount_tomato@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      Then they’re gonna complain about how the system is shit.

      Literally just vote third parties and kick those dinosaurs out of congress

      • MiddleWeigh@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        Yea I have lately found myself very frustrated with liberals, and politics as a whole lately. I browse both right and left stuff online and they each mirror eachothers sentiments like sports team fandoms. The liberals just hold the dnc party line in the name of fighting fascism cause most of them have done extremely well in the current political and economic climate, whether they admit it or not, capitalism and american democracy has suited them just fine and they don’t wanna release the pearls just yet. The right is just shit, tho there are some lines of logic from conservatives I don’t outright dismiss, but they’re mostly just ignorant assholes. 🤷 I voted Biden, I will again, but the whole wasted vote shit is just laughable tbh. Give me something good, and I’ll pick it.

        • diprount_tomato@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          Don’t call leftists “liberals”, it’s inaccurate af

          Btw don’t complain about the current landscape just to then say you’re voting the party that is just like the other instead of voting a third party