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- Path: bloom-beacon.mit.edu!hookup!news.kei.com!world!pschmidt
- From: pschmidt@world.std.com (Paul J Schmidt)
- Subject: Libertarian FAQ: Frequently Asked Questions
- Message-ID: <libertarian/faq_766113605@world.std.com>
- Followup-To: poster
- Summary: This posting contains a list of Frequently Asked Questions
- about libertarianism.
- Supersedes: <libertarian/faq_763505879@world.std.com>
- Reply-To: pschmidt@world.std.com
- Organization: Advocates for Self-Government - Davy Crockett Chapter
- Date: Tue, 12 Apr 1994 01:20:08 GMT
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Expires: Mon, 23 May 1994 01:20:05 GMT
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- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu alt.politics.libertarian:28762 alt.activism:31783 alt.individualism:3036 misc.legal:40828 talk.politics.misc:96244 alt.answers:2402 misc.answers:537 talk.answers:202 news.answers:17925
-
- Archive-name: libertarian/faq
- Version: 1.2
- Last-modified: 11 Apr 1994
-
-
- Frequently Asked Questions about Libertarianism
-
-
- Many USENET readers encounter libertarianism for the first time on
- USENET. The following is a list of answers to many of the frequently
- asked questions about libertarianism.
-
- These answers have been compiled from several sources. Most of the
- answers are derived or quoted from writings by David Bergland including
- "Libertarianism in One Lesson" and "America's Libertarian Heritage."
- Quotes were used with permission from David Bergland and the Advocates
- for Self-Government as long as proper credit was retained. All quoted
- answers will be marked and the source referenced in the bibliography.
-
-
- Contents:
-
- 1. What is libertarianism?
- 2. Are libertarians liberal or conservative?
- 3. How do libertarians approach the issues?
- 4. What is the libertarian position on the military draft?
- 5. Should the government regulate radio, TV, or the press?
- 6. Why do libertarians want to repeal regulations on sex by consenting
- adults?
- 6a. Does this apply to prostitution also?
- 7. Does libertarian support of personal liberty extend to drug use?
- 7a. But if drugs were legalized, wouldn't there be millions more drug
- addicts?
- 8. Do libertarians support gun ownership as a personal liberty?
- 9. How do libertarians want to handle immigration?
- 10. What position do libertarians have on subsidies for farm and business?
- 11. Are people better off with free trade than with tariffs?
- 12. What position do libertarians take on minimum wage laws?
- 13. What about the poor?
- 14. Don't we need affirmative action to keep bigoted employers from
- refusing to hire minorities and women?
- 15. How do libertarians feel about taxes?
- 15a. I'm for cutting taxes, but as a practical matter, how do we do it?
- 16. Aren't you going too far?
- 17. Won't these ideas work only if everybody is good?
-
-
- 1. What is libertarianism?
-
- Libertarians want a win-win world of peace and plenty. And we believe
- that the only way to get it is through self-government... NOT others-
- government.
-
- Self-government is the combination of personal responsibility and
- tolerance. Responsibility means you govern yourself. Tolerance means
- you don't force your values on peaceful, honest people.
-
- Today, however, others-government is giving us insecurity, conflict and
- poverty. Let's revitalize our heritage of self-government to create a
- win-win world where everyone comes out ahead. [4]
-
- -- Carole Ann Rand
-
-
- 2. Are libertarians liberal or conservative?
-
- You have a better choice than just left or right. The libertarian way
- gives you more choices, in politics, in business, your personal life, in
- every way. Libertarians advocate a high degree of both personal and
- economic liberty. Today's liberals like personal liberty but want
- government to control your economic affairs. Conservatives reverse
- that, advocating more economic freedom but wanting to clamp down on your
- private life.
-
- Libertarian positions on the issues are not "left" or "right" or a
- combination of the two. Libertarians believe that, on every issue, you
- have the right to decide for yourself what's best for you and to act on
- that belief so long as you respect the right of other people to do the
- same and deal with them peacefully and honestly.
-
- Today's liberals and conservatives have rejected America's heritage of
- liberty and personal responsibility. They want to put us all in their
- straitjacket. Americans built a great country without shackles. It's
- time to take them off again. Break free of the useless left right
- spectrum. Think freedom on all issues. Think libertarian. [2]
-
-
- 3. How do libertarians approach the issues?
-
- Libertarians use a caring, people centered approach to politics.
- Politicians too frequently forget that their laws and regulations affect
- real, live human beings. Libertarians never lose sight of that fact.
- We see each individual as unique, with great potential. We want a
- system which encourages all of us to discover the best within ourselves
- and make the most of it. A system which encourages the development of
- the most harmonious relationships among all people.
-
- In dealing with political issues, libertarians focus on the people
- involved. Who is having a problem? What is it? What is the government
- doing already, if anything, and might that be the cause of the problem?
-
- Most importantly, Libertarians ask: is anyone violating another's
- rights? Is someone committing murder, rape, robbery, theft, fraud,
- embezzlement, arson, trespass, etc.? If so, then it's proper to call
- on government to help the victim against the wrongdoer. But, if not,
- the government should not get involved.
-
- In most instances, people are better off if allowed to work out their
- own problems through voluntary cooperation without introducing the
- coercive tool of government. [3]
-
-
- 4. What is the libertarian position on the military draft?
-
- History shows that free people can be counted on to defend their homes
- and their country. But the draft is slavery, and slaves make lousy
- defenders of freedom.
-
- I like knowing I'm being protected by people who are in the military
- because they want to be there, not because they were forced against
- their will to be there.
-
- A military focused on defending America instead of policing the globe
- would reduce manpower needs and further eliminate any reason to have a
- draft or draft registration.
-
- Let's let free people defend freedom. [3]
-
-
- 5. Should the government regulate radio, TV, or the press?
-
- America's free press is envied by freedom-starved people everywhere.
- Dictators use a controlled press to silence opposition and to feed lies
- to their citizens.
-
- Americans would not like it if the government here owned or controlled
- the newspapers. Why should we like government control of TV and radio
- any better? As with printed words, broadcast words can and should be
- regulated by the free market.
-
- Americans should be able to freely choose what they will watch or listen
- to, without Big Brother making those decisions for them. [3]
-
-
- 6. Why do libertarians want to repeal regulations on sex by consenting
- adults?
-
- Nothing is more personal than the way people chose to shape their sexual
- relationships. Government has no business intruding into people's
- bedrooms.
-
- This doesn't mean we must personally approve of the sexual behaviors of
- others. It simply means that as long as the participants are consenting
- adults, no one has the right to use the force of government laws to try
- to stop or punish them.
-
- There is no justification for throwing peaceful Americans in jail
- because of their sexual choices. Let's respect people's right to
- control their own bodies. [3]
-
-
- 6a. Does this apply to prostitution also?
-
- Every day millions of adult Americans agree to make love. There is no
- justification for throwing them in jail. These are peaceful voluntary
- agreements between consenting adults. A tiny fraction of these involve
- money.
-
- Criminal penalties do not stop prostitution. They just create real
- problems. One study showed it costs taxpayers two thousand dollars
- every time a prostitute is arrested. Let's respect people's right to
- control their own bodies.
-
- Decriminalize sex, and let it be a private affair. [3]
-
-
- 7. Does libertarian support of personal liberty extend to drug use?
-
- Alcohol prohibition tore America apart once. Now it is the war on
- drugs. Harsh laws and the threat of jail and fines will not stop drug
- use. All they do is make it harder to help people. And just as
- Prohibition created organized crime, today's drug laws keep organized
- crime alive -- with all the violence and corruption that goes along with
- it.
-
- Before drugs were illegal, Americans handled them with few problems.
- Let's respect the right of people to control their own bodies.
-
- Decriminalize drugs, help those who need it, and let the police spend
- their time protecting us from real crime. [3]
-
-
- 7a. But if drugs were legalized, wouldn't there be millions more drug
- addicts?
-
- I, too, want to live in a society where people are healthy and
- productive, not destroying their lives with addictive drugs.
-
- All of the hard drugs were legal before 1914, and there were few
- addicts. Studies show that even addicts can be productive, and also
- that they do not engage in crime when they can get their drugs
- inexpensively.
-
- We have addicts today despite drug criminalization. We also have the
- violence that is caused by drugs being illegal. Let's decriminalize
- drugs so we stop the violence and get help to those who need it. [3]
-
-
- 8. Do libertarians support gun ownership as a personal liberty?
-
- Libertarians,, like other Americans, want to be able to walk city
- streets safely and be secure in their homes. We also want our
- Constitutional rights protected, to guard against the erosion of civil
- liberties. In particular, Libertarians want to see all people treated
- equally under the law, as our Constitution requires. America's millions
- of gun owners are people too.
-
- Law-abiding, responsible citizens do not and should not need to ask
- anyone's permission or approval to engage in a peaceful activity. Gun
- ownership, by itself, harms no other person and cannot morally justify
- criminal penalties.
-
- A responsible, well-armed and trained citizenry is the best protection
- against domestic crime and the threat of foreign invasion. America's
- founders knew that. It is still true today.
-
-
- 9. How do libertarians want to handle immigration?
-
- People have the right to travel anywhere, and to take any job offered
- them, so long as they do it at their own expense and without violating
- the rights of others.
-
- A way to help the poor is to let them go where the work is, regardless
- of borders. Studies show that immigrants don't take jobs from others,
- they add to the economy and help create more jobs.
-
- America was built by immigrants who came here seeking nothing but
- opportunity and freedom -- and created the greatest, most productive
- society ever.
-
- Respect for human rights and compassion for the world's poor require
- that we relax immigration restrictions. [3]
-
-
- 10. What position do libertarians have on subsidies for farm and business?
-
- All business people, including farmers, should be able to offer their
- products in a free market without being subsidized by others. The way
- to help both producers and consumers is to remove government programs
- and restrictions which have damaged America's free enterprise system.
-
- Subsidies are harmful and unfair. Why should some businesses be taxed
- to give handouts to others? Why should you pay higher prices to support
- government favored businesses?
-
- Let's stop this nonsense. Then business could operate in a free market
- and all of us could be better fed, clothed and housed at lower cost.
- [3]
-
-
- 11. Are people better off with free trade than with tariffs?
-
- Free trade provides consumers with better goods at lower prices. Trade
- restrictions produce the opposite: shoddy goods and higher prices.
-
- With free trade, consumers pay lower prices for products and thereby
- have more money left to spend on other goods, domestic as well as
- foreign.
-
- Free trade also helps the cause of world peace. In the 1920's and 30's,
- trade barriers went up everywhere, directly contributing to the outbreak
- of World War II. If goods don't cross borders, armies will.
-
- Let's end all trade restrictions and free the world's resources to be
- allocated in the most efficient and productive manner. [3]
-
-
- 12. What position do libertarians take on minimum wage laws?
-
- Skilled, experienced workers make high wages because employers compete
- to hire them. Poorly educated, inexperienced young people can't get
- work because minimum wage laws make them too expensive to hire as
- trainees. Repeal of the minimum wage would allow many young, minority
- and poor people to work.
-
- It must be asked, if the minimum wage is such a good idea, why not raise
- it to $200 an hour? Even the most die-hard minimum wage advocate can
- see there's something wrong with that proposal.
-
- The only "fair" or "correct" wage is what an employer and employee
- voluntarily agree upon. We should repeal minimum wage now. [3]
-
-
- 13. What about the poor?
-
- I want to break the chains of poverty and help the disabled. First
- remove laws that prevent work. Second, privatize welfare.
-
- Permits, licensing, zoning, labor laws. They all stop people who want
- to work, especially minorities. Repeal those laws. Private charity is
- more compassionate and delivers the goods better than the government
- welfare plantation.
-
- We can't make a perfect world. We can do more for the poor by replacing
- inefficient government programs with effective voluntary assistance. [1]
-
- -- David Bergland
-
-
- 14. Don't we need affirmative action to keep bigoted employers from
- refusing to hire minorities and women?
-
- Libertarians want to see people of all types working in the most
- harmonious relationships. "Affirmative action" refers to laws which
- force people into relationships whether they want them or not. Not
- too many years ago, there were laws in many states which prevented people
- of different races from doing a variety of things together, working,
- eating, marriage, etc. Libertarians oppose all such laws because the
- people involved have the right to decide for themselves whether or not
- to enter a relationship or association.
-
- An old saying states: "it takes two to tango." Relationships or
- associations require at least two people. We cannot justify using force
- to keep people out of voluntary relationships and we cannot justify
- forcing private citizens into relationships against their will.
-
- Government employment is a different case. The only criteria for
- employment or advancement in government work should be merit. The
- Constitution requires that we all be given equal treatment under the
- law. Since governments are created by law, they are Constitutionally
- required to be absolutely even handed. Private citizens or companies on
- the other hand have the right to be stupid and suffer the consequences.
-
- Attempts to correct bigotry with affirmative action haven't worked very
- well. Such laws are easy for bigots to circumvent and people tend to
- think minority employees did not earn their positions on merit even if
- they did. They also make it possible for bigots to harass minorities by
- demanding employment at minority owned businesses. [2]
-
-
- 15. How do libertarians feel about taxes?
-
- Americans already obtain a host of services from private providers.
- There is every reason to think that other services, from postal delivery
- to education to road building and maintenance, could be provided more
- efficiently and at lower cost by the private sector.
-
- We should support all moves to reduce and repeal taxes because taxes are
- obtained immorally, by force. The income tax is particularly evil,
- since it penalizes productivity and forces all of us to expose our
- private affairs to government snoopers.
-
- We had no income tax before 1914 and America prospered. Replacing the
- income tax with voluntary methods for financing services should be our
- goal, and we should begin right now. [3]
-
-
- 15a. I'm for cutting taxes, but as a practical matter, how do we do it?
-
- Think of government as a conglomerate of service businesses. The
- providers of those services do not have to be government employees, and
- the services do not have to be paid for with tax dollars. Whether it is
- education, security, transportation, charity, energy, or whatever, the
- private sector is already doing it for less. To cut taxes, we must
- allow private service providers to replace inefficient bureaucracy.
- Market competition will give us better service at lower cost, and put
- the consumers in control. [3]
-
-
- 16. Aren't you going too far?
-
- I want you to be able to govern yourself. The libertarian way lets you
- decide how much independence is good for you and lets others decide for
- themselves.
-
- Replacing political controls with self-government will only go as far as
- you let it. So let's experiment. Cut foreign aid. Deregulate
- transportation. Repeal one drug law. Cut farm subsidies. Cut taxes.
-
- As you gain self government, you will probably want more. That's for
- you to decide. No one can force you to be free. [1]
-
- -- David Bergland
-
-
- 17. Won't these ideas work only if everybody is good?
-
- You don't have to believe people are always good for freedom to work.
- Most people, most of the time, deal with each other on the libertarian
- premise of respect for the rights of others. You don't want to be
- pushed around or to push your neighbors around. You don't steal, cheat
- or mug people. Very few among us commit all the crime. Society would
- collapse if most people were evil most of the time.
-
- If people are basically evil, the last thing you'd want is a big
- government staffed by those evil folks exercising control over you. [1]
-
- -- David Bergland
-
-
- Bibliography:
-
- [1] "Liberty Communicator Course," Advocates for Self-Government, 1988.
-
- [2] Bergland, David, "America's Libertarian Heritage: The Politics of
- Freedom," Orpheus Publications, 1773 Bahama Place, Costa Mesa, CA
- 92626, (714)751-8980, 1991.
-
- [3] "The Liberator," Spring 1992, pp. 18-19, Advocates for Self-
- Government, 3955 Pleasantdale Road, No. 106-A, Atlanta, GA 30340,
- (800)932-1776.
-
- [4] "The Liberator," Summer 1993, p. 13, Advocates for Self-Government.
-