home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!dreaderd!not-for-mail
- Message-ID: <libertarian/non-lib-faq_1082200966@rtfm.mit.edu>
- Supersedes: <libertarian/non-lib-faq_1079601013@rtfm.mit.edu>
- Expires: 31 May 2004 11:22:46 GMT
- X-Last-Updated: 1997/04/22
- From: mhuben@world.std.com (Mike Huben)
- Newsgroups: talk.politics.libertarian,alt.politics.libertarian,alt.activism,alt.anarchism,alt.individualism,misc.legal,talk.politics.misc,alt.answers,misc.answers,talk.answers,news.answers
- Subject: A Non-Libertarian FAQ, Version 1.4
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.EDU
- Followup-To: talk.politics.libertarian,alt.politics.libertarian
- Summary: Libertarian arguments viewed by skeptics.
- Reply-To: mhuben@world.std.com
- Organization: Critiques Of Libertarianism
- Originator: faqserv@penguin-lust.MIT.EDU
- Date: 17 Apr 2004 11:27:44 GMT
- Lines: 1351
- NNTP-Posting-Host: penguin-lust.mit.edu
- X-Trace: 1082201264 senator-bedfellow.mit.edu 569 18.181.0.29
- Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu talk.politics.libertarian:674011 alt.politics.libertarian:769392 alt.activism:576673 alt.anarchism:179221 alt.individualism:69910 misc.legal:504707 talk.politics.misc:3001436 alt.answers:72485 misc.answers:17210 talk.answers:7059 news.answers:269897
-
- Archive-name: libertarian/non-lib-faq
- Posting-Frequency: monthly
-
- A Non-Libertarian FAQ.
-
- Part of the "Critiques of Libertarianism" site.
- http://world.std.com/~mhuben/libindex.html
-
- Last updated 04/17/97.
-
- Version 1.4
-
- Copyright (c) 1997 Mike Huben.
- This document may be freely distributed for non-commercial purposes if it is
- reproduced in its textual entirety, with this notice intact.
-
- Please send comments to mhuben@world.std.com . I welcome suggestions for
- redistribution, additions, enhancements, and corrections.
-
- TABLE OF CONTENTS:
-
- * INTRODUCTION
- * ABOUT THIS FAQ
- * WHAT IS LIBERTARIANISM?
- * STRATEGIES FOR ARGUMENT
- * LIBERTARIAN EVANGELISTIC ARGUMENTS
- 1. The original intent of the founders has been perverted.
- 2. The US Government ignores the plain meaning of the constitution.
- 3. The Declaration Of Independence says...
- 4. Libertarians are defenders of freedom and rights.
- 5. Taxation is theft.
- 6. If you don't pay your taxes, men with guns will show up at your
- house, initiate force and put you in jail.
- 7. Social Contract? I never signed no steenking social contract.
- 8. The social contract is like no other because it can be
- "unilaterally" modified.
- 9. Other misc. claims denying the social contract.
- 10. Why should I be coerced to leave if I don't like the social
- contract?
- 11. Do Cubans under Castro agree to their social contract?
- 12. Isn't that "love it or leave it"?
- 13. Why should we be coerced to accept the social contract? Why can't
- we be left alone?
- 14. We can't emigrate because there is no libertarian nation.
- 15. Extortion by the state is no different than extortion by the
- Mafia.
- 16. There's no such thing as rights to govern territory!
- 17. Why should I be told what to do with my property? That infringes
- on my rights of ownership.
- 18. Of course it's my property. I paid money and hold the deed.
- 19. New limitations on use of property are a taking, and should be
- compensated.
- 20. Think how much wealthier we'd be if we didn't pay taxes.
- 21. We lived in a fairly libertarian society in the US 150 years ago.
- 22. "Might Makes Right" is the principle behind statism.
- 23. I want self-government, not other-government.
- 24. Why shouldn't we adopt libertarian government now?
- 25. There's a conspiracy to prevent a working libertarian experiment.
- 26. An event is explained by the issue at hand.
- 27. Haven't you read "Libertarianism in One Lesson"?
- 28. Have you read "No Treason: The Constitution of No Authority"?
- 29. Libertarians oppose the initiation of force.
- 30. Dred Scott and the Fugitive Slave Laws were examples of government
- enforcement of slavery.
- 31. The World's Smallest Political Quiz. [Nolan Test]
- 32. The Libertarian Party: America's third largest political party.
- 33. You're a Statist!
- 34. Why do you spend so much time trying to debunk?
- * QUOTATIONS POPULAR WITH LIBERTARIAN EVANGELISTS
- o Frederic Bastiat (1801-1850)
- o Lysander Spooner (1808-1887)
- o Thomas Jefferson
- o Alexander Fraser Tyler
- o Ayn Rand
- o Andre Marrou
- o James A. Donald
- o Unattributed
- * LIBERTARIAN PHILOSOPHY
- * CRITICAL REFERENCES
- * BIBLIOGRAPHY
- * CREDITS
-
- INTRODUCTION
-
- Many USENET readers encounter libertarianism for the first time on USENET.
- Such unfamiliar claims might be quite difficult to judge if we haven't had
- the time to think of reasons why the claims might be false. This FAQ is
- intended to review a few common libertarian claims that seem wrong to
- newcomers, and present some arguments in opposition that show their
- shortcomings.
-
- ABOUT THIS FAQ
-
- The purpose of this FAQ is not to attack libertarianism, but some of the
- more fallacious arguments within it. That done, libertarians can then
- reformulate or reject these arguments. This is also needed to help people
- place libertarianism and its arguments in context. It is very hard to find
- any literature about libertarianism that was NOT written by its advocates.
- This isolation from normal political discourse makes it difficult to
- evaluate libertarian claims without much more research or analysis than most
- of us have time for. Compare this to (for example) the extensive literature
- of socialism and communism written by ideologues, scholars, pundits, etc. on
- all sides. Libertarianism is scantily analyzed outside its own movement.
- Let's fix that.
-
- This particular FAQ is mostly a personal view of libertarianism. It is
- impossible to have an objective view of something like libertarianism, and
- it would be a mistake to presume this FAQ is. (Or that the FAQs written by
- proponents are.) It is also impossible for this FAQ to represent all the
- opposing positions to libertarianism, though I hope to see many future
- contributions from others. One notable failing (common to many libertarians
- as well) is that this FAQ is rather US-centric. All statements in this FAQ
- can be argued further by both sides, and indeed most have in several answers
- to this FAQ. However, feel free to save a copy of this FAQ and cite from it.
- It may not be ultimate truth, but it can be a starting point for answers to
- libertarianism.
-
- The editor and primary author, Mike Huben , has 20 years experience in
- debate over electronic networks. Much of that has been with religious
- believers and creationists, and this colors some of the arguments and
- examples. No judgement or personal offense is intended, though there is a
- substantial amount of ridicule of arguments (based in large part on my
- belief that it is the most effective antidote to pompous argument.) I
- welcome recommendations for alleviating offense while retaining the sense
- and humor of the arguments.
-
- This FAQ is an unfinished work. Vast sections have yet to be created: as in
- talk.origins, we might expect perhaps 20 FAQs to eventually result. Only the
- first major section (Evangelism) has been written and included here. This
- FAQ is written in HTML, then converted to plain text for posting.
-
- WHAT IS LIBERTARIANISM?
-
- It's hard to clearly define libertarianism. "It's a desert topping!" "No,
- it's a floor wax!" "Wait-- it's both!" It's a mixture of social philosophy,
- economic philosophy, a political party, and more. It would be unjust for me
- to try to characterize libertarianism too exactly: libertarians should be
- allowed to represent their own positions. At least two FAQs have been
- created by libertarians to introduce their positions. But the two major
- flavors are anarcho-capitalists (who want to eliminate political
- governments) and minarchists (who want to minimize government.) There are
- many more subtle flavorings, such as Austrian and Chicago economic schools,
- gold-bug, space cadets, Old-Right, paleo-libertarians, classical liberals,
- hard money, the Libertarian Party, influences from Ayn Rand, and others. An
- interesting survey is in chapter 36 of Marshall's "Demanding the Impossible:
- A History of Anarchism", "The New Right and Anarcho-capitalism."
-
- This diversity of libertarian viewpoints can make it quite difficult to have
- a coherent discussion with them, because an argument that is valid for or
- against one type of libertarianism may not apply to other types. This is a
- cause of much argument in alt.politics.libertarian: non-libertarians may
- feel that they have rebutted some libertarian point, but some other flavor
- libertarian may feel that his "one true libertarianism" doesn't have that
- flaw. These sorts of arguments can go on forever because both sides think
- they are winning. Thus, if you want to try to reduce the crosstalk, you're
- going to have to specify what flavor of libertarianism or which particular
- point of libertarianism you are arguing against.
-
- Libertarians are a small group whose beliefs are unknown to and not accepted
- by the vast majority. They are utopian because there has never yet been a
- libertarian society (though one or two have come close to some libertarian
- ideas.) These two facts should not keep us from considering libertarian
- ideas seriously, however they do caution us about accepting them for
- practical purposes.
-
- STRATEGIES FOR ARGUMENT
-
- Many libertarian arguments are like fundamentalist arguments: they depend
- upon restricting your attention to a very narrow field so that you will not
- notice that they fail outside of that field. For example, fundamentalists
- like to restrict the argument to the bible. Libertarians like to restrict
- the argument to their notions of economics, justice, history, and rights and
- their misrepresentations of government and contracts. Widen the scope, and
- their questionable assumptions leap into view. Why should I accept that
- "right" as a given? Is that a fact around the world, not just in the US? Are
- there counter examples for that idea? Are libertarians serving their own
- class interest only? Is that economic argument complete, or are there other
- critical factors or strategies which have been omitted? When they make a
- historical argument, can we find current real-world counterexamples? If we
- adopt this libertarian policy, there will be benefits: but what will the
- disadvantages be? Are libertarians reinventing what we already have, only
- without safeguards?
-
- There are some common counterarguments for which libertarians have excellent
- rebuttals. Arguments that government is the best or only way to do something
- may fail: there are many examples of many government functions being
- performed privately. Some of them are quite surprising. Arguments based on
- getting any services free from government will fail: all government services
- cost money that comes from somewhere. Arguments that we have a free market
- are patently untrue: there are many ways the market is modified.
-
- There are a number of scientific, economic, political, and philosophical
- concepts which you may need to understand to debate some particular point.
- These include free market, public goods, externalities, tragedy of the
- commons, prisoner's dilemma, adverse selection, market failure, mixed
- economy, evolution, catastrophe theory, game theory, etc. Please feel free
- to suggest other concepts for this list.
-
- One way to bring about a large volume of argument is to cross-post to
- another political group with opposing ideas, such as
- alt.politics.radical-left. The results are quite amusing, though there is a
- lot more heat than light. Let's not do this more often than is necessary to
- keep us aware that libertarianism is not universally accepted.
-
- LIBERTARIAN EVANGELISTIC ARGUMENTS
-
- Evangelists (those trying to persuade others to adopt their beliefs)
- generally have extensively studied which arguments have the greatest effect
- on the unprepared. Usually, these arguments are brief propositions that can
- be memorized easily and regurgitated in large numbers. These arguments, by
- the process of selection, tend not to have obvious refutations, and when
- confronted by a refutation, the commonest tactic is to recite another
- argument. This eliminates the need for actual understanding of the basis of
- arguments, and greatly speeds the rate at which evangelists can be trained.
-
- Without preparation, even blatantly fallacious arguments may disturb or
- convince a targeted individual. Evangelists, who tend to be more interested
- in effect than in accuracy, don't tend to point out that there are usually
- lots of valid counterarguments available, sometimes known for millennia.
-
- If the target is not the person spoken to (it may be a group of onlookers,
- such as the lurkers in newsgroups or listeners on a radio show), we might
- expect that the "discussion" will focus on making the person spoken to seem
- wrong, ridiculous, uncomfortable, at a loss, etc.
-
- Small wonder many people are not interested in entering "discussions" with
- evangelists! They're likely to be out-prepared, swamped (or worse convinced)
- by specious arguments, and possibly used as a cat's paw in the persuasion of
- listeners.
-
- The arguments treated here are not strawman misrepresentations: they are all
- evangelistic arguments that have actually been made by libertarians. Many of
- them have been made frequently. Although they are often used
- evangelistically, we can't presume that someone making them doesn't
- understand their basis or cannot support their argument. And on the other
- hand, often other libertarians cringe when they hear these.
-
- Most of these questions are phrased as assertions: that is simply a less
- clumsy shorthand for "How could I respond to a libertarian claiming X?",
- where X is the assertion.
-
- 1. The original intent of the founders has been perverted.
-
- The founders of the USA were a contentious lot, who hardly agreed on
- any one thing, let alone libertarian notions. It is well documented
- that the Constitution and Bill of Rights are compromises amongst them:
- few agreed wholeheartedly with any particular part. Thus, looking to
- the founders for "original intent" is silly: it will vary amongst them.
- Not to mention that "original intent" (or original understanding) is
- just as open to interpretation as the Constitution itself because while
- there is lots of explicit data, it is from many contradictory sources.
- For example, Judge Bork presents notably non-libertarian versions of
- original intent.
-
- I think the best way to interpret the constitution is the way the
- founders explicitly specified in the Constitution: look to the courts,
- especially the Supreme Court. The Constitution leaves the method of its
- interpretation by the court entirely to the court to decide. This begs
- the question of how to judge the interpretive philosophies of the
- possible justices, but libertarians seldom get that far.
-
- "The interpretation of the laws is the proper and peculiar province of
- the courts. A constitution is, in fact, and must be regarded by the
- judges, as a fundamental law. It therefore belongs to them to ascertain
- its meaning, as well as the meaning of any particular act proceeding
- from the legislative body." Federalist No. 78.
-
- There is no reason short of worship of the founders to presume that the
- Supreme Court is less capable than the founders. Indeed, many
- libertarians from outside the US find the authority of the founders
- unconvincing. One writes: "As a Canadian, I don't give a _damn_ what
- the `founders' intended. I hate it when a net.opponent trots out some
- bit of tired U.S. history as a most holy of holies, not to be
- questioned."
-
- Jefferson himself said this plainly: "Some men look at constitutions
- with sanctimonious reverence, and deem them like the ark of the
- Covenant, too sacred to be touched. They ascribe to the men of the
- preceding age a wisdom more than human, and suppose what they did to be
- beyond amendment... laws and institutions must go hand in hand with the
- progress of the human mind... as that becomes more developed, more
- enlightened, as new discoveries are made, institutions must advance
- also, to keep pace with the times.... We might as well require a man to
- wear still the coat which fitted him when a boy as civilized society to
- remain forever under the regimen of their barbarous ancestors."
-
- 2. The US Government ignores the plain meaning of the constitution.
-
- Often this is presented as "The US wouldn't be so bad if the government
- followed the Constitution."
-
- "Plain meaning" is a matter of opinion. A plain meaning one century can
- well be reversed in another, depending on popular usage, historical
- context, etc. Well intentioned people can disagree on "plain meaning"
- endlessly, as we see in any non-unanimous court decision. For practical
- purposes, the meaning MUST be decided one way or another.
-
- Libertarian claims of "plain meaning" are often clearly shaped by their
- beliefs. Where this occurs, it's pretty obvious that their claims to
- "plain meaning" are not "common sense".
-
- 3. The Declaration Of Independence says...
-
- The Declaration Of Independence is a rhetorical document, without legal
- standing in the USA. That status was a deliberate decision of the
- founders, not an accident. If it is purported to reflect the intent of
- the founders, then we can only conclude that they changed their minds
- when writing the Articles of Confederation and then the Constitution.
-
- Nor should it be mistaken for a philosophical treatise: that was not
- its purpose. If a libertarian would like to defend it as philosophy, he
- should rely on sound argument, not reverence for the founders.
-
- 4. Libertarians are defenders of freedom and rights.
-
- Libertarians frequently try to present themselves as the group to join
- to defend your freedom and rights. Lots of other organizations (many of
- which you would not want to be associated with, such as Scientologists)
- also fight for freedom and rights. I prefer the ACLU. (Indeed, if you
- wish to act effectively, the ACLU is the way to go: they advertise that
- they take on 6,000 cases a year free of charge, and claim involvement
- in 80% of landmark Supreme Court cases since 1920.)
-
- It would be foolish to oppose libertarians on such a mom-and-apple-pie
- issue as freedom and rights: better to point out that there are
- EFFECTIVE alternatives with a historical track record, something
- libertarianism lacks.
-
- Nor might we need or want to accept the versions of "freedom" and
- "rights" that libertarians propose. To paraphrase Anatole France: "How
- noble libertarianism, in its majestic equality, that both rich and poor
- are equally prohibited from peeing in the privately owned streets
- (without paying), sleeping under the privately owned bridges (without
- paying), and coercing bread from its rightful owners!"
-
- 5. Taxation is theft.
-
- Two simple rebuttals to this take widely different approaches.
-
- The first is that property is theft. The notion behind property is that
- A declares something to be property, and threatens anybody who still
- wants to use it. Where does A get the right to forcibly stop others
- from using it? Arguments about "mixing of labor" with the resource as a
- basis for ownership boil down to "first-come-first-served". This
- criticism is even accepted by some libertarians, and is favorably
- viewed by David Friedman. This justifies property taxes or extraction
- taxes on land or extractable resources if you presume that the
- government is a holder in trust for natural resources. (However, most
- people who question the creation of property would agree that after the
- creation of property, a person is entitled to his earnings. Thus the
- second argument)
-
- The second is that taxation is part of a social contract. Essentially,
- tax is payment in exchange for services from government. This kind of
- argument is suitable for defending almost any tax as part of a
- contract. Many libertarians accept social contract (for example,
- essentially all minarchists must to insist on a monopoly of
- government.) Of course they differ as to what should be IN the
- contract.
-
- 6. If you don't pay your taxes, men with guns will show up at your house,
- initiate force and put you in jail.
-
- This is not initiation of force. It is enforcement of contract, in this
- case an explicit social contract. Many libertarians make a big deal of
- "men with guns" enforcing laws, yet try to overlook the fact that "men
- with guns" are the basis of enforcement of any complete social system.
- Even if libertarians reduced all law to "don't commit fraud or initiate
- force", they would still enforce with guns.
-
- 7. Social Contract? I never signed no steenking social contract.
-
- That argument and some of the following libertarian arguments are
- commonly quoted from Lysander Spooner.
-
- The constitution and the laws are our written contracts with the
- government.
-
- There are several explicit means by which people make the social
- contract with government. The commonest is when your parents choose
- your residency and/or citizenship after your birth. In that case, your
- parents or guardians are contracting for you, exercising their power of
- custody. No further explicit action is required on your part to
- continue the agreement, and you may end it at any time by departing and
- renouncing your citizenship.
-
- Immigrants, residents, and visitors contract through the oath of
- citizenship (swearing to uphold the laws and constitution), residency
- permits, and visas. Citizens reaffirm it in whole or part when they
- take political office, join the armed forces, etc. This contract has a
- fairly common form: once entered into, it is implicitly continued until
- explicitly revoked. Many other contracts have this form: some leases,
- most utility services (such as phone and electricity), etc.
-
- Some libertarians make a big deal about needing to actually sign a
- contract. Take them to a restaurant and see if they think it ethical to
- walk out without paying because they didn't sign anything. Even if it
- is a restaurant with a minimum charge and they haven't ordered
- anything. The restaurant gets to set the price and the method of
- contract so that even your presence creates a debt. What is a
- libertarian going to do about that? Create a regulation?
-
- 8. The social contract is like no other because it can be "unilaterally"
- modified.
-
- Not true. Consider the purchase of a condominium. You have a contract
- with the condominium association, agreeing to pay the fees they levy
- for the services they provide and obey the rules that they create. You
- have an equal vote with the other residents on the budget and the
- rules. If you don't like the budget or rules that are enacted, you can
- vote with your feet or persuade everyone to change them.
-
- There are numerous other common sorts of contracts that allow changes
- by one or both sides without negotiation. Gas, electric, oil, water,
- phone, and other utility services normally have contracts where at most
- they need to notify you in advance when they change their rates.
- Insurance companies raise their rates, and your only input is either
- pay the new rates or "vote with your feet". (The exception is when
- rates are supervised by government regulatory agencies.)
-
- 9. Other misc. claims denying the social contract.
-
- One commonly cited Spooner argument is that the social contract is like
- no other, and thus not a contract. That's a nonsequitur. A unique
- feature or combination of features doesn't disqualify something from
- being a contract.
-
- Some complain that the social contract is fundamentally unjust because
- it doesn't treat people equally, that people are taxed unequally or
- receive services unequally. So? Like insurance, rates can vary from
- individual to individual, and services received may be more or less
- than premiums paid.
-
- Some complain "Any contract where the enforcing agency is one of the
- contractors is hardly fair." But the U.S. Constitution is a contract
- between SEVERAL parties: the three branches of the government, the
- states, and citizens. It's a multilateral contract where every party is
- subject to enforcement by one or more of the other parties, and every
- party is involved in enforcement for at least one other. This pattern
- of checks and balances was specifically designed to deal with precisely
- this fairness issue.
-
- 10. Why should I be coerced to leave if I don't like the social contract?
-
- Why leave an apartment if you change your mind about the lease? You do
- not own the apartment, just as you do not own the nation. At most, you
- may own some property within the apartment, just as you may own some
- property within the nation.
-
- 11. Do Cubans under Castro agree to their social contract?
-
- If you define contracts as voluntary, then you probably wouldn't say
- the Cuban government operates by social contract, since most people who
- wanted to emmigrate have not been permitted to.
-
- Most libertarians have a peculiar definition of voluntary: contractual
- agreement makes all requirements of the contract "voluntary", no matter
- how unexpected they are, no matter how long the contract lasts for, no
- matter if the contractee changes his mind. However, they're seldom
- willing to view our social contract in that manner.
-
- Our social contract in the USA is one of the nice, voluntary contracts
- that libertarians should like. Even better, because you can terminate
- it by leaving at any time. There is no US government obstacle to
- emmigration from the US.
-
- 12. Isn't that "love it or leave it"?
-
- Nope. This is a distinction that seems too subtle for a lot of
- libertarians: the difference between having a choice and having to
- leave.
-
- For example, let's say you live in a condominium, and are very fond of
- it. As long as you can move out, you have a choice. No matter how
- firmly you intend to stay. No matter how much you prefer your current
- condo. No matter how good or bad your current condo is for you, you
- still have a choice.
-
- This is analogous to living in a nation. You choose which one to live
- in, and you can change. You may not be able to improve some things
- about it all by yourself, because it is not entirely yours.
-
- You have at least 4 choices. 1) Tolerate the social contract, and
- perhaps try to amend it. 2) Leave it by emigrating. 3) Violate it. 4)
- Revolt.
-
- 13. Why should we be coerced to accept the social contract? Why can't we be
- left alone?
-
- You are not coerced to accept US government services any more than you
- are coerced to rent or purchase a place to live. If pretty much all
- territory is owned by governments, and pretty much all houses and
- apartments are owned, well, did you want them to grow on trees? There
- ain't no such thing as a free lunch.
-
- 14. We can't emigrate because there is no libertarian nation.
-
- Yes you can emmigrate, just as you could buy a different car even
- though your favorite company doesn't produce cars which let you travel
- at the speed of sound and get 2000 mpg. Even if nobody produces EXACTLY
- what you want, you can choose any car the market produces or you create
- yourself.
-
- There are roughly 200 nations to which you could emmigrate. They are
- the product of an anarcho-capitalist free market: there is no
- over-government dictating to those sovereign nations. Indeed, the only
- difference between the anarchy of nations and libertopia is that
- anarcho-capitalists are wishing for a smaller granularity. These
- nations have found that it is most cost-efficient to defend themselves
- territorially.
-
- If any other market provided 200 choices, libertarians would declare
- that the sacred workings of the market blessed whatever choices were
- offered. The point is that choices do exist: it's up to libertarians to
- show that there is something wrong with the market of nations in a way
- they would accept being applied to markets within nations.
-
- Libertaria is a combination of values that just doesn't exist: the
- government equivalent of a really posh residence for very little money.
- You can find nations which have much lower taxes, etc.: just don't
- expect them to be first class.
-
- And the reason these combinations don't exist is probably simple: the
- free market of government services essentially guarantees that there is
- no such thing as the free lunch libertarians want. It's not
- competitive.
- 15. Extortion by the state is no different than extortion by the Mafia.
-
- This is a prize piece of libertarian rhetoric, because it slides in the
- accusation that taxation is extortion. This analogy initially seems
- strong, because both are territorial. However, libertarians consider
- contractual rental of land by owners (which is also fundamentally
- territorial) ethical, and consider coercion of squatters by those
- owners ethical. The key difference is who owns what. The Mafia doesn't
- own anything to contract about. The landowner owns the land (in a
- limited sense.) And the US government owns rights to govern its
- territory. (These rights are a form of property, much as mineral rights
- are a form of property. Let's not confuse them with rights of
- individuals.) Thus, the social contract can be required by the
- territorial property holder: the USA.
-
- 16. There's no such thing as rights to govern territory!
-
- You'd have to ignore an awful lot of history to claim this sort of
- PROPERTY didn't exist. The US government can demonstrate ownership of
- such rights through treaty, purchase, bequeathment by the original
- colonies and some other states, and conquest. The EXACT same sources as
- all other forms of land ownership in the US. Also note that governance
- rights are merely a subset of the rights that anarcho-libertarians
- would want landowners to have. For example, insistence on contractual
- obedience to regulations and acceptance of punishment for violations.
-
- 17. Why should I be told what to do with my property? That infringes on my
- rights of ownership.
-
- This question comes up rather often, since absolute ownership of
- property is fundamental to most flavors of libertarianism. Such
- propertarianism fuels daydreams of being able to force the rest of the
- world to swirl around the immovable rock of your property. For example,
- there were trespass lawsuits filed against airlines for flying over
- property.
-
- A good answer is: what makes you so sure it is yours?
-
- 18. Of course it's my property. I paid money and hold the deed.
-
- What do you hold the deed to? Property as recognized by a government.
- As such, you can address infringement of your rights through the legal
- system. However your property as recognized by the legal system is
- limited.
-
- This isn't too surprising, since limitations created by private
- transactions are also common. For example, property is often sold
- without water rights or timber rights. Property is commonly sold with
- easements: for example a neighbor may have the right to cross to reach
- the road. And property may be sold with limitations to its usage: for
- example, the Adirondack State Park was bequeathed to the people of New
- York State with the stipulation that it remain forever wild.
-
- Most government limitations on property are analogous, and you bought
- property that was already under those limitations. Just as it would be
- wrong to deny the validity of an easement sold by the previous owner,
- it is wrong to deny the validity of the current system of limited
- ownership of property. For example, a clear statement of such an
- "easement" is in the Fourth Amendment, which essentially says that the
- government can enter your property with a valid search warrant and not
- be trespassing.
-
- There are many existing limitations such as government rights to tax
- and to zone property, limitations to ownership of navigable waters, how
- far property extends to the water, etc. And sometimes new limitations
- are specified, such as non-ownership of airspace above property.
-
- 19. New limitations on use of property are a taking, and should be
- compensated.
-
- Some new limitations can be viewed as merely making specific that what
- was claimed was never really owned. For example, where was ownership of
- airspace above property ever explicitly granted in our system of
- property? Where were polluters ever explicitly granted the right to
- dump wastes into air or water that they do not have a title to?
-
- Other limitations (such as rezoning to eliminate undesirable business
- or protecting wetlands from development) might be viewed as control of
- negative externalities. Most libertarians would recognize the right of
- a mall owner to write his leases so that he could terminate them if the
- renters cause externalities: why shouldn't communities have this right
- to self-governance as well?
-
- 20. Think how much wealthier we'd be if we didn't pay taxes.
-
- This is a classic example of libertarians not looking at the complete
- equation for at least two reasons. (1) If taxes are eliminated, you'll
- need to purchase services that were formerly provided by government.
- (2) If taxes are eliminated, the economics of wages have changed, and
- wages will change as well.
-
- Here's a really ludicrous (but real) example of (1): "With taxation
- gone, not only will we have twice as much money to spend, but it will
- go twice as far, since those who produce goods and services won't have
- to pay taxes, either. In one stroke we'll be effectively four times as
- rich. Let's figure that deregulation will cut prices, once again, by
- half. Now our actual purchasing power, already quadrupled by
- deTAXification, is doubled again. We now have eight times our former
- wealth!" (L. Neil Smith)
-
- And here's an example of (2): "I'm self-employed. My pay would
- absolutely, positively go up 15+% tomorrow if I wasn't paying
- FICA/Medicare." But only briefly. Standard microeconomic theory applies
- just as well to someone selling labor as to someone selling widgits. If
- FICA disappeared, your competitors in the market to sell labor would be
- attracted to the higher wages and would sell more labor. This increase
- in supply of labor would drive down your wage from the 15% increase.
- You'd earn more (per hour). But less than 15% more.
-
- 21. We lived in a fairly libertarian society in the US 150 years ago.
-
- A classic libertarian roll-back-the-clock argument, that sounds good at
- first because none of us directly remembers it. Libertarians do usually
- remember and criticize some of the more prominent non-libertarian
- features of that period, such as unequal protection under the law for
- blacks and women. However, they seem to overlook a lot of other
- important things.
-
- Yes, the Federal government had a much lighter hand then. However,
- state and local governments had a much greater influence. There is not
- one class of positive duty or obligation in the US today that did not
- exist 200 years ago at state or federal level.
-
- All the biggies were there except income tax. The equivalent of income
- tax was property tax (on all possessions) or head tax by many states.
- There was involuntary conscription, eminent domain, etc. As a matter of
- fact, things got much better when powers of states were interpreted to
- be restricted by the US constitution (much later.) Powers such as state
- religious authority.
-
- Also, society was organized quite differently before the industrial
- revolution spread to the US. Our "nation of shopkeepers" was actually a
- nation of farmers. The means of production were controlled primarily by
- the workers (who were the owners of the farms and shops.) Government of
- that era would be as out-of-place today as the tarriffs and scientific
- knowledge of that era.
-
- 22. "Might Makes Right" is the principle behind statism.
-
- No, "Might makes ability to make something", Right or Wrong. You can't
- even try for Right until you have Might to back it up in the real
- world. That's the reason that some real governments have survived and
- all utopian governments that have tried to abolish force have failed.
-
- However, government is not alone in requiring might. All property is
- based on might as well. Nobody is beholden to your notions of what
- constitutes your property. Property is just as "involuntary" as the
- social contract. There is no moral obligation for anyone to respect
- your property: only a practical one.
-
- Recognition that the fundamental nature of property is based on force
- is essential to recognition that there are costs and benefits to the
- principle of property. It is not as negative a "right" as libertarians
- like to portray it.
-
- 23. I want self-government, not other-government.
-
- "Self government" is libertarian newspeak for "everybody ought to be
- able to live as if they are the only human in the universe, if only
- they believe in the power of libertarianism." It's a utopian ideal like
- those of some Marxists and born-agains that would essentially require
- some sort of human perfection to work.
-
- More explicitly, "self government" is the peculiar notion that other
- people ought not to be able to regulate your behavior. Much as we would
- like to be free of such regulation, most people also want to be able to
- regulate the behavior of others for practical reasons. Some
- libertarians claim that they want the first so much, that they will be
- willing to forgo the second. Most other people feel that both are
- necessary (and that it would be hypocritical or stupid to want just
- one.)
-
- 24. Why shouldn't we adopt libertarian government now?
-
- Because there are no working examples of libertarian cities, states, or
- nations.
-
- Innumerable other ideologies have put their money where their mouths
- are, if not their lives. Examples include most nations that have had
- Marxist revolutions, Israel, many of the American colonies, a huge
- number of religious and utopian communities, etc.
-
- Yet libertarians want us to risk what many of them consider the best
- nation in the world with their untested beliefs. It's not even sensible
- to convert here first for the claimed economic benefits of
- libertarianism: there would be less marginal benefit to converting the
- USA to a libertarian system than most other nations. Let libertarians
- bear the risk and cost of their own experiment.
-
- Let libertarians point to successful libertarian programs to seek our
- endorsement. For example, narcotic decriminalization in Holland has
- been a success. So has legalized prostitution in Nevada and Germany
- (and probably other places.) Privatization of some municipal services
- has been successful in some communities. But these are extremely small
- scale compared to the total libertarian agenda, and do not rule out
- emergent problems and instabilities of a full scale libertarian system.
-
- 25. There's a conspiracy to prevent a working libertarian experiment.
-
- Right. Uh huh. [Read: sarcasm.]
-
- Libertarians sometimes cite the Minerva project (armed squatting on a
- Tongan island) and an attempted overthrow of the government of
- Suriname. If libertarians are too inept to compete internationally
- through diplomacy, politics, bribery, or force of arms, it hardly takes
- a conspiracy to explain that they lost. That's what sovereignty takes.
-
- A working libertarian experiment could be easily county sized. A tiny
- religious sect was able to buy control of Antelope, Oregon and relocate
- there a few years ago: the vastly more numerous libertarians could do
- much more. Privatize the roads, schools, libraries, police. Abolish
- property taxes, zoning, anything not required by the state. Then show
- the benefits. Yes, the state will prevent you from achieving some
- libertarian goals: do what you can to show how you can improve things.
- You shouldn't have to go 100% libertarian to show marked benefits
- according to most libertarian claims.
-
- 26. An event is explained by the issue at hand.
-
- This is really a class of argument, "post hoc, ergo propter hoc", that
- is made all too often by arguers of all stripes. The claims made with
- this sort of argument by libertarians are innumerable. Counter examples
- and other issues that plainly had influence are usually extremely easy
- to find. Here are some real claims actually made in a.p.l.
-
- For example: "The automotive recession started in October 1989, which
- was the start of the requirement that some cars of each manufacturer be
- fitted with air bags... Perhaps the reason that car sales have gone
- down is that many consumers are not willing to pay for a car with air
- bags."
-
- For example: "There are as many military reasons why the draft is bad
- as there are moral ones. Witness our success using a volunteer army
- versus a conscripted one."
-
- It would be possible to collect libertarian examples of the other
- classes of fallacies of argument, but this frequent one can serve as
- the exemplar. This particular one comes up a lot because of the lure of
- testing theory with reality.
-
- 27. Haven't you read "Libertarianism in One Lesson"?
-
- Every belief system has its evangelistic writings, designed to help
- convince or draw in new members. The Campus Crusade for Christ uses
- "Evidence That Demands A Verdict", Scientology uses "Dianetics", and
- libertarians use "Libertarianism in One Lesson".
-
- All of these books are very convincing-- in the absence of
- counterargument. However, they are easily rebutted by skeptics because
- they MUST omit the exceptions to their point of view to be convincing.
-
- If I may cite a convert: "Libertarians like me believe in a simple
- morality-- everyone should be free to do what they like, so long as
- they don't initiate use of force... If you're not familiar with this
- morality, I urge you to read "Libertarianism in One Lesson", by David
- Bergland. I was personally shocked to find that things could be so
- neatly axiomatized, and what's even more remarkable is that in the
- empirical world, societies seem to me to be punished in an eye for an
- eye fashion from their deviation from this simple morality. We are
- deviating quite a bit and suffering accordingly... in my view this is
- why economic growth is stagnating, the inner cities are dying..."
-
- Any time I read how simple it is to understand the world through system
- X, I know I'm dealing with a convert from evangelistic writings. They
- blithely assert that their explanations show the true cause of current
- problems. And the key to showing them to be wrong, is to show that
- there's more complexity to the world than is encompassed by their
- simplistic explanations.
-
- 28. Have you read "No Treason: The Constitution of No Authority"?
-
- "No Treason" is a lengthy rant that doesn't take longer than the first
- paragraph to begin its egregious errors.
-
- For example, in the first paragraph: "It [The Constitution] purports,
- at most, to be only a contract between persons living eighty years
- ago." Thus he focuses his attention on the Preamble, and evidently
- ignores Article VII, which says EXACTLY who contracted for the
- Constitution:
-
- "The ratification of the conventions of nine States shall be sufficient
- for the establishment of this Constitution between the States so
- ratifying the same. Done in Convention, by the unanimous consent of the
- States present, the seventeenth day of September, in the year of our
- Lord one thousand seven hundred and eighty-seven, and of the
- Independence of the United States of America the twelfth. In Witness
- whereof, we have hereunto subscribed our names."
- [signatories FOR STATES omitted.]
-
- He's wrong on this simple matter of fact: the constitution says who
- contracted with whom. But then he goes on to make a big deal about the
- people of that era being dead, as if contracts between organizations
- lapse when their office holders depart.
-
- The rest of his "analysis" is equally shoddy, and consists largely of
- calling government a collection of thieves and murderers at least 75
- times. David Friedman, in "The Machinery of Freedom", says Spooner
- "attacks the contract theory of government like a lawyer arguing a
- case": but REAL presentations of cases have to cope with
- counterarguments, and can't depend so heavily on invalid presumptions
- which are easily shot full of holes.
-
- 29. Libertarians oppose the initiation of force.
-
- How noble. And I'm sure that in a real libertarian society, everybody
- would hold to this morality as much as Christians turn the other cheek.
- [ :-( For the sarcasm-impaired.]
-
- "Initiation of force" is another libertarian newspeak term that does
- not mean what the uninitiated might think. Libertarians except defense
- of property and prosecution of fraud, and call them retaliatory force.
- But retaliation can be the initiation of force: I don't need force to
- commit theft or fraud. This is a bit of rhetorical sleight of hand that
- libs like to play so that they can pretend they are different than
- government. You know: break a law (like not paying your taxes) and MEN
- WITH GUNS initiate force. Sorry, but you've gotta play fair: it can't
- be initiation for government and retaliation for you.
-
- Like most other non-pacifistic belief systems, libertarians want to
- initiate force for what they identify as their interests and call it
- righteous retaliation, and use the big lie technique to define
- everything else as evil "initiation of force". They support the initial
- force that has already taken place in the formation of the system of
- property, and wish to continue to use force to perpetuate it and make
- it more rigid.
-
- The National Libertarian Party membership form has "the pledge" on it:
- "I do not believe in or advocate the initiation of force as a means of
- achieving political or social goals." It's quite amusing to hear how
- much libertarians disagree over what it means: whether it is or isn't
- ok to overthrow the US because it has "initiated force" and they would
- be "retaliating".
-
- Beyond this perceived class interest, libertarian dislike of
- "initiation of force" isn't much different than anyone else's. It may
- be humanitarian, defensive, etc.
-
- 30. Dred Scott and the Fugitive Slave Laws were examples of government
- enforcement of slavery.
-
- No. There's a subtle distinction: they were enforcement of property
- rights of slaveowners. It was entirely the owners assertion that he was
- property that the government was acting upon. If the owner had at any
- time freed him, he would not have been a slave.
-
- Libertarians would love to lay slavery at the feet of government
- precisely because slavery is a sin of capitalism. The US government
- NEVER enslaved the blacks. The US government never said "you must now
- own this slave" or "you've never been a slave before, but you are one
- now." US slavery was initiated by capitalists.
-
- The US government was NOT in the business of proclaiming people free or
- slaves: that was a private sector responsibility until that Evil
- Statist Lincoln stole that sacred private right for the State. Until
- that time, only private, capitalist owners had the right to declare
- whether a black person was free or slave.
-
- 31. The World's Smallest Political Quiz. [Nolan Test]
-
- This libertarian quiz asks a set of leading questions to tempt you to
- proclaim yourself a libertarian. The big trick is that if you answer
- yes to each question, you are a macho SELF GOVERNOR: there is an
- unspoken sneer to those who would answer anything else. It is an
- ideological litmus test.
-
- The most obvious criticism of this quiz is that it tries to graph the
- range of politics onto only 2 axes, as if they were the only two that
- mattered, rather than the two libertarians want the most change in. For
- example, if socialists were to create such a test, they would use a
- different set of axes.
-
- The second obvious criticism is typical of polls taken to show false
- levels of support: the questions are worded to elicit the desired
- response. This is called framing bias. For example, on a socialist
- test, you might see a question such as "Do you believe people should
- help each other?" Libertarians would answer "yes" to this question; the
- problem is the "but"s that are filtered out by the question format.
-
- Many libertarians use this as an "outreach" (read: evangelism) tool. By
- making it easy to get high scores on both axes, subjects can be told
- that they are already a libertarian and just didn't know it. This is
- the same sort of suckering that cold readers and other frauds use.
-
- 32. The Libertarian Party: America's third largest political party.
-
- Wow, third! That sounds impressive until you realize that the
- Libertarian Party is about 0.1% of the size of the other two. Funny how
- they don't mention that in their slogan. I guess they should get a new
- slogan. Let's have a new slogan contest for the Libertarian Party!
-
- o A party a lot smaller than the Communists used to be?
- o The party that can't get as many votes as any one-shot third
- party?
- o The party that's elected fewer to national office than the
- Socialists?
- o The party whose symbol is a big government statue.
- o The party with the oxymoronic name?
- o The party of Pat Paulson, uh, I mean Don Imus, uh, I mean Howard
- Stern!
- o America's Third Most Comical Political Party?
- o Preschool for hyperactive Republicans?
-
- Join in! Submit your slogan today!
-
- Almost as comical is the Libertarian Party's '94 election results. They
- now have even fewer elected dogcatchers and other important officials.
- Most notable, their loss of 2 out of 4 state reps in New Hampshire.
-
- 33. You're a Statist!
-
- Don't be surprised if you receive some ad-hominem abuse from
- libertarian evangelists when you don't accept their arguments. It's no
- different than if a communist called you bourgeois or a Bircher called
- you a commie lover. Sometimes they'll go overboard and even accuse you
- of mental disease, at which time you can point out to them the fine
- company they keep: Stalin, Hitler, etc.
-
- 34. Why do you spend so much time trying to debunk?
-
- As I told creationists who wondered why I bothered, it's interesting to
- me to study unusual beliefs for the same reason it's interesting for
- doctors to study pathologies. You don't have to catch a disease to be
- able to understand it, fight it, or vaccinate against it.
-
- QUOTATIONS POPULAR WITH LIBERTARIAN EVANGELISTS
-
- The purpose of bumper sticker phrases is not to enlighten: it is to
- misdirect and channel your thoughts. That's a prime need for evangelism, and
- thus we see a lot of these from libertarian evangelists.
-
- Frederic Bastiat (1801-1850)
-
- * "Life, liberty, and property do not exist because men have made laws.
- On the contrary, it was the fact that life, liberty, and property
- existed beforehand that caused men to make laws in the first place."
-
- This quote is one of the central ideas of "The Law", a piece of
- philosophical propaganda full of errors and uncompelling arguments.
- Let's start with a simple demonstration of its ambiguity. Did men make
- laws to support or suppress life, liberty, and property? At first
- glance, since we like those three glittering generalities, we'd say
- support. But if we change the generalities and keep the "logic" the
- same:
-
- "Death, enslavement, and indigence do not exist because men have made
- laws. On the contrary, it was the fact that death, enslavement, and
- indigence existed beforehand that caused men to make laws in the first
- place."
-
- Now we'd say suppress. The fact is, this ringing statement can be
- interpreted to praise or damn law supporting or suppressing any
- generality.
-
- Now, Bastiat does get more specific. If you read a few sentences
- further into "The Law", he presumes natural rights from god, a simple
- fallacy of reification (pretending an idea is a real thing.) But the
- real source of rights is might. Individuals don't have rights to
- protect their lives, liberty and property: they have miniscule powers
- to attempt to create such rights. Law is an attempt to benefit those
- within society by creating rights through conventions that reduce
- in-society conflict and utilize combined powers efficiently. Bastiat
- has the tail wagging the dog: collective rights being justified by
- individual rights, when in actual society individual rights are
- produced by collective might.
-
- It's hard to accept philosophy like this which starts by preferring
- imaginary rights to basic observable facts of society.
-
- Lysander Spooner (1808-1887)
-
- * "A man is none the less a slave because he is allowed to choose a new
- master once in a term of years."
-
- When you contract for government services, you are a customer, not a
- slave. If you think you cannot change with whom you contract, you have
- enslaved your self.
-
- Thomas Jefferson
-
- * "A wise and frugal government, which shall restrain men from injuring
- one another, which shall leave them otherwise free to regulate their
- own pursuits of industry and improvement, and shall not take from the
- mouth of labor the bread it has earned. This is the sum of good
- government." (First Inaugural Address)
-
- Perhaps as an unreachable goal. Certainly Jefferson practiced
- differently than this would seem to imply he thought. For example,
- Jefferson supported compulsory tax-supported schools and kept slaves.
- Jefferson was very much a political pragmatist full of such
- contradictions, as any non-hagiographic biography will tell.
-
- But if you want get into a founder quoting contest, Ben Franklin wrote:
- "Private property ... is a Creature of Society, and is subject to the
- Calls of that Society, whenever its Necessities shall require it, even
- to its last Farthing, its contributors therefore to the public
- Exigencies are not to be considered a Benefit on the Public, entitling
- the Contributors to the Distinctions of Honor and Power, but as the
- Return of an Obligation previously received, or as payment for a just
- Debt." We could find quite a few other appropriate quotes with a little
- searching.
-
- Libertarians might endorse their interpretation of the initial quote
- without the backing of Jefferson: if so, let them present a working
- example of such a government before we take it as more than a utopian
- ideal.
-
- * "Sometimes it is said that man cannot be trusted with the government of
- himself. Can he, then, be trusted with the government of others? Or
- have we found angels in the forms of kings to govern him? Let history
- answer this question." (First Inaugural Address)
-
- History shows that the USA has been one of the best governments, by
- most people's standards, even libertarian. The last sentence indicates
- that Jefferson intended these as rhetorical questions, not as
- statements against all government. He also said (in the same address:
-
- "If there be any among us who would wish to dissolve this Union or to
- change its republican form, let them stand undisturbed as monuments of
- the safety with which error of opinion may be tolerated where reason is
- left free to combat it."
-
- Jefferson clearly had more confidence in government than the initial
- quotation out of context would imply. If libertarians want to adopt
- this position (as some do), they'd be better off supporting it with
- something more than an appeal to the inconsistent authority of
- Jefferson.
-
- Alexander Fraser Tyler
-
- * "A democracy cannot exist as a permanent form of government. It can
- only exist until the voters discover that they can vote themselves
- money from the Public Treasury. From that moment on, the majority
- always votes for the candidate promising the most benefits from the
- Public Treasury with the result that a democracy always collapses over
- loose fiscal policy always followed by dictatorship." From: "The
- Decline and Fall of the Athenian Republic".
-
- I wasn't aware that there was any "permanant form of government".
- However, we could make a pretty good case that voters in the US have
- always known that they could vote themselves benefits from the Public
- Treasury. Indeed, it's been done pretty often. Yet we've lasted 200+
- years.
-
- Unlike the Athenian Republic, in the USA the money in the Public
- Treasury comes directly from the pockets of the majority, the middle
- class. This might be the most significant deterrent to loose fiscal
- policy.
-
- Ayn Rand
-
- * "I shall choose friends among men, but neither slaves nor masters."
-
- Did Ayn Rand pay her taxes out of friendship then? That's a new one on
- me.
-
- Andre Marrou
-
- * "Liberals want the government to be your Mommy. Conservatives want
- government to be your Daddy. Libertarians want it to treat you like an
- adult."
-
- Libertarians want to kill mommy and daddy so that they can stay up
- later and buy more ice cream than they can now.
-
- Bumper sticker analogies are as poor a method of understanding
- libertarianism (let alone anything else) as science fiction. Too bad so
- many libertarians make such heavy use of those methods.
-
- James A. Donald
-
- * "We have the right to defend ourselves and our property, because of the
- kind of animals that we are. True law derives from this right, not from
- the arbitrary power of the omnipotent state."
-
- The two red-alert-for-a-whopper phrases in this quote are: "the kind of
- animals that we are" and "true law".
-
- People who compare us to animals usually know little about animals and
- less about people. If we look to animals for models we can find all
- sorts of unacceptable (and conflicting) behaviors which are entirely
- natural. Characterizations of humans as animals for most philosophical
- purposes have historically ignored sociological, anthropological, and
- sociobiological knowledge in favor of conveniently parochial
- observations.
-
- There is no "true law". Innumerable political and religious sects might
- claim it, but I'd think that if there was such a thing, people could
- recognize it and agree on it.
-
- Unattributed
-
- * "Mob rule isn't any prettier merely because the mob calls itself a
- government."
-
- Corporate feudalism isn't any prettier merely because the corporations
- prattle about free markets. Strawmen are SO easy to create.
-
- The presumption that the US government is the equivalent of mob rule is
- ludicrous. The assertion that libertarian anarchy would be better is
- unsupported by real examples. (Libertarian minarchy doesn't change the
- form of government from "mob rule".)
-
- * "It ain't charity if you are using someone else's money."
-
- Almost all charitable organizations use other people's money. Their
- real point is that the money used for government social programs is
- "coerced" (libertarian newspeak for taxes.) What they overlook is that,
- in many philosophical and religious systems (including Judaism and
- Islam), charity isn't a virtue of the giver: charity is the relief of
- the receiver.
-
- * "Utopia is not an option."
-
- This is the libertarian newspeak formula for overlooking problems with
- their ideas. Much like "Trust in Jesus". Used the way it commonly is,
- it means "libertarianism might do worse here: I don't want to make a
- comparison lest we lose."
-
- It is also another motherhood and apple pie issue; it applies to EVERY
- political theory. The question is what provisions are made for coping
- with necessary imperfections; libertarians tend to assume "the same as
- today but better", without any experience of what their proposed
- changes actually will do.
-
- According to Perry Metzger, who claims to have popularized the phrase,
- the correct usage is "you *have* to make a comparison of libertarianism
- against the existing system rather than against your ideals of what
- you'd like your system to do." However, since there is no real example
- of libertarianism, that would be comparing the real current system
- against an ideal libertarian system. That's hardly a fair or valid
- comparison.
-
- There is one valid way of using this phrase: to indicate that
- perfection is not a possible result. That is a rare usage.
-
- * "Democracy is like three wolves and a sheep deciding what to have for
- lunch."
-
- We are not a simple democracy: we are a representative democratic
- republic: there are not direct elections of laws and there is a
- constitution that limits what laws can be enacted. Extend the analogy
- to take that into account and lo and behold, it becomes: "deciding what
- to have for lunch that is not meat."
-
- Now, if you were making the analogy about anarcho-capitalism, it would
- become "three wolves competing to be first to 'add value' to the sheep
- by slaughtering it and sell it to the others."
-
- This is really a classic libertarian strawman, used by many flavors of
- anarchists for centuries. The authors of the US Constitution were well
- aware of this: they devoted a segment of the Federalist papers to it:
- "... it may be concluded that a pure democracy... can admit of no cure
- for the mischiefs of faction... A republic, by which I mean a
- government in which the scheme of representation takes place, opens a
- different prospect, and promises the cure for which we are seeking."
- Federalist No. 10, James Madison.
-
- LIBERTARIAN PHILOSOPHY
-
- Libertarianism does have a lot of philosophical literature which is much
- more sophisticated than the evangelistic and bumper sticker arguments
- critiqued above. However, much of it can be critiqued as fundamentally
- flawed. James K. Galbraith, criticizing many economists, might well have
- been criticizing libertarians when he wrote (in a letter in Slate, Nov. 5,
- 1996):
-
- I don't accept that much of use can be learned about policy in
- this way [well-structured deduction from metaphysical first
- principles.] When the world deviates from the principles, as it
- usually does, the simple lessons go astray. This is not a
- complaint against math. It is a complaint against indiscriminate
- application of the deductive method, sometimes called the
- Ricardian vice, to problems of human action. Mine is an old gripe
- against much of what professional economists do; not against
- science but against scientism, against the pretense of science. To
- combat it, I spend my research time wrestling with real-world
- data, and I spend much of my writing time warring against the
- policy ideas of aggressive, ahistorical deductivists.
-
- A thorough discussion of problems of libertarian philosophy would be well
- beyond the scope of this FAQ, though an overview might one day be developed.
- In the mean time, a few sources are available at the "Critiques of
- Libertarianism" site ( http://world.std.com/~mhuben/libindex.html ), and
- still better are a number of the excellent critical references listed below.
-
- CRITICAL REFERENCES
-
- I am seeking references to critiques and analyses of libertarianism or its
- positions, which seem to be very scarce. So far the following have been
- found or recommended (special thanks to James Hammerton and Robert Lockard):
-
- * Walter Adams "The Bigness Complex" Pantheon Books, 1987. (opposes
- libertarian antitrust position)
- * Norman P. Barry "On Classical Liberalism and Libertarianism" MacMillan
- 1987
- * Jeremy Bentham "Anarchical Fallacies"
- * John Bryant "Libertarian Dirt" Socratic Press, 1995. A ranting pamphlet
- about Murray Rothbard; 2/3 self promotion and blank pages.
- * George W. Downs and Patrick D. Larkey "The Search For Government
- Efficiency: From Hubris to Helplessness" Random House, 1986. A serious,
- scholarly study of efficiency. Not a polemic but very necessary to
- balance the government as inefficient polemics.
- * Charles T. Goodsell "The Case for Bureaucracy: A Public Administration
- Polemic" Chatham House, 1994. Reexamines empirical findings on U.S.
- bureaucratic performance, noting how well the American system really
- works.
- * Allen Buchanan "Ethics, Efficiency, and the Market" Rowman &
- Littlefield, 1985. From the cover: "... contains the most thorough and
- systematic analysis of economic and moral arguments both for and
- against the market as an instrument of resource allocation." The
- chapter, "Moral Arguments For and Against the Market" occupies most of
- the book.
- * G. A. Cohen "Self-Ownership, Freedom, and Equality (Studies in Marxism
- and Social Theory)" Cambridge Univ Press, 1995.
- * John Gray "Beyond the New Right: Markets, Government and the Common
- Environment" Routledge 1994. John Gray once held views very close to
- libertarianism, but in this book he repudiates both neoclassical
- liberalism and libertarianism. Chapter 3, "The Moral Foundations of
- Market Institutions" contains some strong criticisms of the libertarian
- position.
- * Donald P. Green "Pathologies of Rational Choice Theory" Yale University
- Press, 1994. A serious, scholarly study of the intellectual failures of
- Rational Choice Theory.
- * Alan Haworth "Anti-Libertarianism: Markets, Philosophy, and Myth"
- Routledge 1994.
- * Dennis Henigan, Bruce Nicholson, David Hemenway "Guns and the
- Constitution" Aletheia Press 1995. A book-length FAQ of refutations of
- the gun-ownership propganda and mythology promulgated by the NRA and
- gleefully parrotted by libertarians. Essential reading.
- * William E. Hudson "American Democracy in Peril" Chatham House, 1996.
- Chapter 3 "The second challenge: radical individualism" has a
- subsection "The flaws of libertarianism."
- * Attracta Ingram "A Political Theory of Rights" Oxford University Press
- 1994. Ingram argues that the libertertarian concept of self-ownership
- is inadequate, and proposes a (much more complex) theory of rights
- based in a principle of self-government. Chapters 1-3, form a useful
- exposition and critique of the standard libertarian position.
- * Roland Kley "Hayek's Social and Political Thought" Oxford University
- Press 1994. Shows that Hayek's concept of a spontaneous order doesn't
- stand up to scrutiny, undermining a body of theory libertarians often
- draw upon to show that free markets work.
- * Will Kymlicka "Contemporary Political Philosophy: An Introduction"
- Clarendon Press, 1990. Now the standard text in the field; very highly
- regarded. Has a long chapter on libertarianism. Not at all kind to it.
- * Steven Luper-Foy "The Possibility of Knowledge: Nozick and His Critics"
- * Stephen L. Newman "Liberalism at Wits' End: The Libertarian Revolt
- Against the Modern State" Cornell University Press in 1984
- * William J. Novak "The People's Welfare: Law and Regulation in
- Nineteenth-Century America" Univ. of North Carolina Pr., 1996. "Blasts
- to pieces... the libertarian fantasy that until the twentieth century
- the American state left private property owners and economic
- entrepreneurs alone." --Robert W. Gordon, Yale Law School.
- * Jeffrey Paul, editor "Reading Nozick" (anthology of essays about
- "Anarchy, State, And Utopia")
- * L.A. Rollins "The Myth of Natural Rights"
- * Robbins, John W "Answer to Ayn Rand : A critique of the philosophy of
- objectivism"
- * Schartz, Peter "Libertarianism: The perversion of liberty" (Article)
- * Thomas A. Spragens, Jr. "The Limitations of Libertarianism." RESPONSIVE
- COMMUNITY (Spring 1992)45-47. (Part 2.)
- * James P. Sterba "Contemporary Social and Political Philosophy"
- Wadsworth, 1994. His chapter on libertarianism makes the argument that,
- "... the right to a social minimum endorsed by welfare liberals is also
- required by the libertarian's own ideal of liberty."
- * James P. Sterba "Morality in Practice" Fifth edition, Wadsworth, 1997.
- Another statement of the above argument. A longer version of this
- article will appear as "Reconciling Liberty and Equality or Why
- Libertarians must be Socialists" in Liberty and Equality, edited by
- Larry May and Jonothan Schonsheck (MIT, 1996).
- * Lars Udehn "The Limits of Public Choice: A sociological critique of the
- economic theory of politics" (Routledge 1996).
- * Robert Anton Wilson "Natural Law"
- * Donald A. Wittman "The Myth of Democratic Failure: Why Political
- Institutions Are Efficient" University of Chicago Press, 1995. "...
- refutes one of the cornerstone beliefs of economics and political
- science: that economic markets are more efficient than the processes
- and institutions of democratic government."
- * Jonathan Wolff "Robert Nozick: Propery, Justice and the Minimal State"
- Blackwell 1991. (Details Nozick's political theory and exposes its
- flaws and incompleteness.)
-
- I've yet to read most of these, and welcome reviews, summaries, and better
- citations.
-
- BIBLIOGRAPHY
-
- * Bergland, David "Libertarianism in One Lesson"
- * Friedman, David "The Machinery of Freedom"
- * Marshall, Peter "Demanding the Impossible: A History of Anarchism"
- * Spooner, Lysander "No Treason"
-
- CREDITS
-
- Thanks to many people who have contributed directly or indirectly to this
- FAQ. Some specific recommendations have come from (in alphabetical order):
-
- Ken Arromdee (arromdee@blaze.cs.jhu.edu)
- Chris Auld (auld@econ01.econ.QueensU.CA)
- Paul Barton-Davis (pauld@cs.washington.edu)
- Bruce Baugh (Bruce.Baugh@p23.f40.n105.z1.fidonet.org)
- Jeffrey Bolden (bolden@s5.math.umn.edu)
- Daniel Brown (dbrown@ai.uga.edu)
- Steven Burnap (sburnap@netcom.com)
- Caliban (caliban@gate.net)
- Tony Cox (tcox@SSRL01.SLAC.STANFORD.EDU)
- Merle Christopher (merle@a.cs.okstate.edu)
- Ervan Darnell (ervan@cs.rice.edu)
- Lamont Granquist (lamontg@cs.washington.edu)
- James A Hammerton
- Chris Holt (Chris.Holt@newcastle.ac.uk)
- Aman Jabbi (Amandeep.Jabbi@Eng.Sun.COM)
- Steve Kangas (kangaroo@scruznet.com)
- Jim Larson (jsl@zeus.Jpl.Nasa.Gov)
- Robert Lockard (RLock81626@aol.com)
- Calvin Bruce Ostrum (cbo@cs.toronto.edu)
- Glen Raphael (raphael@fx.com)
- Scott Susin (ssusin@econ.Berkeley.EDU)
- Russell Turpin (turpin@cs.utexas.edu)
- Bob Waldrop (bwaldrop@xmission.com)
- Matthew Daniel Walker (mdwalker@1.amherst.edu)
-
- I owe a debt to the many people with whom I have discussed libertarianism on
- the net whose ideas have helped to inform and shape my own.
-
- Mike Huben ( mhuben@world.std.com )
-