home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!bloom-beacon.mit.edu!news.telebyte.nl!newsfeed.stueberl.de!cox.net!gail.ripco.com!wasp.rahul.net!samba.rahul.net!rahul.net!a2i!jwd3.a2i!jwd3
- From: jwd3@dehnbase.fidonet.org (Joe Dehn)
- Newsgroups: talk.politics.libertarian,alt.politics.libertarian,talk.answers,alt.answers,news.answers
- Subject: Libertarian Party FAQ: Commonly Asked Questions
- Followup-To: poster
- Date: 5 Sep 2002 09:41:29 GMT
- Organization: Libertarian Party
- Lines: 178
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Distribution: world
- Expires: Sun, 06 Oct 2002 00:00:00 GMT
- Message-ID: <al78s9$e66$1@samba.rahul.net>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: waltz.rahul.net
- NNTP-Posting-User: jwd3
- Summary: This article contains answers to ten commonly asked questions about the Libertarian Party.
- Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu talk.politics.libertarian:598399 alt.politics.libertarian:701389 talk.answers:6178 alt.answers:63742 news.answers:237142
-
- Archive-name: libertarian/party/common-questions
- Posting-Frequency: monthly
-
- TEN ANSWERS TO COMMONLY ASKED QUESTIONS
- ABOUT THE LIBERTARIAN PARTY
-
- [Adapted from a flyer distributed by the Libertarian Party.]
-
-
- 1. What is a Libertarian?
-
- To put it simply, Libertarians believe that you have the right to live
- your life as you wish, without the government interfering -- as long
- as you don't violate the rights of others. Politically, this means
- Libertarians favor rolling back the size and cost of government, and
- eliminating laws that stifle the economy and control people's personal
- choices.
-
- 2. Are Libertarians liberal or conservative?
-
- Libertarians are neither. Unlike liberals or conservatives,
- Libertarians advocate a high degree of both personal and economic
- liberty. In a sense, Libertarians "borrow" from both sides to come
- up with a logical and consistent whole -- but without the
- exceptions and broken promises of Republican and Democratic
- politicians.
-
- For example, Libertarians agree with conservatives about freedom in
- economic matters; in favor of lowering taxes, slashing bureaucratic
- regulation of business, and charitable -- rather than government --
- welfare. But Libertarians also agree with liberals on personal
- tolerance; in favor of people's right to choose their own personal
- habits and lifestyles.
-
- 3. How big is the Libertarian Party?
-
- By almost every measure, the Libertarian Party is the third largest
- political party in America. We're active in all 50 states, and there
- are hundreds of vigorous state, county, and local Libertarian
- organizations. Despite unfair and restrictive ballot access laws
- passed by the Republicans and Democrats in many states, there are
- already more than 224,000 registered Libertarians in 26 states
- around the country -- a number which has jumped by 100% in the
- last eight years.
-
- 4. Do Libertarians win many elections?
-
- More and more all the time. Right now, there are over 300 Libertarians
- serving in elected public office (plus hundreds more in appointed
- positions). We've elected Libertarian State Representatives in New
- Hampshire, Vermont, and Alaska, mayors in 11 states, and more than
- 60 city and town council members in 22 states. Other Libertarians
- serve on school boards, as city commissioners, on town budget
- committees, as judges of elections, and in a wide variety of other
- elected offices such as city treasurer, district attorney, and sheriff.
- According to Congressional Quarterly, these Libertarian officeholders
- "give the party a status no third party has enjoyed in decades".
-
- There have been Libertarian candidates for president and vice
- president on the ballot in all 50 states in the last three presidential
- elections -- an achievement unmatched by any other alternative party.
-
- In 2000, more than 250 Libertarians ran for US House of Representatives,
- the first time in eighty years that a majority of the seats were
- contested by any party other than the Republicans or Democrats.
- Libertarian candidates for US Senate received more than one million
- votes, 3.3 million Americans voted for at least one Libertarian
- candidate, and at least 35 Libertarians were elected to public
- office.
-
- 5. What is the party membership fee for?
-
- Your annual membership payment -- which gets you a subscription to our
- monthly newspaper LP News -- helps finance our work to spread the word
- about the Libertarian Party. With your help, we can keep the media
- informed; run Internet, radio, and magazine advertisements; and send
- information to more Americans. We also support Libertarian candidates
- in winnable races; promote pro-freedom legislation at the federal
- level; provide resources to our state and local organizations;
- and much more!
-
- 6. Why do you ask me to sign a membership statement?
-
- Libertarians are working to reduce the role of government in society.
- A government that was concerned only with protecting individual rights
- would no longer be initiating force to achieve the political or
- social goals of politicians and special interest groups.
-
- That's why we ask new Libertarian Party members to sign the statement
- (on the membership form) -- to remind us of the need to reduce the
- power of government, and to dedicate our political efforts towards
- achieving that goal.
-
- One other question commonly asked is: Does this mean that
- Libertarians don't believe in the right of self-defense? No. The
- key word is that we don't advocate the _initiation_ of force. We
- believe all individuals have the right to use appropriate force
- to defend themselves, their families, and their country.
-
- 7. What kind of people join the Libertarian Party?
-
- People like you. People who used to be Republicans, Democrats, and
- independents -- from all walks of life. They have joined us because
- they realize that we're the only political party working for their
- personal and economic liberty.
-
- Another question we sometimes hear: Is political extremist Lyndon
- LaRouche in the Libertarian Party? No. LaRouche has never been
- associated in any way with us. He runs for office as a Democrat.
-
- 8. Why don't I hear more about the Libertarian Party?
-
- The media have been slow to realize that the Republicans and
- Democrats now have serious competition. But, as the party becomes
- more successful, we're attracting more and more favorable attention.
- For example...
-
- Former Senator William Proxmire (D-Wisconsin) said: "The Libertarian
- Party is a breath of fresh air ... They are offering a clear
- alternative."
-
- The Investor's Business Daily wrote: "Long consigned to the political
- wilderness... libertarians are seeing their ideas accepted by state
- and local governments, once the undisputed turf of Democrats. Regional
- governments increasingly are adopting free-market policies originally
- developed by libertarian thinkers, making what were once considered
- extreme views part of the mainstream."
-
- Hugh Downs, formerly of ABC's 20/20 said: "All the really good ideas
- belong to Libertarians."
-
- The Hill in Washington, DC wrote: "The Libertarian Party provides
- a case study in how a grassroots organization works to establish
- itself as a third voice for a frustrated electorate."
-
- The Los Angeles Times wrote: "Libertarianism has contributed much
- to defining American political thought. Libertarian themes are
- part of contemporary political discourse."
-
- 9. Are Libertarians having an impact on American politics?
-
- Libertarians all around the nation have been actively defending
- Americans' rights on a wide range of issues:
-
- Tennessee: "If it weren't for the Libertarians, I believe we'd
- have an income tax by now," said Nashville talk radio host Steve
- Gill. The Tennessee Libertarian Party played a major role in a
- coalition that blocked a new state income tax in 2000 and 2001.
-
- Alabama: In 2001, a Libertarian city councilman in Adamsville
- repealed a city ordinance requiring citizens to get a permit before
- doing minor home improvement work.
-
- Colorado: Libertarians rallied to defend the First Amendment rights
- of shock-rocker Marilyn Manson, after politicians considered
- cancelling his June 2001 concert. "Manson's lyrics are revolting,"
- said Libertarian Ari Armstrong. "But using government to shut out
- messages that some people find offensive is a terrible precedent."
-
- Washington state: Libertarians helped pass I-747, a 2002 initiative
- that capped property tax increases and will save $1.8 billion over
- six years.
-
- On issue after issue, in all 50 states, Libertarians are successfully
- defending the Bill of Rights, free enterprise, free trade, private
- charity, and individual liberty.
-
- 10. Should I join the Libertarian Party?
-
- Ask yourself: Is government too big or too small? Are taxes too high
- or too low? Does the government regulate my business too much or too
- little? Does the government control my personal life too much or not
- enough?
-
- If you agree, like most Americans, that government is too large, too
- expensive, and meddles too much, the Libertarian Party is for you!
-
-