Libertarian: better adjective than noun

Recent­ly I lis­tened to a Com­mon­wealth Club dis­cus­sion with Nick Gille­spie and Matt Welch titled WWLD: What Would Lib­er­tar­i­ans Do? Gille­spie and Welch are co-edi­tors of Rea­son mag­a­zine, which I’ve nev­er read, but is reput­ed to have a strong lib­er­tar­i­an bent. The top­ic is of inter­est to me, as I have mixed feel­ings about lib­er­tar­i­ans. In the 1990s I was a reg­is­tered mem­ber of the Lib­er­tar­i­an Par­ty. I vot­ed for Har­ry Browne in the pres­i­den­tial elec­tions of 1996 and 2000, and for Andre Mar­rou in 1992. I used to spend week­ends at coun­ty fairs in Con­necti­cut hand­ing out copies of the World’s Small­est Polit­i­cal Quiz and explain­ing the Nolan Chart. One very dear friend of mine refers to me, not jok­ing­ly, as a recov­er­ing lib­er­tar­i­an.

My friend says «recov­er­ing» because there are many points on which I dif­fer from the Lib­er­tar­i­an Par­ty plat­form. It calls for the elim­i­na­tion of pub­lic schools and the dis­so­lu­tion of all envi­ron­men­tal reg­u­la­tion. Many peo­ple, my friend includ­ed, have come to asso­ciate the word «lib­er­tar­i­an» with a cer­tain brand of ide­alogue who insists that all gov­ern­ment action at any lev­el is evil and who believes that in the absence of gov­ern­ment human­i­ty would assem­ble itself in pro­duc­tive har­mo­ny and not look any­thing at all like Afghanistan. There are those too, who see «lib­er­tar­i­an» as no more than code for «repub­li­can». Some more char­i­ta­bly refer to lib­er­tar­i­ans as «repub­li­cans who smoke pot». I don’t smoke pot, but there are a num­ber of oth­er ways in which actu­al lib­er­tar­i­ans dif­fer from republicans.

I’ve long been torn between admi­ra­tion for lib­er­tar­i­an ideals and the actu­al views pro­mot­ed by the Lib­er­tar­i­an Par­ty. Reg­u­lar read­ers may recall that not too long ago I described myself half-jok­ing­ly as a social­ist repub­li­can. Gov­ern­ment, in a democ­ra­cy (even in a demo­c­ra­t­ic repub­lic) is a tool to be respon­si­bly wield­ed by the peo­ple, not reject­ed as the nat­ur­al ene­my of the peo­ple. Of course, even in a democ­ra­cy lim­i­ta­tions are nec­es­sary to keep the pas­sions, fears, and greed of the major­i­ty from run­ning over indi­vid­ual freedoms.

Gille­spie and Welch’s July talk for the Com­mon­wealth club was refresh­ing and is rec­om­mend­ed to any­one inter­est­ed in lib­er­tar­i­an ideas. Despite hav­ing authored a book ([ama­zon 978 – 1586489380 inline]) that claims that lib­er­tar­i­an ideas can solve all of Amer­i­ca’s prob­lems, Gille­spie and Welch each demon­strat­ed a high­ly nuanced and prag­mat­ic view of lib­er­tar­i­an­ism, in stark con­trast with the par­ty’s plat­form. The talk should make an excel­lent intro­duc­tion to lib­er­tar­i­an thought for folks who are new to the idea.

Right off the bat, Gille­spie sug­gest­ed that it might be bet­ter to think about the word «lib­er­tar­i­an» as an adjec­tive rather than as a noun. That struck a chord. As a set of ideals or a gen­er­al ide­o­log­i­cal ori­en­ta­tion the idea of pre­fer­ring indi­vid­ual free­doms over reliance on author­i­ty retains all of its appeal with­out get­ting mired down in specifics. It could be seen as a cop-out to take a neb­u­lous idea that near­ly every­one can get behind while dodg­ing the gran­u­lar pol­i­cy ques­tions, but it imme­di­ate­ly dis­pels much of the asso­ci­a­tions one might have made between the word and over­ly zeal­ous lib­er­tar­i­ans who might have cor­nered you at a coun­ty fair and talked your ear off sev­er­al years ago. It takes the imme­di­a­cy away and removes the pos­si­bil­i­ty that one might be seen as a LINO for falling short of per­fect con­for­mance to a par­ty platform.

Gille­spie and Welch sug­gest­ed that lib­er­tar­i­an pol­i­cy may not be the spe­cif­ic solu­tion to every prob­lem, but that lib­er­tar­i­an­ism is an under­ly­ing theme that the nation is cur­rent­ly grav­i­tat­ing back toward in reac­tion to a decade of author­i­tar­i­an pub­lic pol­i­cy under the Bush the younger and Oba­ma admin­is­tra­tions. This idea — that one could embrace lib­er­tar­i­an (adjec­tive) thought with­out being a lib­er­tar­i­an (noun) — low­ers the bar­ri­er that makes «lib­er­tar­i­an» a dirty word in some cir­cles. I was remind­ed of anoth­er Com­mon­wealth Club talk, giv­en by P J O’Rourke, where he was asked whether he felt uncom­fort­able in «the bel­ly of the beast» also known as the San Fran­cis­co Bay Area. He said that he did­n’t feel uncom­fort­able in San Fran­cis­co at all because, for all the left­ist polit­i­cal thought that hap­pens here, San Fran­cis­co has a lib­er­tar­i­an under­cur­rent. With «lib­er­tar­i­an» as a noun, that is a con­tra­dic­tion. As an adjec­tive, it becomes one of a set of val­ues that per­haps com­pete in the psy­che of the City, if a city can be said to have such a thing.

There­fore, I no longer have to be a recov­er­ing lib­er­tar­i­an. I don’t have to be a lib­er­tar­i­an or even not be a lib­er­tar­i­an. I have lib­er­tar­i­an val­ues which com­ple­ment a grander set of val­ues. Val­ues are more vital — to an indi­vid­ual or to a soci­ety — than a polit­i­cal par­ty will ever be.

One Reply to “Libertarian: better adjective than noun”

  1. Your last sen­tence sums it up

    Your last sen­tence sums it up nicely!

    I, too, have strong Lib­er­tar­i­an val­ues, and they get stronger with each pass­ing year. I have nev­er been a mem­ber of the Lib­er­tar­i­an par­ty, part­ly because of extreme state­ments about their posi­tions. Today your arti­cle prompt­ed me to read the plat­form state­ment on their web site which address­es most of their major posi­tions. It does not appear from their plat­form state­ment that they are call­ing for the elim­i­na­tion of pub­lic schools or all envi­ron­men­tal reg­u­la­tion. Cer­tain­ly they believe, as do I, that pri­vate schools edu­cate kids bet­ter. (A recent study com­pared Harlem Suc­cess (a char­ter school) with PS 149, which shares the same build­ing and draws from the same pool of kids. Harlem Suc­cess costs less per stu­dent and dra­mat­i­cal­ly out­per­forms PS 149 in every mea­sure. Says some­thing.) The Lib­er­tar­i­an plat­form does call for schools to be run at the local lev­el so par­ents have con­trol. They do NOT call for the elim­i­na­tion of pub­lic edu­ca­tion. Also, their plat­form plank on the envi­ron­ment sounds pret­ty rea­son­able to me. Nei­ther is there a plank on turn­ing every street in the nation into a pri­vate toll road. I am sure there are a few Lib­er­tar­i­ans who sup­port those items, but I believe they are tru­ly rare exceptions.

    As I said, my actu­al knowl­edge of the Lib­er­tar­i­an Par­ty is min­i­mal so all that I said above may be wrong, but their plat­form state­ment seems to sup­port the idea that they believe in your lib­er­tar­i­an ideals.

    Dad

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