Tuesday, February 18, 2014

5 Questions for Republicans and Conservatives


After reading this page giving 5 questions to Democrats (which was threaded on this sub), I decided to give my own 5 questions for Republicans and conservatives:
If you support limited government, why do you support legislation that punishes non-violent vices with jail time and State punishments?
Conservatives and Republicans often support the use of the law to regulate moral behavior that doesn't directly violate the rights of others. Libertarians oppose such laws because such laws violate the whole purpose of the law, which is to punish the violation of rights. Vices, while they are bad, do not violate the rights of others, and the law shouldn't be used against them. This respects individual freedom and individual rights; conservatives are being inconsistent in their support for limited government when they support such laws.
If you support limited government, then why do you support the government's wars?
Conservatives often support the use of government force, particularly America's government, to force other nation-states to support the American ideals of "democracy and freedom." This was true of the Iraq, Afghanistan, Vietnam and Korean wars. They often ignore the unconstitutional nature of most of these wars, and they ignore the immorality of them very often. Libertarians, as we are opposed to big government, see war as "the health of the State" and oppose offensive/pre-emptive war. We are OK with self-defense war (which would be truly "just" war), but we are not OK with offensive war in the name of "spreading democracy" or aiding some other countries. We remember not to support "entangling alliances" with any other nations, which conservatives often do regarding Israel. This is consistent with keeping the government limited within its own borders, and is vital to keeping a government restricted in its powers.
If you support limited government, then why do you support Republican violations of civil liberties?
Conservatives were very big in supporting GWB's Patriot Act and the other Republican laws put in favor of violating the traditional civil liberties of Americans and the constitutional protections of liberty. The Patriot Act was intended to increase the power of the State to crack down on terrorists, give law enforcement more tools to do so, and allowed for wiretapping of people's phones for the greater good. While some conservatives spoke out against this, it was only libertarians who branched out a consistent opposition to the Patriot Act and the anti-civil liberties actions taken by the U.S. government. If you support limited government, conservatives, then why do you support the use of surveillance, wiretapping and other State powers which require the growth of government? Because once you open the possiblities of growing the State, the doors rarely shut.
If you support limited government, then why do you support the war on drugs?
Conservatives generally support the use of government force to crack down on drugs, particularly drug production and drug use. While this is changing a bit, the pro-drug war bias is still there. Libertarians oppose it because it is immoral/unlawful (it takes the law to a length it should never be taken), unconstitutional (because it was started by the federal government, in violation of the Constitution's 10th Amendment), and prone to abuse (because the police are now being militarized in fighting this drug war, as Radley Balko, Will Grigg and John Whitehead are documenting, and many civil liberties violations occur in drug raids). Conservatives seem to ignore some of these things because, after all, the only reason many teens don't take drugs is because of the laws in place that ban drugs. I say, "Balderdash!" The law is not meant to regulate vice, and the law is not meant to regulate drug use or production that doesn't commit rights violation in the process. So drug legalization and government non-interference are the policies truly compatible with limited government.
If you support limited government, then why do you still support the police force and the military?
The military and the police force are two of conservatives' favorite government institutions. Conservatives love the military for its "patriotism," "traditional values," and whatnot; similar words are also applied to the police force. But the police force is now becoming one of the greatest tools for tyranny and police statism. Radley Balko, Will Grigg, and John Whitehead, three great writers, document very well the problem of police statism and how it is destroying the libertarian traditions of America. The military, apart from the fact that it is using its powers to fight in immoral and unconstitutional wars, is quickly becoming a hotbed of moral degeneracy that conservatives so despise. Sexual assaults are now becoming regular in the military, more soldiers are suferring from PTSD and other problems, and now the military is cracking down on Christianity and traditional values. So conservatives, apart from the fact that the military and police force are quickly becoming incompatible with the ideal of limited government which you claim to uphold, are you still going to support the military and police force?
I could have asked a few more questions, and I believe that I could have improved overall on the text, but I hope that these five questions will be meant to provoke thought among the conservatives and libertarian movement.

Letter of Liberty News Edition (2-18-2014)

Here is the Tuesday News Edition of the Letter of Liberty Blog













Friday, February 14, 2014

Letter of Liberty News Edition (2-14-2014)

Here is the Friday edition of the Letter of Liberty News Edition

Jim Cox takes the libertarian view of tax consumers, tax payers, and the "Cox box."

William Grigg asks what ever became of America.

Joseph Salerno looks at the Argentinian currency crisis and the lessons it holds for us.

Paul Joseph Watson makes the case that the State is a parasite, not a benefit, to society.

Paul Craig Roberts exposes the five Gestapo.

Michael Scheuer looks at another folly of our leaders.

Christina Sarich looks at another government evil.

Sergey Duz makes the case that war never solves anything.

David Stockman warns of a mass economic catastrophe that's coming

Paul Rosenberg gives his thoughts on the dangers of "free" services.

Sheldon Richman writes more on voting.

Gary North argues that Jay Leno did not have to leave The Tonight Show.

Justin Raimondo shows the Achilles heel of the surveillance state.

James E. Miller asks what's precisely wrong with high-frequency trading.

Victoria Henderson looks at why anti-sweatshop activists are in the wrong.

C. Jay Engel analyzes the battle cry of modern Christians.

Ilana Mercer has some words for the Obamacare apologists.

Michael Alford looks at the real St. Patrick.

Joseph Salerno responds to George Selgin.

William Hartung asks some questions about Obama's arms sales policy.

Medea Benjamin warns of the drones' seductive power.

JP Sottle looks at America's rekindling of friendship with France.

Andrew Napolitano looks at the attacks on free speech by the government.

Rev. Larry Beane II, SSP, defends Walter Block against the evil lies of the Loyola staff.

Jacob Hornberger looks at the changin' times.

Jeremy Daw gives his four favorite anti-drug war movies.

Scott McPherson exposes yet another gun-control failure.

John Odermatt exposes yet another gun-control supporter who falls into his own trap.

Richard Ebeling looks at the president's pride in his State of the Union address.

Pamela Constable and Scott Clement look at the Hispanic immigrants, who have the most faith in the American dream.

Lyla Rosen looks at Nick Turse's new Vietnam War book.

Conor Friedersdorf looks at the NSA and phone dragnets.

Michael Wilson looks at the economic legend Ludwig von MIses.

Mike Church looks at Jefferson, Burr, and Obama's hit list.

Don Boudreaux looks at the term "shared prosperity."






Wednesday, February 12, 2014

A Repost on Abraham Lincoln's Birthday

Today is the birthday of the famous president Abraham Lincoln. While he is regarded by many as the greatest president ever, I do not hold that view, and most libertarians hold that to the contrary, Lincoln was a dictator and a statist who laid the foundations for the modern statism that is rampant in American society. Thomas DiLorenzo, a historian, has written much work disputing the idolatry of Lincoln that occurs among many circles, even among some libertarian and Christian circles.

But since I am not going to write anything today, I decided to repost a post from last year which listed some libertarian resources on Lincoln, and I would include Tom Woods's recent interview with Tom DiLorenzo himself, as well as Tom DiLorenzo's new article at LewRockwell.com.

So here is the repost.

Mike Rozeff and Tom DiLorenzo Take Down Rich Lowry and Some Libertarian Resources on Secession, Nullification, and the Confederacy

The libertarians Tom DiLorenzo and Mike Rozeff have taken down neoconservative Rich Lowry for his NRO article "Lincoln Defended".

Here is a quote from Tom DiLorenzo's post:

The way to become politically relevant and win over America's youth, says Rich Lowry (who apparently will always look like he just started shaving last week) is to continue to libel and smear Ron Paul and "the fever swamp of LewRockwell.com" while composing boring, poorly-written, long-winded apologies for the abolition of civil liberties, crackdowns on free speech, the imprisoning of dissenters, pervasive spying by the state, the deportation of political opponents, massive taxation and debt to pay for it all, centralized, monopolistic government, crony capitalism,  and above all, never-ending aggressive wars all around the world in the name of "making all men free."

Here is a quote from Mike Rozeff's post:

Lowry writes of  "a species of libertarians — 'people-owning libertarians,' as one of my colleagues archly calls them — who apparently hate federal power more than they abhor slavery." Totally asinine and totally wrong. I have to inform the analytically-challenged Lowry that federal power and slavery are not necessarily opposites. One can be against both federal power and slavery, when both violate rights and self-ownership. Slavery is not something either that necessarily has to be eliminated by the exercise of federal power or a national power or by a terrible civil war or by gross violations of rights or by destroying a Constitution. Other nations ended slavery without these necessarily happening.

Here are the links to Tom DiLorenzo's post, Mike Rozeff's post, and the Lowry article. Read these three and send me your opinions.

I will close with thoughts on Lincoln from the great Murray Rothbard himself from his great speech, "Two Just Wars: 1776 and 1861":  "Abraham Lincoln’s conciliatory words on slavery cannot be taken at face value. Lincoln was a master politician, which means that he was a consummate conniver, manipulator, and liar. The federal forts were the key to his successful prosecution of the war. Lying to South Carolina, Abraham Lincoln managed to do what Franklin D. Roosevelt and Henry Stimson did at Pearl Harbor 80 years later – maneuvered the Southerners into firing the first shot. In this way, by manipulating the South into firing first against a federal fort, Lincoln made the South appear to be "aggressors" in the eyes of the numerous waverers and moderates in the North." Abe Lincoln was, in the words of Isabel Paterson, "a humanitarian with a guillotine."

Note: I would like to make a comment on the Lowry article. On the second page, Lowry tries to rebut DiLorenzo's claim that America was birthed in secession by claiming it was a revolution. I will comment that both Lowry and DiLorenzo were right. The revolution was a secession in that it withdrew from the British Empire and declared their independence, and it was a revolution in that it blended libertarian and republican thought, as well as the traditional rights of Englishmen, and broke with the past by applying it in such a revolutionary way as has never been seen. 

For more information on Lincoln, secession, nullification, and the Confederacy from a libertarian perspective, see these resources:

"Lincoln's Greatest Failure (Or, How a Real Statesman Would Have Ended Slavery)" by Tom DiLorenzo,LewRockwell.com, November 15, 2012

"Judge Napolitano on Lincoln" by Tom DiLorenzo, LewRockwell.com, January 8, 2008

"Is Secession a Right?" by David Gordon, LewRockwell.com, December 7, 2012

"Be Patriotic: Become A Secessionist" by Tom DiLorenzo, LewRockwell.com, December 6, 2012

"Parting Company" by Walter Williams, LewRockwell.com, November 27, 2012

"3 Myths About Secession" by Ryan McMaken, LewRockwell.com, November 15, 2012

"Nullification: Answering the Objections" by Thomas E. Woods, Liberty Classroom

"Secession and Liberty" by Tom DiLorenzo, LewRockwell.com, November 28, 2000

"Abraham Lincoln" by Walter Williams, LewRockwell.com, February 28, 2013

"Lincoln the Racist" by Tom DiLorenzo, LewRockwell.com, November 10, 2012

"The Real Lincoln In His Own Words" by Tom DiLorenzo, LewRockwell.com, June 5, 2013

"An Abolitionist Defends the South" by Tom DiLorenzo, LewRockwell.com, October 20, 2004

"Virginia's Black Confederates" by Walter Williams, LewRockwell.com, November 2, 2010

"Libertarians and the Confederate Battle Flag" by Tom DiLorenzo, LewRockwell.com, April 19, 2001

"A Libertarian Theory of Secession and Slavery" by Walter Block, LewRockwell.com, June 10, 2012

"Nations by Consent: Decomposing the Nation-State" by Murray Rothbard, Journal of Libertarian Studies 11:1, Fall 1994

"A Jeffersonian View of the Civil War" by Donald W. Miller, Jr., LewRockwell.com, September 7, 2001

"Genesis of the Civil War" by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr., LewRockwell.com, May 11, 2000

"The Great Struggle: Republic or Empire?" by Steven Yates, LewRockwell.com, February 3, 2001

"Lincoln and His Legacy" by Joseph Sobran, Fitzgerald Griffin Foundation, February 19, 2008

"The Right to Secede" by Joseph Sobran, LewRockwell.com, September 30, 1999

For more information about Lincoln, see the King Lincoln Archive at LewRockwell.com and Tom DiLorenzo's archive of articles.

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Letter of Liberty News Edition (2-11-2014)

Here is the Tuesday Letter of Liberty News Edition

Will Grigg on Henry Magee, John Quinn, and the right to resist unjust arrests

Phil Girardi muses on the art of American scaremongering.

Tom Woods talks with Anthony Gregory about libertarianism and the Left-Right paradigm

James E. Miller reflcets on the president and the nuclear bomb.

David Howden writes more on the Sochi Olympics.

Justin Raimondo exposes the Sochi coverage for what it is: more propaganda.

Kelly Vlahos writes on John Kiriakou's imprisonment.

Chase Madar argues against arming Israel.

Logan Albright makes the case against socialized law.

David Howden gives his requiem for Bernanke.

Laurence Vance shows the way to dismantling the American empire.

Pat Buchanan looks at the prospects for the welfare state.

Scott Lazarowitz asks what is going on with rulers these days.

Robert Wood looks at the phenomenon of Americans renouncing their citizenship.

Paul Huebl looks at the ID of the police state.

Benjamin Wiegold makes the case that endangered animals can be dealt with in a free, private-property society.

Laurence Vance explains why not to "walk in the shoes of a soldier."

Walter Williams explains there is no real poverty, only dependence.

D. W. Mackenzie explains the tragedy of the commons in light of the recent healthcare fiasco.

Richard Fulmer gives his thoughts on several economic issues.

Jeffrey Overstreet reviews The LEGO Movie.

Steven Greydanus also reviews The LEGO Movie


Friday, February 7, 2014

Letter of Liberty News Edition (2-07-2014)

Here is the Friday News Edition of Letter of Liberty:

Christopher Westley gives his perspective on the danger of labor and energy regulations.

Gary North writes on Sophia Loren.

A German TV network interviews Edward Snowden (an interview which was "blacked out").

Robin Koerner explains the false dichotomy between freedom and security.

Eric Peters shows the tax-by-mile for what it is: another scheme to take money from taxpayers.

Michael Rozeff shows what "nation" really is.

Pratap Chaterjee explains the surveillance state's alliance with private corporations.

William Grigg exposes the real reason why SWAT teams exist.

Sheldon Richman explains why Ed Snowden is not a lawbreaker (with respect to the natural law).

Jesse Ventura goes "off the grid" to hide from the drones.

Elizabeth Renter gives 14 good foods and drinks that are optimal for health.

Pat Buchanan makes the case for non-interventionist conservatism.

Justin Raimondo warns of the coming Dark Age.

Max Borders writes on the rise of libertarianism and the left wing backlash.

Nebojsa Malic explains the "Lords of Chaos."

Ben Swann explains why Rand Paul's "economic freedom zones" are not a good idea.

Bryce McBride looks at what's in store for central banking.

Ash Navabi defends Austrian economics against neoclassical economics.

Sheldon Richman exposes the cruelty of voting idolatry.

Wendy McElroy exposes the immorality of state education.

Marjorie Cohn warns of yet another super-Orwellian statist evil.

Jeff Morley writes on RFK's opposition to the American embargo on Cuba.

Russell Brand exposes how the deceased actor Phillip Seymour Hoffman was a victim of the drug war.

Benjamin Weingarten takes a look at a 1940s speech that could serve as a rebuttal to Obama's SOTU.

Craig Drake cuts at the heart of the evil minimum wage.

Michael Kosares takes a look at the relation between gold and hyperinflation.

Josh Begley gives a map of US empire.

Robert Scheer looks at the three-decade failure of the Afghanistan War.

Sibel Edmonds looks at the "civilized" barbarism of the American nation.


Tuesday, February 4, 2014

Letter of Liberty News Edition (2-04-2014)

John Cochran shows the true legacy of Ben Bernanke.

Justin Raimondo responds to Cass Sunstein's paranoid attack on libertarianism.

Walter Williams addresses the problem of public schoolteacher cheating.

James Miller shows who is really idiotic (it's not libertarians).

Pat Buchanan addresses the problem of mobocracy which might infect Ukraine (not to say that a total state would be great).

Brian Terrell looks at yet another police state evil.

Jim Lobe exposes the evil of AIPAC.

Mitchell Plitnick shows yet another lack of support for the two-state solution among Americans.

Phil Girardi exposes yet another croynist scheme of the exploitative class.

Ron Paul exposes how the USG caused and provoked the new al-Qaeda problem.

Karen Kwiatkowski shows how statism is truly paranoid.

Eric Peters gives his perspective on journalism in Amerika.

Russ Baker looks at the negative results that the execution of Dzohkar Tsarnaev might bring about.

John Whitehead asks if we need yet another cultural and political revolution 50 years after the Beatles.

A former TSA agent exposes the issues with TSA scanning.

Top Guardian photographers say "Happy 100th Birthday" to the German Leica, one of the greatest cameras in the world.

Chris Ferreira asks whether doctors can fix poverty or not.

Paul Rosenberg addresses the issue of German gold and the Amerikan government.

The housing market is just distorted.

Scott Lazarowitz exposes the relation between the blood cult of statism and the sexual revolution.