Considering that
1. there's been a fair amount of promotion as of late for Ron Paul and his mostly Libertarian positions, and
2. that some self proclaimed Libertarians are claiming to be the true Conservatives while attempting to label most Republicans as Neoconservatives (Neocons) - a sneering pejorative term used by some to describe conservative Jews and their sympathizers, I thought it might be a good idea to look into the Libertarian philosophy to see what the attraction might be. On the surface, their political positions seem to make a lot of sense; see the following link that spells out their platform:
Platform | Libertarian Party
At first glance these positions would certainly be in sync with most any reasonable conservative. But as the levels of the Libertarian onion are peeled away one begins to realize why this political party has never been and will never be a significant factor in American politics. Their isolationist attitudes on foreign affairs provide the first clues, and more research brings their unrealistic worldview into clearer focus.
The following article/speech was done a number of years ago but provides an excellent analysis that holds true to this day. It's a Loooong read, but here's a few excerpts that might reveal the general theme of the piece:
(Bold emphasis is mine)
1. there's been a fair amount of promotion as of late for Ron Paul and his mostly Libertarian positions, and
2. that some self proclaimed Libertarians are claiming to be the true Conservatives while attempting to label most Republicans as Neoconservatives (Neocons) - a sneering pejorative term used by some to describe conservative Jews and their sympathizers, I thought it might be a good idea to look into the Libertarian philosophy to see what the attraction might be. On the surface, their political positions seem to make a lot of sense; see the following link that spells out their platform:
Platform | Libertarian Party
At first glance these positions would certainly be in sync with most any reasonable conservative. But as the levels of the Libertarian onion are peeled away one begins to realize why this political party has never been and will never be a significant factor in American politics. Their isolationist attitudes on foreign affairs provide the first clues, and more research brings their unrealistic worldview into clearer focus.
The following article/speech was done a number of years ago but provides an excellent analysis that holds true to this day. It's a Loooong read, but here's a few excerpts that might reveal the general theme of the piece:
(Bold emphasis is mine)
A DISPASSIONATE ASSESSMENT OF LIBERTARIANS
by Russell Kirk
The term "libertarianism" is distasteful to people who think seriously about politics. Both Dr. F.A. Hayek and your servant have gone out of their way, from time to time, to declare that they refuse to be tagged with this label...
The libertarian groups differ on some points among themselves, and exhibit varying degrees of fervor. But one may say of them in general that they are "philosophical" anarchists in bourgeois dress...
Of society's old institutions, they would retain only private property. They seek an abstract Liberty that never has existed in any civilization - nor, for that matter, among any barbarous people, or any savage...
The representative libertarian of this decade is humorless, intolerant, self-righteous, badly schooled, and dull...
Why are these doctrinaire libertarians, with a few exceptions, such peculiar people - the sort who give healthy folk like Marion Montgomery the willies? Why do genuine conservatives feel an aversion to close association with them? Why is an alliance between conservatives and libertarians inconceivable, except for very temporary purposes? Why, indeed, would any such articles of confederation undo whatever gains conservatives have made in recent years?
I give you a blunt answer to those questions. The libertarians are rejected because they are metaphysically mad. Lunacy repels, and political lunacy especially. I do not mean that they are dangerous: nay, they are repellent merely. They do not endanger our country and our civilization,...
There exists no peril that American public policies will be affected in any substantial degree by libertarian arguments; or that a candidate of the tiny Libertarian Party ever will be elected to any public office of significance...
The American public rejects this fantastic ideology of extreme individualism, and rightly so. Libertarianism, nevertheless, is a peculiarly American political folly...
A Dispassionate Assessment of Libertarians | The Heritage Foundation
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