Brainpolice:I myself prefer the moral approach and find it to be more radical and I do see a certain danger of the utilitarian abandoning the principle in practise when they find it to be unpragmatic.
I've never been a fan of morality. Perhaps I'd be willing to put more emphasis on it, if more people actually practiced what they preached. But at the moment, morality in its various forms is more often a convenient justification for something, than an actual narrative to live by. So having grown up seeing the world as a nihilistic free-for-all, I never had a need to incorporate morality into that scheme of things. It would only introduce unneeded complexity.
And I think this applies to everyone. I see the moral approach only as a consequence of understanding properly the utility gained from coercing others. For example, as long as I held to a nationalist view of the world, where I kept imagining a connection between myself and the state, I also held that coercing others to serve the state was advantageous. And similarly a socialist will hold to his forceful doctrine as long as he imagines a connection between himself and the collective. And so will the social liberal as long as he is under the delusion that he can improve others. The only way to libertarianism is through understanding that what is gained from all this is actually very minimal, if not non-existent.
Drag not your strength from government, but from the voices they abuse.