Brainpolice: I emphasize the following from a LIBERTARIAN perspective: Contemporary conservatives do not support free markets. They do not support non-intervention abroad. They do not support philosophical individualism. They do not support private property rights. The idea that they have those traits is largely a myth that any libertarian with good sense should have rejected long ago. These are FALSE ADVERTISEMENTS, not accurate depictions of the objective content of what conservatives support. At best, conservatives support liberty for their prefered special interest groups while opposing liberty for everyone else - just like all other political factions. This is simply how politics works. Common traits of a conservative may be: a hobbesian view of human nature, idolization of the police and military, a desire to outlaw culturally undesired behaviors, a desire to preserve political traditions, knee-jerk defenses of corporate power, a desire to use political means to achieve cultural uniformity, a desire to preserve political borders, support for a surveillance apparatus, the idea that the military must be kept big, a desire to invade disliked countries, support for political favors to various industries, a preferance for the use of monetary inflation and borrowing over taxation, support for the "right" of states to be authoritarian in defiance of the feds, political hegomonic trade agreements, and so on. Libertarianism isn't thinly defined by making a few tax cuts and fighting minimum wage increases. There is much more at stake.
I emphasize the following from a LIBERTARIAN perspective: Contemporary conservatives do not support free markets. They do not support non-intervention abroad. They do not support philosophical individualism. They do not support private property rights. The idea that they have those traits is largely a myth that any libertarian with good sense should have rejected long ago. These are FALSE ADVERTISEMENTS, not accurate depictions of the objective content of what conservatives support. At best, conservatives support liberty for their prefered special interest groups while opposing liberty for everyone else - just like all other political factions. This is simply how politics works.
Common traits of a conservative may be: a hobbesian view of human nature, idolization of the police and military, a desire to outlaw culturally undesired behaviors, a desire to preserve political traditions, knee-jerk defenses of corporate power, a desire to use political means to achieve cultural uniformity, a desire to preserve political borders, support for a surveillance apparatus, the idea that the military must be kept big, a desire to invade disliked countries, support for political favors to various industries, a preferance for the use of monetary inflation and borrowing over taxation, support for the "right" of states to be authoritarian in defiance of the feds, political hegomonic trade agreements, and so on.
Libertarianism isn't thinly defined by making a few tax cuts and fighting minimum wage increases. There is much more at stake.
If anyone has any doubt about this then I recommend going any number of conservative forums (hannity forums, freerepublic, protestwarrior, politicalcrossfire etc.) and look for yourself. They're filled with the average conservative voter.
minorgrey: Brainpolice: I emphasize the following from a LIBERTARIAN perspective: Contemporary conservatives do not support free markets. They do not support non-intervention abroad. They do not support philosophical individualism. They do not support private property rights. The idea that they have those traits is largely a myth that any libertarian with good sense should have rejected long ago. These are FALSE ADVERTISEMENTS, not accurate depictions of the objective content of what conservatives support. At best, conservatives support liberty for their prefered special interest groups while opposing liberty for everyone else - just like all other political factions. This is simply how politics works. Common traits of a conservative may be: a hobbesian view of human nature, idolization of the police and military, a desire to outlaw culturally undesired behaviors, a desire to preserve political traditions, knee-jerk defenses of corporate power, a desire to use political means to achieve cultural uniformity, a desire to preserve political borders, support for a surveillance apparatus, the idea that the military must be kept big, a desire to invade disliked countries, support for political favors to various industries, a preferance for the use of monetary inflation and borrowing over taxation, support for the "right" of states to be authoritarian in defiance of the feds, political hegomonic trade agreements, and so on. Libertarianism isn't thinly defined by making a few tax cuts and fighting minimum wage increases. There is much more at stake. If anyone has any doubt about this then I recommend going any number of conservative forums (hannity forums, freerepublic, protestwarrior, politicalcrossfire etc.) and look for yourself. They're filled with the average conservative voter.
But they support tax cuts, so they're are allies!
But they hate corporations, so they are allies!
Don't allow leftists to play games with definitions! Some of the libertarian-leaning leftists at this forum will try to redefine "left-wing" back to its original defition (Third Estate, limited government, free-markets, laissez-faire reforms, etc.). Fine! We non-leftists can't stop them from using their own personal definitions; they can use whatever labels they want to describe any concept they want.However, they have the audacity to then use their personal definition of "left-wing" (remember, the original definition, which is no longer valid) to prove that modern leftists are more libertarian than modern rightists! They will say that libertarianism is "inherently leftist" (again, using the original, no longer valid definition), and use that to insist that we should prefer and side with modern leftists over modern rightists.
Question their motives.
So is conservatism the definition of conservatism, or is it defined by the actions and beliefs of the people who call themselves conservatives?
Because I think we're running into the domain of little Nicky's "purge" rhetoric. The faux libertarians must go, because they are not real libertarians, and based on that, one could argue that many of today's conservatives do not adequately address true conservatism.
By that metric, modern liberals are soft minded narcissitic socialists if DailyKOS is any example.
Do we really believe that today's idiot or lowest common denominator is the benchmark for these paradigms?
I would make a great bureaucrat. Wanna see? Click here. It's fun.
Ego: But they hate corporations, so they are allies!
Precisely. BrainPolice is applying a sliding scale when measuring the right and left separately. Heck, even collectively.
I am having a hard time believing that someone would make the case for welfarism over warfarism.
I'm sorry, is someone saying we should support statist liberals? I don't care what flavor of anarchism they are as long as they don't force it on me. If they can do that then it's all-good.
liberty student: Ego: But they hate corporations, so they are allies! Precisely. BrainPolice is applying a sliding scale when measuring the right and left separately. Heck, even collectively. I am having a hard time believing that someone would make the case for welfarism over warfarism.
Really? You don't see one as being more destructive than the other? In one case I have something taken from me to feed to another person... in the other case I have something taken from me to kill another person. If I had to choose I'd rather have rampant welfare over rampant warfare.
I'd rather have rampant warfare over rampant welfare. Why? One of the two has proven itself never to end; the other always burns out.
Ego: I'd rather have rampant warfare over rampant welfare. Why? One of the two has proven itself never to end; the other always burns out.
I don't follow your logic at all and have already refuted this in previous threads. The warfare state does not end. It has continued and grown perpetually. New enemies are manufactured when older ones go away. The warfare state apparatus does not usually dissapear when war is over. They just find a new enemy. For example, what happened when the cold war ended? The warfare apparatus merely turned to "radical Islam" and "terrorism" as the new enemy. The warfare state doesn't "burn out". It's arguably the most serious problem facing us today. We've practically had perpetual war for decades.
Furthermore, as minorgrey points out, warfare actually murders people. I consider murder to be much more serious of a crime than theft. I'd most certainly rather be cheated out of some of my money than to be killed. At least I'm still alive after being robbed. The same can't be said of warfare, which is merely institutionalized mass-murder. Also, the warfare state is funded through the exact same means as the welfare state. It involves just as much wealth redistribution, only the wealth is redistributed to wealthy elites and industries instead of poor and disabled people.
I don't see how wealth redistribution + murder is superior to wealth redistribution to poor folks. The rationale you give for why welfare is so bad is part of the same reason why warfare is bad. So your distinction strikes me as nonsensical if not hypocritical or inconsistant.
You think that socialist programs haven't killed people? Are you serious? Socialist planning has probably killed more people than every war combined, ever. It's ruined the lives and liberty of billions more than that.
In addition, wars have come and gone through history; tens of thousands have been fought, and all of them have ended. Welfare states are self-perpetuating; warfare states will inevitably fall. I'll go search for the thread you're referencing, we had an excellent discussion going.
You think that socialist programs haven't killed people? Are you serious? Socialist planning has probably killed more people than every war combined, ever.
The warfare state is a state-socialist program. A huge one that makes up approximately 1/3 of the federal budget. That's not minor! It involves just as much central planning and wealth redistribution as any welfare scheme. It requires the exact same means that any left-liberal domestic program does. This website is full of resources providing an economic analysis of the effects of the warfare state, and it's not pretty. So once again, why do you make a distinction where none exists? They're two heads of the exact same hydra. Except one directly murders people. I don't deny that the welfare state leads to deaths as well, but they are not direct murders in the way that the warfare state perpetuates.
Plus, wars have come and gone through history; tens of thousands have been fought, and all of them have ended. Welfare states are self-perpetuating, warfare states will inevitably fall.
No, no, no. I'm talking about warfare states. The military-industrial apparatus itself. It does not go away after a single war. It is self-perpetuating as well. Military intervention abroad breeds the conditions for future military intervention, and military planners make a career out of finding new enemies so that more wars can be fought. Throughout the whole ordeal, even in so-called "peace-time", the military continues to be funded through extortion money and be full of government bureaucracy. Over the past century, the American warfare apparatus has done nothing but grow and grow, and we've practically been in a state of perpetual warfare. So your claims are simply false. I don't understand this perspective.
Ego:most modern rightists are, at their core, confused, inconsistent individualists who view the state and taxation as necessary evils.
This is a bit of an over-generalization. While your characterization is certainly true in some cases, it would be just as accurate to say that modern rightists are, at their core, confused, inconsistent nationalists who view the state as their god and taxation as tithe money.
Whatever the state says or demands they accept as truth or law without thought; or rather, for them it becomes truth or law (they are uber-relativists in this regard). As I mentioned (somewhere) in an earlier thread, whatever (obvioustly inchoate) individualist/libertarian bent still exists in the heart of the typical rightist is just the effect of the right's appealing to tradition to justify policy and having been strongly associated with individualism/libertarianism in the past (viz. the old right).
In other words a libertarian-minded individual and a statist-minded individual are equally likely, after being introduced to politics, to label themselves 'conservative' and eventually become an ugly amalgam of the two.
I HATE PAPER
liberty student:So is conservatism the definition of conservatism, or is it defined by the actions and beliefs of the people who call themselves conservatives?
By that metric, modern liberals are soft minded narcissitic socialists if DailyKOS is any example.Do we really believe that today's idiot or lowest common denominator is the benchmark for these paradigms?