11-05-2018, 12:45 AM
(11-04-2018, 10:28 AM)Bob Butler 54 Wrote:(11-04-2018, 06:08 AM)Galen Wrote: The Jim Crow agenda was an unfortunate consequence, one of many, from the compromise of allowing slavery to continue after the American Revolution. I am not a big fan as you might imagine since involuntary servitude is not something libertarians are in favor of. This forms the basis of the libertarian view of taxation as theft.
The Founding Fathers on the whole, Alexander Hamilton is an exception, could be considered in modern terms to be Minarchist Libertarians. Murray Rothbard's Conceived In Libery covers this evolution toward individual liberty from Colonial Times to the early Federalist period. Their agenda was to create a government that was limited in power which was an unheard of idea in the eighteenth century.
Modern liberals and progressives are not and never have been in favor of individual liberty. The battle always has and always be between liberty and tyranny.
But as I see it, liberty should not get in the way of human rights. Robber Barrons thus should not get in the way of food, shelter, health care, retirement and other basic rights supposedly guaranteed in the UN Declaration of Human Rights. Thus, so long as the absurd division of wealth exists side by side with a denial of rights, this progressive for one can scream.
Progressives tend to define everything as a right and has no concept of the difference between positive and negative rights. It never occurs to you that the progressive tendency to declare everything to be a human right would create a tyranny on par with the Soviet Union.
The problem with positive rights is that you have to apply coercion to get the resources for those things that you consider to be rights. There is no limit to what progressive consider to be rights which is why progressives tend to be such a nasty bunch of totalitarians.
Democracy is the theory that the common people know what they want, and deserve to get it good and hard. -- H.L. Mencken
If one rejects laissez faire on account of man's fallibility and moral weakness, one must for the same reason also reject every kind of government action. -- Ludwig von Mises
If one rejects laissez faire on account of man's fallibility and moral weakness, one must for the same reason also reject every kind of government action. -- Ludwig von Mises