Tuesday, March 29, 2005

Libertarian Future Prospects

...for full text, check our links section to Lew Rockwell...

The libertarian tradition stretches from the ancient world through the middle ages to our own day. But I do think we are living through a high point in intellectual development and recruitment. The body of theoretical work is vast and the intellectuals are hardened and ready for battle. The web and blogosphere give us the means to compete in the world of ideas as never before.

There is no sure blueprint for success other than for libertarians to do what each individually does best, whether that means teaching students, organizing antiwar rallies, writing large books on technical economic topics, or tirelessly managing a compelling blog.

I'm wary of all formal alliances but I do think libertarians need to be strategically flexible and entrepreneurial in finding intellectual allies, even if it means admitting that far better arguments are being made by CounterPunch than National Review.

What desperately needs to be rethought is this tendency of libertarians to avert their eyes from the reality of what's going on at places like National Review. Their main dishes consist of calling for ever more war, approving the killing of civilians, backing the surveillance state, and even torture. Libertarians have traditionally provided the side dishes that call for petty deregulatory measures and tax cuts. This really must stop.

The libertarian revolution will come when we least expect it, and it will unfold in a way we cannot fully anticipate. In the mid 1980s, everyone assumed that the Soviet empire would last forever. Five years later, it was gone without a trace. So too, the expectation of eternal world rule by Washington, DC, could evaporate very quickly.

Tuesday, March 22, 2005

U.S. Congress VS Michael Schiavo

Few people babbling on this topic KNOW much about it. I don't KNOW much about it either, but I used to wonder why her husband couldn't get a divorce and turn Terri's care over to her parents who obviously wanted it. Then he turned down $1,000,000 if he would do just that. Whoah! There's something else going on here, methinks.

Now I mentally put myself or my wife on that slab - we, by the way, are quite happy together, very much in love and anticipating many years in that delightful state. Both of us KNOW that neither would want to live absent movement, communication and the stimulus that is life.

You try laying in bed staring at the ceiling, and I mean doing absolutely nothing else, for 24 hours. No talking. No reading. No eating. Nothing. Zip. Nada.

Not too bad. Okay, now keep it up for 72 hours. Starting to go crazy yet? Now imagine doing that for 87,600 hours - one long minute at a time. You'd darn sure want someone who loves you to put an end to that torture.

I KNOW I would. I could only hope that the person fighting for me would have the fortitude and perseverance to withstand the immense social, political and economic pressures that have been placed on Michael Schiavo.

I also KNOW this is not the business of a Congress, President or federal court system defined by the United States Constitution.

Ted Dunlap