[Vision2020] Is Budge is true libertarian?
lfalen
lfalen at turbonet.com
Tue Mar 15 11:26:43 PST 2005
I generally agree with libertarians accept on foreign policy and with Dave Budge. In this cass I'm with Mill and Gier. I think libertarian and Classical Liberal are about the same.
-----Original message-----
From: Nick Gier ngier at uidaho.edu
Date: Tue, 15 Mar 2005 09:50:02 -0800
To: vision2020 at moscow.com
Subject: [Vision2020] Is Budge is true libertarian?
> Greetings:
>
> As I have noted before, I've generally been impressed with David Budge's
> intellectual acumen and what at first appeared to be a consistent
> libertarian position, as opposed to some phony Christian libertarians that
> we know so well.
>
> John Stuart Mill's On Liberty has been a classic resource for contemporary
> libertarians, and one of the most important points that Mill makes in his
> defense of liberty is the protection of minorities. I believe this is a
> direct quote: "Even a minority of one must be protected." (This is the
> reason why we need the ACLU.) When Dave states that we must decide basic
> issues of human rights by a democratic vote, he has left, as far as I'm
> concerned, the libertarian fold. We have a judicial system primarily
> because we don't want a majority of people in Mississippi tell its citizens
> that segregation is OK because that is how they've always done it.
>
> As I have argued elsewhere, in a true libertarian society the role of
> government would contract significantly, but the court system would expand
> not contract. For example, the libertarian solution to pollution is not a
> clumsy EPA but class action suits against polluters. The libertarian
> solution against unsafe planes is not the FAA but class action suits
> against unsafe carriers. The libertarian argument is that this is a far
> more effective way to irresponsible businesses.
>
> After teaching undergraduates for 31 years and learning how poorly they
> understand basic rights such as equality of opportunity and liberty to do
> what one wants within a minimal legal framework, I do not want my fellow
> Americans voting on these basic rights. They are not negotiable and our
> courts are there to protect our inalienable rights. That's why I'm so
> fearful of the current administration packing the court system with real
> activist judges.
>
> Yours for liberty, equality, and community,
>
> Nick Gier, Classical Liberal
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