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Why I am (or at least try to be) a libertarian : Comments
By Steven Schwartz, published 24/12/2024In a world driven by fear, division, and creeping authoritarianism, libertarianism offers a belief in the dignity of the individual, voluntary cooperation and the power of accountability.
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I mostly agree with his position and think of myself as a small-“l” or classical liberal. I agree as well that libertarianism doesn’t fit neatly in left-right political labels on issues such as gay marriage.
But as with all ideologies, the key question – which the article alludes to – is where the boundaries lie. What, if any, are the limits to free speech? Should government leave poor or sick children without free education or free healthcare? And most free-market economists accept that there are situations where the market doesn’t deliver the best outcome, and regulation or other government is in society’s interests –monopolies and polluting industries, for example.
And many exponents of so-called Libertarianism see it as a justification for preserving their own rights and interests even when these harm others – which classical liberals would not support. In the USA, libertarian arguments are often used to oppose gun tighter controls despite the massive death toll that results. On these pages, David Leyonhjelm has used them to argue for fewer speed limits on public roads.
As the humourist PJ O’Rourke said, half seriously – “There is only one basic human right, the right to do as you damn well please. And with it comes the only basic human duty, the duty to take the consequences.”
Extreme Libertarianism, like extreme any other “ism”, can be ugly.