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livertarian

livertarian

Fairfax, VA
February 2008

FEB 21, 2008 11:25 AM

FearTheReaper said:

livertarian said:
I agree with Ron Paul's assessment of the immigration issue. Illegals are used as a scapegoat by the neo-cons, and as a rallying point for liberals, but we all lose by embracing either side. Either we continue to expand subsidies and entitlements, which are putting future generations into crushing debt, or we enrage our neighbors with harsh extraction and prosecution efforts.

The solution isn't simple or easy, but my man RP has the right idea: Address the more fundamental economic policies that distort and cripple our markets and money. Let the free market decide whether sneaking over US borders is a potentially lucrative risk. I believe if governments got out of the way, we could sort this out over a shorter period of time, if it can be sorted out at all.



And I believe in fairies.



Well that's just cynical. Cynicism doesn't work if you're trying to come up with ideas. We've tried federal intervention into all aspects of economic and social policy, and I see massive failure in results. Politicians will try to make all issues sound like they're at a critical juncture - time to act! - at precisely those times when we need to focus on long term efforts and consequences.

Hooraydiation

Hooraydiation

Boston, MA
October 2005

FEB 21, 2008 11:28 AM

Federal intervention gave us minimum wage and child labor laws, even though the free market opposed both.

livertarian

livertarian

Fairfax, VA
February 2008

FEB 21, 2008 11:34 AM

Hooraydiation said:
Federal intervention gave us minimum wage and child labor laws, even though the free market opposed both.



Don't mistake the free market for nasty operatives within it. Laws against unfair or immoral practices can and should continue to be enforced in a free market. I hear this argument all the time: Free market = rampant abuse by evil capitalists. I counter that argument with the fact that monopolies and mega-corporations have always thrived with our regulatory system - it cannot get worse or more unfair for competition than it is right now.

As for minimum wage, it's a bit of a joke. Our monetary polices ensure the minimum wage will always be running behind the cost of living. Wages and prices distract from the real picture.

wereduck

wereduck

I'm lost
July 2007

FEB 21, 2008 11:35 AM

Hooraydiation said:
Federal intervention gave us minimum wage and child labor laws, even though the free market opposed both.



Added to your list:

anti-trust laws, environmental protection, health regulations for food and medicine, and labor safety regulations.

Yep. That free market is made of honey and rainbows.

wereduck

wereduck

I'm lost
July 2007

FEB 21, 2008 11:37 AM

livertarian said:
I counter that argument with the fact that monopolies and mega-corporations have always thrived with our regulatory system - it cannot get worse or more unfair for competition than it is right now.



Apparently, you don't know about all those big trusts that Theodore Roosevelt went after. The ones that were squashed by regulation.

livertarian

livertarian

Fairfax, VA
February 2008

FEB 21, 2008 11:40 AM

we3_pirate said:

Hooraydiation said:
Federal intervention gave us minimum wage and child labor laws, even though the free market opposed both.



Added to your list:

anti-trust laws, environmental protection, health regulations for food and medicine, and labor safety regulations.

Yep. That free market is made of honey and rainbows.



Anti-trust is a well documented joke: Companies sue each other using these laws to put each other out of business. All the regulatory institutions you cite are also corrupt and ineffective. We live in a world where good information is more accessible than ever before, and yet we still think the government ought to be the supplier and enforcer. If there was ever a good time for mega-regulation, that time passed already. And I am not convinced it ever helped.

FearTheReaper

FearTheReaper

NEWSWIRE

I'm lost

FEB 21, 2008 11:40 AM

How is it that Ron Paul trolls can turn every thread so it is about their candidate? It's fucking amazing. You people are pathetic and have a total lack of understanding that YOUR actions have resulted in numerous voters hating your candidate.

This is about a fence. It has so little to do with Ron Paul it is fucking amazing.

Uncognitive

Uncognitive

Brooklyn, NY
May 2003

FEB 21, 2008 11:44 AM

livertarian said:
All the regulatory institutions you cite are also corrupt and ineffective. We live in a world where good information is more accessible than ever before, and yet we still think the government ought to be the supplier and enforcer. If there was ever a good time for mega-regulation, that time passed already. And I am not convinced it ever helped.



Yeah, those evil government regulations banning the use of lead in household paint sure didn't help anyone.

But hey, I'm sure the Triangle Shirtwaist Company is still hiring.

livertarian

livertarian

Fairfax, VA
February 2008

FEB 21, 2008 11:47 AM

FearTheReaper said:
How is it that Ron Paul trolls can turn every thread so it is about their candidate? It's fucking amazing. You people are pathetic and have a total lack of understanding that YOUR actions have resulted in numerous voters hating your candidate.

This is about a fence. It has so little to do with Ron Paul it is fucking amazing.



C'mon man. If someone cites a Hillary policy, does that make him a cult member? I only mentioned RP because I think he's got good points. If I hadn't mentioned RP, I'm sure my obvious libertarianism would have attracted a similar level of scorn anyway.

Quirky

Quirky

Birmingham, AL
October 2005

FEB 21, 2008 11:49 AM

livertarian said:

FearTheReaper said:
How is it that Ron Paul trolls can turn every thread so it is about their candidate? It's fucking amazing. You people are pathetic and have a total lack of understanding that YOUR actions have resulted in numerous voters hating your candidate.

This is about a fence. It has so little to do with Ron Paul it is fucking amazing.



C'mon man. If someone cites a Hillary policy, does that make him a cult member? I only mentioned RP because I think he's got good points. If I hadn't mentioned RP, I'm sure my obvious libertarianism would have attracted a similar level of scorn anyway.



Try not to wear your beliefs on your sleeve.

FearTheReaper

FearTheReaper

NEWSWIRE

I'm lost

FEB 21, 2008 11:52 AM

livertarian said:

FearTheReaper said:
How is it that Ron Paul trolls can turn every thread so it is about their candidate? It's fucking amazing. You people are pathetic and have a total lack of understanding that YOUR actions have resulted in numerous voters hating your candidate.

This is about a fence. It has so little to do with Ron Paul it is fucking amazing.



C'mon man. If someone cites a Hillary policy, does that make him a cult member? I only mentioned RP because I think he's got good points. If I hadn't mentioned RP, I'm sure my obvious libertarianism would have attracted a similar level of scorn anyway.



Bringing up Hillary Clinton in a thread about the blatant political corruption involved in the building a fence would have been equally bullshit.

You mention Ron Paul because that is all you people do. You could bring it up on a gardening website. You are parasites.

wereduck

wereduck

I'm lost
July 2007

FEB 21, 2008 11:52 AM

livertarian said:

we3_pirate said:

Hooraydiation said:
Federal intervention gave us minimum wage and child labor laws, even though the free market opposed both.



Added to your list:

anti-trust laws, environmental protection, health regulations for food and medicine, and labor safety regulations.

Yep. That free market is made of honey and rainbows.



Anti-trust is a well documented joke: Companies sue each other using these laws to put each other out of business. All the regulatory institutions you cite are also corrupt and ineffective. We live in a world where good information is more accessible than ever before, and yet we still think the government ought to be the supplier and enforcer. If there was ever a good time for mega-regulation, that time passed already. And I am not convinced it ever helped.



First off: Uh, what institutions did I cite? Laws =/= institutions. There are environmental protection laws, and then there is this whole separate thing called an agency. The law is the independent variable here, as it can exist without the agency.

Second off: By your logic: there are "nasty operatives" in the free market, and there are "nasty operatives" in regulation. Yet, the "nasty operatives" in the free market shouldn't be used as evidence of deregulation not working, but the "nasty operatives" in regulatory agencies, which are put in place by the "nasty operatives" in the free market, should be used as evidence that regulation is bad?

EDIT: And, I've maxed out my use of quotations for the next three months.

Toku666

Toku666

Columbus, OH
May 2004

FEB 21, 2008 12:03 PM

livertarian said:

FearTheReaper said:

livertarian said:
I agree with Ron Paul's assessment of the immigration issue. Illegals are used as a scapegoat by the neo-cons, and as a rallying point for liberals, but we all lose by embracing either side. Either we continue to expand subsidies and entitlements, which are putting future generations into crushing debt, or we enrage our neighbors with harsh extraction and prosecution efforts.

The solution isn't simple or easy, but my man RP has the right idea: Address the more fundamental economic policies that distort and cripple our markets and money. Let the free market decide whether sneaking over US borders is a potentially lucrative risk. I believe if governments got out of the way, we could sort this out over a shorter period of time, if it can be sorted out at all.



And I believe in fairies.



Well that's just cynical. Cynicism doesn't work if you're trying to come up with ideas. We've tried federal intervention into all aspects of economic and social policy, and I see massive failure in results. Politicians will try to make all issues sound like they're at a critical juncture - time to act! - at precisely those times when we need to focus on long term efforts and consequences.



Before he admits that his stance is "just cynical" you would have to admit that your opening post contains a gargantuan false dichotomy. What's interesting is that you'd think "Doc" Paul-iday would be toeing the libertarian line on this one, but he actually isn't.

To FearTheReaper: livertarian is totally on topic, gramps! Don't forget about NAFTA SUPERHIGHWAY! Toot toot, all aboard! Oh wait! Doesn't NAFTA superhighway paranoia fundamentally contradict opposition to further federal stricture on borders?

Toku666

Toku666

Columbus, OH
May 2004

FEB 21, 2008 12:21 PM

livertarian said:

we3_pirate said:

Hooraydiation said:
Federal intervention gave us minimum wage and child labor laws, even though the free market opposed both.



Added to your list:

anti-trust laws, environmental protection, health regulations for food and medicine, and labor safety regulations.

Yep. That free market is made of honey and rainbows.



Anti-trust is a well documented joke: Companies sue each other using these laws to put each other out of business. All the regulatory institutions you cite are also corrupt and ineffective. We live in a world where good information is more accessible than ever before, and yet we still think the government ought to be the supplier and enforcer. If there was ever a good time for mega-regulation, that time passed already. And I am not convinced it ever helped.



Hmm. "You keep saying zis word, but I do not theenk it mean what you think it mean."

Stop saying things are some kind of superlative "joke" when such a statement is demonstrably (even with what's already been given as evidence within this same thread!) false. Did Microsoft go out of business whilst I slept? Does it really look like Sun microsystems was devoured by the moon? Point the first.

So you would seriously lay claim that OSHA is corrupt and ineffective? I'd lay odds that any body functioning in the service of the necessary federal business restrictions listed are not statistically corrupt or ineffective. You may make serious counterclaim as to the possibly abysmal space the bell curve for that currently encompasses, but that's outside the scope of this thread, no? Point the second.

"We live in a world where good information is more accessible than ever before, and yet we still think the government ought to be the supplier and enforcer." Your words. Excuse me? What? First of all, for the same reason that "good" information is more accessible than ever, the opposite is also true. Though you've already colored the rhetoric by using the word "good," instead of the possibly more descriptive "valuable" or "worthwhile," I can still only give you a choice of possibilities as to how we describe the opposite here. It could be "bad," "evil," or "worthless" information. This kind of information is getting the same boost as your so-called "good" information. Consider Furries, or suicide cults, or anorexia cults. However, consider the following way in which your statement is also wrong; most of the people posting here believe in freedom of information, in fact so much so that we grudgingly accept Furries, and suicide cults, and anorexia cults, while simultaneously trying to help and inform people trapped by harmful Internet communities. None of us want the government to be in control of the Internet, matey, and I'm not sure where in your tom-foolish libertarian worldview you got the impression that a group of mostly varyingly-leftish Internet would-be or actual pundits would support government restriction of the Internet. And surely not the enforcer, man! Come ON!

Ultimately: what we3_pirate said.

livertarian

livertarian

Fairfax, VA
February 2008

FEB 21, 2008 12:21 PM

Man... no love here. I did not mean to try to turn this thread into an RP stump speech, but I will not back down from endorsing the guy as the only honest talker out there. He is far from perfect, and I do not share his views on some things, but where he's right is where it all counts.

So what is so great about interventionist government? Alll the great programs cited on this board have many flaws and unintended consequences. Free markets are not supposed to be perfect. It is naive to think that any amount of regulation would truly make the world a better place. The best chance we have is to get these fucking "leaders" out of our lives and learn to live with each other, not try to use the sytem to beat the other half down.

I became a libertarian because I have a daughter whose generaton is fucked as of right now. More government is not the answer. I defy anyone to prove me wrong on this.

livertarian

livertarian

Fairfax, VA
February 2008

FEB 21, 2008 12:25 PM

Toku666 said:

livertarian said:

we3_pirate said:

Hooraydiation said:
Federal intervention gave us minimum wage and child labor laws, even though the free market opposed both.



Added to your list:

anti-trust laws, environmental protection, health regulations for food and medicine, and labor safety regulations.

Yep. That free market is made of honey and rainbows.



Anti-trust is a well documented joke: Companies sue each other using these laws to put each other out of business. All the regulatory institutions you cite are also corrupt and ineffective. We live in a world where good information is more accessible than ever before, and yet we still think the government ought to be the supplier and enforcer. If there was ever a good time for mega-regulation, that time passed already. And I am not convinced it ever helped.



Hmm. "You keep saying zis word, but I do not theenk it mean what you think it mean."

Stop saying things are some kind of superlative "joke" when such a statement is demonstrably (even with what's already been given as evidence within this same thread!) false. Did Microsoft go out of business whilst I slept? Does it really look like Sun microsystems was devoured by the moon? Point the first.

So you would seriously lay claim that OSHA is corrupt and ineffective? I'd lay odds that any body functioning in the service of the necessary federal business restrictions listed are not statistically corrupt or ineffective. You may make serious counterclaim as to the possibly abysmal space the bell curve for that currently encompasses, but that's outside the scope of this thread, no? Point the second.

"We live in a world where good information is more accessible than ever before, and yet we still think the government ought to be the supplier and enforcer." Your words. Excuse me? What? First of all, for the same reason that "good" information is more accessible than ever, the opposite is also true. Though you've already colored the rhetoric by using the word "good," instead of the possibly more descriptive "valuable" or "worthwhile," I can still only give you a choice of possibilities as to how we describe the opposite here. It could be "bad," "evil," or "worthless" information. This kind of information is getting the same boost as your so-called "good" information. Consider Furries, or suicide cults, or anorexia cults. However, consider the following way in which your statement is also wrong; most of the people posting here believe in freedom of information, in fact so much so that we grudgingly accept Furries, and suicide cults, and anorexia cults, while simultaneously trying to help and inform people trapped by harmful Internet communities. None of use want the government to be in control of the Internet, matey, and I'm not sure where in your tom-foolish libertarian worldview you got the impression that a group of mostly varyingly-leftish Internet would-be or actual pundits would support government restriction of the Internet. And surely not the enforcer, man! Come ON!

Ultimately: what we3_pirate said.



You point to paradox, right? We can deconstruct any argument into a stalemate if we wanted to. I am trying to keep things simple: Big government has not stopped corporate malfeasance, pollution, laziness, drug abuse, or border hopping. What is the solution?

FearTheReaper

FearTheReaper

NEWSWIRE

I'm lost

FEB 21, 2008 12:29 PM

livertarian said:


I became a libertarian because I have a daughter whose generaton is fucked as of right now. More government is not the answer. I defy anyone to prove me wrong on this.



You are hopeless.

Toku666

Toku666

Columbus, OH
May 2004

FEB 21, 2008 12:31 PM

livertarian said:
Man... no love here. I did not mean to try to turn this thread into an RP stump speech, but I will not back down from endorsing the guy as the only honest talker out there. He is far from perfect, and I do not share his views on some things, but where he's right is where it all counts.

So what is so great about interventionist government? Alll the great programs cited on this board have many flaws and unintended consequences. Free markets are not supposed to be perfect. It is naive to think that any amount of regulation would truly make the world a better place. The best chance we have is to get these fucking "leaders" out of our lives and learn to live with each other, not try to use the sytem to beat the other half down.

I became a libertarian because I have a daughter whose generaton is fucked as of right now. More government is not the answer. I defy anyone to prove me wrong on this.



On that last point you are probably correct. So why don't we start with a candidate that might do something as whacky as breaking DHS back into its component overlaps with existing federal (i.e., Constitutional) law enforcement? Or somebody who won't lose us billions of dollars in debt to China, police action cost in the Middle East, (yes I realize "Doc" wants us out of the ME) and the economic nightmare that would be our national re-structuring to withstand the ravages of a return to the gold standard. Or somebody who wouldn't throw our country to the wolfish state of pre-Roe v. Wade and pre-Brown v. Board of Education. Or, hey, how about somebody who might actually be able to help heal national issues and deeply held feelings about race relations, instead of somebody who has (at best!) highly dubious thoughts on the subject.

Is this going anywhere? Or is Sisyphus gonna push his rock back up to the top?

livertarian

livertarian

Fairfax, VA
February 2008

FEB 21, 2008 12:37 PM

FearTheReaper said:

livertarian said:

FearTheReaper said:
How is it that Ron Paul trolls can turn every thread so it is about their candidate? It's fucking amazing. You people are pathetic and have a total lack of understanding that YOUR actions have resulted in numerous voters hating your candidate.

This is about a fence. It has so little to do with Ron Paul it is fucking amazing.



C'mon man. If someone cites a Hillary policy, does that make him a cult member? I only mentioned RP because I think he's got good points. If I hadn't mentioned RP, I'm sure my obvious libertarianism would have attracted a similar level of scorn anyway.



Bringing up Hillary Clinton in a thread about the blatant political corruption involved in the building a fence would have been equally bullshit.

You mention Ron Paul because that is all you people do. You could bring it up on a gardening website. You are parasites.



I will no longer mention RP in future postings. Too hot a button to push.

And you are right about wearing it on the sleeve. This was an emotional response.

I will, however, continue to represent some idea of small government.

Toku666

Toku666

Columbus, OH
May 2004

FEB 21, 2008 12:38 PM

livertarian said:
You point to paradox, right? We can deconstruct any argument into a stalemate if we wanted to. I am trying to keep things simple: Big government has not stopped corporate malfeasance, pollution, laziness, drug abuse, or border hopping. What is the solution?



Hurrrrmmm. Let's see here...

First off, don't accuse me of rhetorical solipsism. Seriously. Do not.

Well, so big government has not stopped, etc., you state. Okay, fine. I'm going to be really generous and grant you that point. So, in rebuttal I would ask you the following:

1) Have you ever been fishing or hunting? Did you catch and/or shoot them all?

2) Do Highway Patrol officers catch all reckless/inebriated drivers?

3) Do homicide departments in police forces apprehend all murderers and rapists?

4) In 2) and 3) above, can you see how it could be harmful if government did less in these instances?

In the wake of China's woes over exported goods like poisonous toothpaste, dogfood, and toxic children's toys, it is astounding that you hold to some claim that we can do without an agency such as the FDA. So again I would argue that we should probably go with a candidate who suggests the greatest chance of being somebody who would not only make these agencies more transparent (hint: Google "Obama" and "transparency," and click on the links that look like they lead to legislation) but could, possibly, maybe do away with a lot of the disgracefully wasteful legislation of the past seven years.

Hooraydiation

Hooraydiation

Boston, MA
October 2005

FEB 21, 2008 12:38 PM

I will, however, continue to represent some idea of small government.



I prefer "The Little Government That Could".

DevilsReject

DevilsReject

Cleveland, OH
February 2007

FEB 21, 2008 12:41 PM

livertarian said:
So what is so great about interventionist government?



Well, with that whole corrupt "OSHA" thing, we kind of mandated a policy that says we'd rather not kill people whilst manufacturing something.

Machines that once ripped fingers and arms off were made safer so that the U.S. Worker could actually still have full use of his/her appendages while not at work.

I think that's pretty great.

The EPA told huge steel companies, and other manufacturers in Cleveland that they weren't allowed to dump toxic waste into the Cuyahoga River anymore, it hasn't caught fire in at least a decade or two.

i think that's pretty great.

The EPA also told medical waste companies that they aren't allowed to dump medical waste into Lake Erie anymore. The Lake itself has cleaned up over the years, we have a long way to go, but it is an improvement. Fish kills aren't nearly as common as they used to be and it's been a long time since hypodermic needles washed up on our beaches.

i think that's pretty great.


wereduck

wereduck

I'm lost
July 2007

FEB 21, 2008 12:42 PM

livertarian said:
You point to paradox, right? We can deconstruct any argument into a stalemate if we wanted to. I am trying to keep things simple: Big government has not stopped corporate malfeasance, pollution, laziness, drug abuse, or border hopping. What is the solution?



I don't think anyone reasonable would argue that any solution will cure all of society's ills. But I highly doubt going back to unregulated capitalism would help instead of hurting. If you really think so, then why not go even further and argue for removing laws altogether? After all, those things that prevent us from going, "Hey, I don't like my neighbors noisy kids" *blam blam blam* limit our freedoms, and they don't stop murder from happening.

Toku666

Toku666

Columbus, OH
May 2004

FEB 21, 2008 12:43 PM

FearTheReaper said:

livertarian said:


I became a libertarian because I have a daughter whose generaton is fucked as of right now. More government is not the answer. I defy anyone to prove me wrong on this.



You are hopeless.



Okay, the "future generations" reasoning is a bit heavy on the pathos, but is he really hopeless? I honestly think he's just focusing on the wrong fucking areas of supposed government "waste." He sets his crosshairs on agencies that keep metal out of hot dogs and green sludge out of his daughter's drinking water when he would not only have a fatter but a bigger target were he to go after waste via military action or draconian micromanagement of things like federal funding for sex ed and the like. (Despite the fact that the Bush 43 admin has been cutting funding for a lot of sex ed programs, the change-over to abstinence-only pamphlets still cost us plenty) Those, to me, would have been higher priorities for the 19-year-old know-it-all libertarian version of me. (Kept the know-it-all, lost the libertarian)

Toku666

Toku666

Columbus, OH
May 2004

FEB 21, 2008 12:45 PM

livertarian said:
I will no longer mention RP in future postings. Too hot a button to push.

And you are right about wearing it on the sleeve. This was an emotional response.

I will, however, continue to represent some idea of small government.



Gosh, I hope you don't expect me to think you can tar me with this brush. I think I've been completely rational and reasonable yet you don't seem to be addressing too many of my points. You'll note that a lot of them don't have anything to do with Paul, but rather his stated positions on, y'know, stuff.

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