Friday, September 13, 2013

Some Questions for Libertarians

I know a lot of people, which means that, among the many I know, I know a fair number of self-described "libertarians."  These range from a friend of mine who happens to be an auto mechanic and who believes that libertarians have discovered a new form of economics and likes to say "Who is John Galt?" to a friend who is a former Libertarian gubernatorial candidate and notable lawyer and is on the inside of the movement.  I've often been puzzled by the discontinuities in libertarian beliefs -- for instance, I am puzzled by libertarians who rail against "the right to privacy" -- and I know I am not alone in this.  An article by R.J. Eskow published yesterday in Salon (which I saw via Pharyngula) puts it right up front: "11 Questions to See if Libertarians are Hypocrites."

The whole article is worth reading, as Eskow puts the questions into context. Here, though, are his questions:
  1. Are unions, political parties, elections, and social movements like Occupy examples of “spontaneous order” [a term used by the Cato Institute to define libertarian thought] —and if not, why not?
  2. Is a libertarian willing to admit that production is the result of many forces, each of which should be recognized and rewarded?
  3. Is our libertarian willing to acknowledge that workers who bargain for their services, individually and collectively, are also employing market forces?
  4. Is our libertarian willing to admit that a “free market” needs regulation?
  5. Does our libertarian believe in democracy? If yes, explain what’s wrong with governments that regulate.
  6. Does our libertarian use wealth that wouldn’t exist without government in order to preach against the role of government?
  7. Does our libertarian reject any and all government protection for his intellectual property?
  8. Does our libertarian recognize that democracy is a form of marketplace?
  9. Does our libertarian recognize that large corporations are a threat to our freedoms?
  10. Does he think that [Ayn] Rand was off the mark on this one, or does he agree that historical figures like King and Gandhi were “parasites”?
  11. If you believe in the free market, why weren’t you willing to accept as final the judgment against libertarianism rendered decades ago in the free and unfettered marketplace of ideas?
I have to distance myself a bit from Eskow's questions (even in the context of the article in which they're propounded) as they make a few unfounded leaps and they're not that well phrased, complete, or ordered.  Still, they point up fundamental inconsistencies in libertarian dogmas.

And in so saying I have to point out that I am, as I supposed Eskow is, a strong believer in individual rights.1 I seek a system which protects those rights and interests -- and provides the opportunity to exercise those rights and interests -- to the maximum extent for the maximum number of citizens. It's that last part that seems to me the too common rub with libertarians: they seem, too often, to seek to maximize rights for a few (usually themselves) to the detriment of everyone else. Yes, I think, democratic republican forms of government are the closest we've come so far to a regime of individual rights; and some government and some regulation, measured for it's reasonability, is necessary to protect our rights and interests.
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1 Here I have to make a controversial (if correct) comment: individual rights are not "natural rights." They are made by people. That is not a political or philosophical observation; it is a factual one. It is something we cannot change no matter how much we wish it to be different. One would have to be extremely ignorant of history to think that individual rights have existed for many centuries (let alone forever). One would have to be extremely ignorant of the world to think that individual rights exist everywhere. One would have to be extremely ignorant of culture to think that all cultures reflect or even understand western notions of individual rights. One would have to be extremely ignorant of the process of government and lawmaking to think that rights or laws magically exist. That individual rights are not "natural rights" does not mean that individual rights are unimportant; it means their explication and codification is critical.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

'Natural rights' are typically defined as things a person can naturally do unless someone exerts force upon them to prevent them. The rights enumerated in the bill of rights largely fit this definition.
Most 'little L' libertarians have a goal of minimizing force used to constrain behavior as much as possible while still maintaining a functional society. Note that this is NOT abolishing government. It is understood that the level of constraint needed varies by circumstance; more rules are needed in a crowded city than in a rural area, simply because it is harder to act without affecting others.

Galileo Feynman said...

You may have an understanding of "natural rights" as "things a person can naturally do unless someone exerts force on them to prevent them," but, if so, you are confusing the word "rights" with the word "ability." People have a "natural ability" to do many things unless constrained, as you describe; they do not necessarily have the "right" to do those things. And I certainly agree that most "little l" libertarians do not seek to abolish all government.